• TNPF condemns death threats against Jaffna Uni students

    The Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) said it "severely condemns" the issuing of death threats against four Jaffna University students and one lecturer, warning them against remembering Tamil national remembrance day, Maaveerar Naal on November 27.

    "Posters have been posted inside Jaffna University's premises including the names of four students and a lecturer, threatening to shoot and kill them. The names listed in the posters are english department's dean and the University Teachers’ Union Leader, Amirthalingam Rasakumaran, as well as 3rd year media studies students, Thurairasa Thamilselvan, Kanesalingam Nivas, and Thangarasa Ayngaran, and 3rd year geography student Philipeiris Britto," the TNPF said in a statement.

    "The poster, written in inaccurate Tamil, warned not to observe Maaveerar Naal events, and if observed, [the students and staff] will be shot and killed. As only the Sri Lankan government and the army have been continuously making threats not to hold remembrance events, we suspect that the posters published between 21 and 27 during Maaveerar remembrance week were posted by Sri Lanka military intelligence officers," the TNPF said.

  • Rathika Sitsabaiesan commemorates 'Tamil Heroes Day' in Canadian parliament
    A New Democratic Party (NDP) MP in a statement commemorating "Remembrance Day and Tamil Heroes Day," urged Canadian parliament to work towards peace and justice at "home and abroad" whilst highlighting injustices that ethnic communities faced in Sri Lanka.



    Rathika Sitsabaiesan, an MP  for Scarborough Rouge River, spoke on the ongoing injustices and discrimination that ethnic and religious communities in Sri Lanka continued to face.

    Full transcript reproduced below. 
  • Ananthy Sasitharan's office under military surveillance
    The office of the TNA Northern Provincial Council (NPC) member, Ananthy Sasitharan is under military surveillance, locals sources said.

    "The army is involved in unusual patrol activities in front of my office in Sulipuram and military intelligence are monitoring the office from shops opposite," Sasitharan told the Uthayan.

    The heightened military activity comes amid the Tamil nation's annual remembrance day commemoration on November 27 - Maaveerar Naal.

    Earlier in the day, trees were planted in the North-East in memory of fallen LTTE cadre.



  • Rajapaksa calls on SAARC to 'resist external manipulations'

    Photograph:www.news.lk

    Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa called on members of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) to unite and resist against 'external manipulations' at the 18th SAARC summit this week.

    Addressing the summit, being held in Kathmandu, Nepal, Rajapaksa said,
    "While SAARC practice has been to abstain from involvement in bilateral issues of a political nature, we must resist external manipulations."
  • Anonymous letters urge Jaffna schools to commemorate Maaveerar Naal

    Schools in Jaffna received anonymous letters urging them to commemorate Maaveerar Naal on Thursday, reports Uthayan.

  • Thoughts of you must guide our way' - Mano Ganesan on remembrance

    Mano Ganesan, leader of the Democratic People’s Front and former MP, has posted a message of remembrance, ahead of Maaveerar Naal, on his Facebook page.


  • LTTE leader's 60th birthday marked across the world
    The 60th birthday of LTTE leader Veluppillai Prabhakaran was marked today, with celebrations reportedly being held across the North-East and the rest of the world.

    Jaffna-based newspaper Uthayan reported that in locations across the North-East, Tamils distributed sweets to neighbours and relatives to mark the occasion.

    Secret celebrations were also reportedly held in Jaffna University, where students lit candles and cut a cake.

    Jaffna


    Celebrations were also held across Europe including the UK, Denmark and France, with cakes being cut and fireworks lit.

    In Tamil Nadu MDMK leader Vaiko also cut a cake, whilst students across the state in Kovai, Pondy and Chidambaram held events to mark the occasion.

    See photos from the various events below.
  • UK ‘not at all happy’ with Sri Lanka’s dismissal of UN investigation

    The United Kingdom has condemned Sri Lanka’s continued refusal to co-operate with a United Nations investigation into mass atrocities, during a debate in the House of Lords on Monday.

    Responding to a question on the refusal of the Sri Lankan authorities to grant visas to the United Nations team which was to investigate the atrocities committed, Lord Wallace of Saltaire, Government Whip acting as government spokesperson on the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, said,

    “My Lords, the UK was a sponsor of the resolution of the UN Human Rights Council. We are actively concerned in this issue. We are not at all happy about the refusal of the Sri Lankan authorities to co-operate with the attempts to have an external inquiry, because of our concerns that the internal inquiry’s recommendations have not yet been implemented”.

    Lord Wallace went on to say that the UK has “actively made our position clear to the Sri Lankan Government and will continue to do so.”

  • Monument for Tamil war dead to be erected in Germany

    The Tamil monument during construction (Photo: Knut Vahlensieck, Der Westen)

    A sculpture to commemorate Tamil war deaths will be erected in the German town of Essen later this week, reported the German paper Der Westen.

    German sculptor Georg Schaab created the12-ton granite monument at the request of German Tamils, who funded it using donations from the community.

    “Many Tamils were driven away from Sri Lanka since the civil war in the 1980s and live in exile across the world,” Schaab said.

  • UN Special Rapporteur on minority issues criticises BBS for preaching 'racial superiority'
    The United Nations Special Rapporteur on minority issues Rita Izsak criticised Sri Lankan Buddhist organisation Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) in a report released ahead of the seventh session of the Forum on Minority Issues, which is currently underway in Geneva.

    In the report, the Special Rapporteur stated that she considers “violence against minorities must constitute a high priority for States, regional bodies and the international community, as well as civil society”.

    She went on to note that on 2 July 2014 the Special Rapporteur “along with other United Nations experts, called on Sri Lanka to adopt urgent measures to stop the racial and faith-based hatred and violence directed at Muslim and Christian communities by Buddhist groups with extremist views, and to bring perpetrators to justice”.

  • Maithripala invited us for talks – BBS

    The opposition candidate at the presidential elections in January, Maithripala Sirisena, invited the Buddhist organisation Bodu Bala Sena for talks, according to the group’s general secretary Gnanasara.

    The monk said the BBS received several invitations for discussions on the election from the parties in the common opposition.

    “We have not taken any final decision to meet him,” the Daily Mirror quoted Gnanasera.

  • UNP vows to work against potential war crimes charges on Sri Lankan leaders
    The Sri Lankan opposition United National Party (UNP) outlined that it was fully committed in ensuring that Sri Lankan leaders were not tried at international courts on war crimes charges, reports Colombo Page.

    Speaking in Sri Lankan parliament on Monday, UNP MP, Harsha de Silva, said,
    “I am telling the world. We (UNP and myself), will not allow anybody to take President Rajapaksa or any other leader to international court about war crimes. We will not allow the president whether he won or lose to be tried before war crime tribunals.”
    The UNP parliamentarian made the comments in response to criticisms regarding his appearance in an Aljazeera interview with the spokesman for the Global Tamil Forum (GTF), Suren Surendiran.

  • Rajapaksa will be tried for genocidal war crimes if he loses elections - GTF
    Mahinda Rajapaksa will be tried at international courts for war crimes if he loses his position as head of state, said the Global Tamil Forum spokesman in an interview with Aljazeera news last week.

    Commenting on Rajapaksa’s decision to hold snap elections in January 2015, Suren Surendiran said,

    “It is Rajapaksa, as the head of state and commander in chief of the military, who stands accused of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity. Some people even accuse him of committing genocidal crimes against the Tamil community.  As head of state he has immunity against international law. The day he is beaten in an election and is not head of state. Just has what happened to Charles Taylor or Milosevic who committed genocidal crimes and breached international law, Rajapaksa will be taken by the International Criminal Court and will be charged with committing war crimes.”

  • Death threats posted in Jaffna university
    Posters have appeared in Jaffna university threatening students and the leader of the Teachers' Union with death as Maaveerar Naal approaches, reports Uthayan.

    Students from the media department and geography department were named in the posters, alongside the head of the Jaffna University Teachers' Union, warning them that they would be shot if they attempted to observe the upcoming remembrance day.


    “They are creating tigers, we will shoot them,” said the posters written in improper Tamil.

    “We will not allow to observe Maveerar Thinam [Heroes Day].” (sic)
  • Indian and Sri Lankan joint military exercises end in Hambantota

    A contingent of Indian Army Special Force troops concluded joint military exercises with Sri Lankan soldiers on Monday.

    The Sri Lankan army website reported that the three week long exercise was “elevating existing relations to new heights and marking the start of a new era of neighbourly understanding and close cooperation between both organizations.”

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