• US stands with Tamil Families of the Disappeared

    During his visit to Jaffna, the US embassy's deputy chief of mission, Doug Sonnek, met with the Families of the Disappeared and Tamil politicians from across the North-East.

  • TG VIEW - British Tamils expect action from Rishi Sunak

    As a new British Prime minster takes office, Tamils across the country will be watching closely. It is indeed historic that Rishi Sunak will be the first person of South Asian office to hold the highest office in the country. However, both domestically and internationally, he will have his work cut out for him.

  • An assassination of Tamils in Paris that remains unsolved

    Today marks 26 years since two Tamil activists were shot dead in a Parisian neighbourhood, a murder that shocked the Tamil diaspora worldwide and remains unsolved to this day.

    Kandiah Gajendran, also known as Gajan, was the editor of Paris based Tamil weekly 'Eelamurasu' and Kandiah Perinpanathan, known as Nathan, was in-charge of LTTE's international finance. The two men aged 30 and 32-years old respectively, were strolling down Boulevard de La Chapelle on the 26th of October 1996 - a neighbourhood which had a long established and thriving Eelam Tamil community.

  • ‘At least you’re not Sri Lanka,’ China tells Bangladesh

    China’s Ambassador to Bangladesh attempted to calm concerns over the country’s troubled economic situation, by stating it was “much better” than what was happening in Sri Lanka.

    "We foresee a promising outlook [in terms of relations with Bangladesh],” Li Jiming told the Jatiya Press Club in Dhaka. “We are ready to work with Bangladesh for a brighter future."

  • ‘I tried to kill myself many times’ – Tamil families of the disappeared still living in pain

    Tamil families of the disappeared have spoken about the pain they continue to feel, including suicide attempts, as they continue to search for their abducted loved ones.

    Speaking to Reuters, government employee Valantina Daniel said her 66-year-old injured mother was forcibly disappeared in 2009.

  • ‘No genocide in Sri Lanka’ - OMP chairman denies surrendered Tamils are missing

    The head of Sri Lanka’s Office of Missing Persons (OMP) told Reuters that a genocide of Tamils did not take place and instead claimed the military had “rescued 60,000 civilians” during a 2009 offensive that was littered with massacres.

  • SLMC leader speaks out against international accountability for war crimes

    The leader of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC), Rauf Hakeem, has spoken out against any international accountability mechanism for mass atrocities and instead advocated for a wholly domestic Sri Lankan process.

  • Rekindling an old flame – China seeks to ‘enhance friendship’ with SLPP

    Responding to a tweet by disgraced former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, congratulating Xi Jinping for his re-election as the CPC’s General Secretary, China’s embassy in Sri Lanka thanked the accused war criminal and noted their ambition to enhance the relationship between the CPC and the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP).

  • Rise in Sri Lankan sex workers sees infections soar

    Sri Lanka’s economic crisis has seen more people turn to sex work, said a leading doctor on the island, which in turn has led to a growing number of sexually transmitted diseases being detected.

    According to Sri Lanka’s National STD/AIDS Control Programme, 4,556 HIV patients were recorded in the first quarter of 2022, up 11.8 percent from 4,073 in 2021 first quarter.

    In the second quarter of 2022, 4,686 HIV patients have been identified, up 13.2 percent from 4,142 in 2021.

  • Prince: A royal pain

    Horror, much like most other genres, elicits laughter when it fails. Failed comedy, on the other hand, leaves the viewer horrified. This was my experience of watching Anudeep KV’s Sivakarthikeyan starrer ‘Prince.’ 

  • Sardar: What Cobra could have been - a competently made spy thriller

    Having seen the teaser for PS Mithran’s latest release ‘Sardar’, I had braced myself  for a repeat viewing of ‘Cobra’ released earlier this Summer. The film’s star Karthi appears in multiple disguises and costumes - which was also Cobra’s primary marketing point - and I was overcome with flashbacks to rolling my eyes and sighing with the Vikram starrer. Thankfully, ‘Sardar’ is a better feature in almost every aspect. 

  • Will Sri Lanka go bust?

    In a bid to increase government revenues, Sri Lanka’s Finance Ministry unveiled a 150% increase on annual taxes for casinos, from Rs 200 million to Rs 500 million, as well as the introduction of an entrance for locals of 200 US dollars.

  • 13 years after the massacres, bodies discovered in Mullaitivu

    More than 13 years after the Sri Lankan military massacred tens of thousands of Tamils in Mullaitivu, human remains have been discovered in the district earlier this month.

    The Mullaitivu District Judge has ordered Forensic Medical Officers to conduct an investigation on the remains, which were discovered in a private site in Ananthapuram, Puthukudiyiruppu.

  • Bail granted for four suspects detained over alleged plot to murder Sumanthiran

    The Colombo High Court granted bail to four persons who were detained under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) over an alleged assassination attempt on Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Parliamentarian M A Sumanthiran last week.

    The four suspects had been detained since February 2017.

  • Kokuvil Hindu College massacre by IPKF commemorated

    The 35th anniversary event of the Kokuvil Hindu College massacre by the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IKPF) was held in Jaffna on Monday.

    The commemoration was in front of the entrance of Kokuvil Hindu College on Kankesanturai Road and organized by the relatives of victims.

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