• Tamil Nadu marks Maaveerar Naal

    Updated 15:00 GMT
    Thousands of people across Tamil Nadu marked Maaveerar Naal this week, with remembrance events being held across the state.

    MDMK leader Vaiko held a rally and paid tribute to the fallen Tamils alongside thousands of people.


    Meanwhile student groups across the Indian state held various events, where candles were lit and flowers laid on shrines.

    Tambaram

  • SL police claim Tamil youth confessed to Maaveerar Naal posters
    The Jaffna district police superintendent Wimalasena claimed that the Tamil youth arrested earlier this week for allegedly putting up posters commemorating Tamil national remembrance day (Maaveerar Naal) has confessed to the crime.

    The Tamil youth, originally from Meesalai, was arrested on November 26 by Sri Lankan police on terrorism charges.

    The youth has "admitted that he produced them", Wimalasena was quoted by the Uthayan as saying. He has since been handed over to the Terrorism Investigation Department (TID), Wimalasena added.

    According to Wimalasena, in a confession statement, the youth said:
    "Recently, societal ills have increased amongst youths [in Jaffna]. Sword fights and gang fights have increased. I produced the Maaveerar Naal posters to show the LTTE was still present, as no one would engage in such activities, if they felt they were around."

  • Canadian universities commemorate Maaveerar Naal

    University of Toronto Scarborough
    All photographs courtesy of TYO Canada

    Students in Canada held a series of events in universities this month marking Maaveerar Naal, a day to remember those who gave their lives for the Tamil struggle.

    The universities held events in the weeks leading up to November 27th, a date commemorated by Tamils across the world. Dance and songs were performed, speeches and poems were read out and flowers were laid in tribute to the thousands who died.

    See more photos from the events below.

  • JHU to sign MoU with Maithripala

    The Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), a former coalition partner in President Rajapaksa's UPFA, has announced it will sign a memorandum of understanding with the opposition candidate Maithripala Sirisena, after which they will actively support his campaign, the Daily Mirror reported.

  • Police attack Tamils demanding their lands back in Jaffna
    Photographs Uthayan


    Sri Lankan police attacked Tamils in Pommaiveli, Jaffna who were demanding to be given their own lands back.

    The protest began on Saturday morning, by Pommaiveli junction, with demonstrators blocking the streets and putting up tin sheds in the street.

    Police officers soon arrived at the seen, and attempted to remove the tin sheds. As the demonstrators refused to move, police officers hit them and threw stones at them, reported the Uthayan newspaper. One elderly demonstrator was injured.

  • Bodu Bala Sena gives 'unconditional support' to President Rajapaksa

    The Buddhist organisation Bodu Bala Sena has declared its support to President Mahinda Rajapaksa in the forthcoming presidential election, reported The Island.

    General Secretary Gnanasara told media that the BBS pledged unconditional support to Rajapaksa.

  • I will protect Rajapaksas from war crime charges – Maithripala

    The opposition candidate at the presidential election, Maithripala Sirisena said that he would not allow the international community or the Tamil diaspora to take President Mahinda Rajapaksa, or anyone else to face war crimes charges, the Daily Mirror reports.

    “I will not allow President Rajapaksa, his family or any member of our armed forces to be taken before any international war crimes tribunal,” Sirisena said to reporters.

    Speaking to media on behalf of the common opposition, Sirisena said he would implement a “proper reconciliation” plan, to heal divisions amongst the different communities.

  • TNA calls for release of fishermen on death row

    The Tamil National Alliance has called for the release of the three Eelam-Tamil fishermen, who remain on death row after their conviction for drug trafficking.

    Another 5 Tamil Nadu fishermen who were convicted alongside them, were released after a presidential pardon was granted.

    TNA leader R Sampanthan requested President Mahinda Rajapaksa to release the fishermen, saying that it was important to serve justice equally and it was unacceptable that a group of people involved in the same crime were granted an amnesty and another group is still tried for the crime, the Uthayan reported.

  • SL police arrest asylum seekers turned back by Australia
    Thirty-seven asylum seekers who were deported to Sri Lanka by Australian authorities after being detained at sea have been arrested by Sri Lankan police.

    Sri Lanka's police spokesperson Ajith Rohana, said the asylum seekers, which include 6 children, have been handed over on Thursday after being caught by Australia's coast guard by the Indonesian coast.

    'The boat left Sri Lanka on November 1,' Rohana said.

  • You can never remove memories from our hearts' - NPC minister Ayngaranesan
    Photographs Tamilwin


    The Northern Provincial Council (NPC) agriculture minister, P. Ayngaranesan, education minister T. Kurukularasa, and TNA MP S. Sritharan joined arranged a tree planting ceremony in Varani on Thursday, in the memory of LTTE cadre who had given their lives for the Tamil struggle.

    "The tombs of those fought for us have been destroyed, and today the Sri Lankan army is stepping on those places," NPC minister Ayngaranesan told Uthayan.

    "As we are not able to go there to pay our respects, today we are planting trees in remembrance. Each tree planted in remembrance of the dead are living shrines."

    "The Liberation Tigers or other cadres may appear as terrorist in the eyes of the Sri Lankan government, but they are our blood."

  • Sri Lankan stocks reach 3 month low due to presidential election uncertainty
    Sri Lankan stocks fell to a 3 month low due to investors' fears that the presidential elections in January could result in a hung parliament, reports Reuters.
  • Maaveerar Naal in Qatar

    Tamils in Qatar observed Maaveerar Naal commemorations on Thursday, along with Tamils across the world, reported Pathivu..

    Dozens of Tamils gathered in the capital Doha and paid their respects to the fallen fighters.

  • A legacy for generations

    Twenty-five years ago today, the Tamil nation’s day of remembrance - Maaveerar Naal, was first commemorated at an event in the Vanni. Today, the commemoration of the nation’s fallen heroes has spread across the world, taken by those who were forced to flee their homeland in the North-East. This year also marks a significant anniversary of remembrance in global history, the hundredth anniversary of the start of the first world war. Over 16 million people died during four years of intense warfare, which led to a further world war and millions more deaths. Silence, a candle and a flower - a gloriosa lily and a poppy, were used in an act of remembrance that is understood across nations and across generations. The legacy of those who gave their all for their nation binds a people beyond political differences. It reverberates through history and is honoured and revered as the ultimate sacrifice.

  • Stop EU trade benefits if SL does not cooperate with UN inquiry says UK Foreign Affairs Committee
    The British Foreign Affairs Committee report said that the UK should negotiate with the EU to remove trade benefits granted to Sri Lanka, if the government not allow UN investigators into Sri Lanka or stop activists engaging with the UN.

    Highlighting further concerns over witness intimidation following David Cameron’s visit to Jaffna, the Committee urged the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) to report on how individuals at risk in Sri Lanka had been monitored, in a report published today.

  • Commemorating 'Heroes Day' is a terrorist act warns SL military spokesperson
    Sri Lanka will not allow anyone to celebrate the birthday of the Liberation of Tamil Tigers leader or “Heroes Day,” said the Military Media spokesperson, Ruwan Wanigasooriya.

    The brigadier stressed that security had been strengthened in the North by deploying additional special forces, and warned that anyone commemorating these events would be considered as committing a terrorist act, reports Colombo Page.

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