• ‘Jaffna burns again’ - snippets from the burning of Jaffna Library

    May 31, 1981 marked not only the burning of the Jaffna Public Library, but the beginning of a week-long rampage of violence by Sri Lankan security forces and Sinhala mobs which devastated the peninsula.

  • Anywhere but here – Sri Lanka tells airlines to fill up elsewhere

    Sri Lanka’s Civil Aviation Authority has told airlines coming to the island to either ensure all flights arrive with the required fuel they need to leave or fill up elsewhere, as fuel shortages amidst an economic crisis wreaks havoc on the island.

  • British PM discusses clean energy and Ukraine with Wickremesinghe

    British Prime Minister Boris Johnson expressed his government’s “continuing support for the people of Sri Lanka during their current economic difficulties” in a phone call with his counterpart Ranil Wickremesinghe earlier today.

  • 1,906 days of struggle and still no justice

    In Mullaitivu, Families of the Disappeared gathered for the 1,906 day of protest and to mark the death of one of their members, Mary Fatima Pushparani.

    Pushparani was a native of Vadamarachchi East & former president of Jaffna District Missing Persons Association. For the past 13 years, she searched for her son after having lost another to the war. She passed away at Chavakachcheri base hospital. At least 115 demonstrators have died without knowing the truth behind their loved ones’ disappearances.

  • Another Tamil mother dies without knowing the fate of her son

    Within less than two weeks since Mullivaikkal commemorations took place on the 18 May for the hundreds of thousands of Tamil genocide victims, another Tamil mother searching for her forcibly disappeared son has passed away.

  • Doug Ford, the Tamil struggle is not for sale

    Photograph: Gardiner Expressway, May 10, 2009

    Thirteen years ago, I was among tens of thousands in Toronto’s Tamil community who protested the war in Sri Lanka. I remember waking up on Mother’s Day that year to the horrific news that an all-night artillery barrage killed nearly 1,000 people in a single night. After weeks of candlelight vigils, letter-writing campaigns and petitioning, we felt desperate to draw the world’s attention to Sri Lanka’s escalating genocide against the Tamil people.

    Later that day, thousands of us occupied the Gardiner Expressway. It would become a landmark event in the history of our community.

  • TNA MP calls on Canada to support ‘interim governing mechanism’ for Eelam Tamils

    A Tamil lawmaker thanked Canada’s parliament over a landmark motion that recognised May 18th as Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day and called for an internationally monitored referendum for Eelam Tamils and the diaspora to determine their political future.

  • Popular travel provider TUI cancels more holidays to Sri Lanka 

    All holidays booked to Sri Lanka up to and including June 12 2022 with the travel provider Tui have been cancelled, as the country's tourism industry suffered another blow last week.

  • Sri Lanka's medicine crisis is 'virtual death sentence' warn doctors

    The economic crisis in Sri Lanka has produced a medicine shortage that doctors say could result in deaths, as hospitals are unable to perform life-saving procedures. 

    The healthcare system sits on the brink of collapse as Sri Lanka confronts an unprecedented economic crisis. As 80% of medical supplies in the country are imported and foreign currency reserves are depleted, essential medications are in desperately short supply.

  • Sri Lanka’s crisis forces garment workers to prostitution

    Women in Sri Lanka who were formerly employed in the textiles and garment industry are being forced to turn to prostitution and sex work, as an economic crisis on the island continues to impact on livelihoods reports The Telegraph.

    “Poor politics has shattered my life and this is my only hope to put food on the table for my children,” on sex worker told The Telegraph.

  • Tamil Nadu to receive 10 stolen artefacts from New Delhi

    The government of Tamil Nadu will see 10 stolen artefacts, that were retrieved from Australia and the USA, returned from New Delhi next week.

    According to The Indian Express, the artefacts were reclaimed from Australia in 2020-2022 and six were retrieved from America in 2021. 

  • Book launched to commemorate life of assassinated Tamil journalist

    Tamil press clubs in the North-East launched a book in Batticaloa and Jaffna to mark the 18th anniversary of Tamil journalist Aiyathurai Nadesan's assassination. 

    The book is a collection of essays by Nadesan's family, colleagues and friends, compiled to remember Nadesan's work. 

  • Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister declares 21 Amendment will be passed but opposition remains sceptical

    Sri Lankan Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, announced today that the 21st Amendment will be passed and will strengthen parliament however the leader of Sri Lanka’s opposition, Sajith Premadasa, denounced the move.

  • Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister claims the government is ‘fully committed to reconciliation’

    In a meeting with US Ambassador, Julie Chung, Foreign Minister G.L. Peiris thanked the US for its continued support whilst claiming that the government was “fully committed to addressing reconciliation-related issues” and would respect “rights of all to the freedom of expression and assembly”.

  • TNA demands dissolution of parliament

    Amidst Sri Lanka’s ongoing political and economic crisis, Tamil National Alliance MP, MA Sumanthiran, has demanded the dissolution of parliament and for fresh elections.

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