• Sri Lanka should ban tea imports – Finance Secretary

    Finance Secretary Dr P B Jayasundera has said tea imports into Sri Lanka should be banned in order to protect the integrity and image of Sri Lankan tea.

    The Tea Exporters Association, which represents around 75% of Sri Lankan tea exporters, has recently made a proposal to allow the importing and blending of foreign tea with Sri Lankan blends for export.

  • Right to Information bill blocked by SL government

    The Right to Information Act proposed by the UNP has been blocked by the government, according to UNP MP Karu Jayasuriya.

  • Mobile phone messages used by government to spread UN petition
    The Sri Lankan government has been sending notifications to mobile phone users in the country, urging them to sign a petition addressed to the President of the United Nations Human Rights Council, according to reports.
  • Judge criticises 'banner of terrorism' in sentencing US Tamil

    A federal judge in USA called into question the "emblazoned banner of terrorism" during the sentencing of Karunakaran Kandasamy, accused of providing material support to the LTTE.

  • Channel 4 shines at One World Media Awards

    Jon Snow with Zoe Sale and Callum Macrae
  • GTF pays tribute to Comrade Roy at state funeral - S Africa

    GTF delivers tribute message

    The Global Tamil Forum (GTF) joined President Jacob Zuba, ministers and senior government officials of South Africa to pay tribute to the late activist and minister, Roy Padayachie, at his state funeral in Durban on Wednesday.

    As one of the handful of speakers requested to address the mourners and pay tribute to the late Mr Padayachie, the GTF's spokeperson, Suren Surendiran, shared his memories of Comrade Roy, who he described as a pivotal and inspirational figure to the organisation.

    President Jacob Zuma greets Mr Surendiran

    Addressing the mourners, Mr Surendiran said,

    "let me, on your behalf, salute Comrade Roy, whom I and a large number of Tamil speaking people admire so much, for his leadership, not just in this country, but throughout the Tamil diaspora for laying the foundation for Global Tamil Forum, and for his crucial and catalytic role in bringing the liberation campaign together, with a vision to follow."

    "The reward he sought, as he has always said, is not recognition, nor status, nor titles, nor money but that the coming generation – who never even knew him – enjoys a better life, thanks to his courageous work. And I also want to pay my personal tribute, to his work and his leadership in achieving, by his determined action, what many thought was impossible - to internationalise, the Tamil Question."

  • Minister accuses TNA of assisting the LTTE

    The General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party Maithripala Sirisena has accused the Tamil National Alliance of assisting 'LTTE activists' to enter the country.

  • Government buys up local milk

    The Sri Lankan Government has ordered the state-owned milk company Milco to buy up all unsold milk from farmers.

    Farmers recently held demonstrations, highlighting their inability to sell fresh milk in the Sri Lankan market by spilling 12,000 litres on the streets of Hatton.

  • Government seeks Rs 200m to buy cars for judges

    An estimate for supplementary expenses, submitted by the Sri Lankan government on Monday, included Rs 347,500,000 to pay for 52 vehicles for several ministries and members of the judiciary, reported The Island.

  • Gigolos and a day in Sri Lanka’s parliament

    Minister of Foreign Employment Promotion and Welfare Dilan Perera and UNP MP Ranjan Ramanayaka called each other ‘gigolos’ during a debate in parliament, The Island reported on Wednesday.

    The debate centred around the fate of Rizana Nafeeq, a house maid on death row in Saudi Arabia.

  • Tamils from Palali demand to be resettled home

    Tamils from Palali who remain internally displaced after the army took control of the area, demanded that they be allowed to go home, reported the Jaffna newspaper, Uthayan.

  • Monks resume protests against Dambulla mosque

    A large number of Buddhist monks and supporters took part in a protest march in Kalutara on Monday, demanding the removal of the mosque in Dambulla.

    The protest was organised by a Buddhist organisation called 'Buddhist Protection Foundation'.

  • Power behind the throne

    Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa

Subscribe to Tamil Affairs