Jaffna Lecturer Killed in Alleged Family Plot Laid to Rest

Jaffna Lecturer Killed in Alleged Family Plot Laid to Rest


Share this post

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka — March 22, 2026 —

A senior University of Jaffna lecturer killed in an alleged family plot was buried Sunday, as new details from police investigations painted a disturbing picture of the crime.

Dr. (Mrs.) Thayalini Thileepan, 54, a Senior Lecturer at the Faculty of Siddha Medicine, was laid to rest following funeral rites held at her residence in Jaffna.

Her 19-year-old daughter, one of the main suspects in the case, was permitted by court order to attend the funeral under police escort.

At the cemetery, several Tamil media online outlets reported that M.A. Sumanthiran, acting general secretary of the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (ITAK), urged that no photographs or video recordings be made.

Jaffna Monitor could not independently verify these claims, as its reporters were not present at the funeral.

Some media reports also described Sumanthiran as a family friend of the deceased lecturer. Others reported that he had appeared in court on behalf of the lecturer and requested permission for her daughter to attend the funeral.

Sumanthiran, however, strongly denied those claims in a post on his official Facebook page.

In the statement, published by an administrator, it said in Tamil: “Mr. Sumanthiran neither sought permission, nor did the court issue such an order. Misreporting court proceedings amounts to contempt of court.”

Sumanthiran had earlier also rejected a social media post by a journalist claiming that he had appeared on behalf of the murdered lecturer’s daughter.

In a statement posted on his official Facebook page, he strongly denied the claim, saying he had appeared in court on behalf of the victim, not the accused.

“Please refrain from spreading false information,” the post said. “Mr. Sumanthiran appeared in court on behalf of the affected University of Jaffna lecturer. Legal action will be taken immediately against those who disseminate false reports.”

Killing and Disposal

Suvidhiya, daughter of Dr. Thayalini Thileepan, with her legally married husband, Thivakar.
Suvidhiya, daughter of Dr. Thayalini Thileepan, with her legally married husband, Thivakar.

Police said the lecturer was killed in the early hours of March 18 at her home in Pandiyantazhvu.

According to police sources who spoke to Jaffna Monitor, the daughter’s partner allegedly entered the house at night by removing roof tiles and lowering himself inside with a rope. He had reportedly consumed drugs prior to entering the house.

Investigators allege that he later woke the daughter and proposed that they resume their relationship. Police sources said the daughter agreed but indicated that her mother would not allow them to reunite.

A police source told Jaffna Monitor that the suspect, identified as Thivagar, had stated during questioning that the daughter restrained her mother by holding her legs while he strangled her.

Jaffna Monitor could not independently verify that account.

Police sources also said the daughter has denied direct involvement, stating she acted out of fear.

Police sources said the body was wrapped in a bedsheet, placed in the victim’s vehicle, and transported to an isolated area in Thanankilappu, where it was dumped.

Another police source told Jaffna Monitor that the suspects had initially planned to bury the body, but abandoned the attempt after the shovel they were carrying broke.

The body was recovered on March 21 following information provided during interrogations.

Flight and Arrest

Police said the suspects removed a digital video recorder (DVR) from the house’s CCTV system and discarded it in a water body while fleeing.

They also took jewelry from the house and later pawned some items to obtain money, which they used to rent a house in Trincomalee, where they began living together as a couple, police sources said.

The suspects travelled across districts in the victim’s vehicle, using her bank card to withdraw cash in Paranthan and to purchase fuel via a QR-based payment system in Trincomalee.

The lecturer’s son, himself a lecturer at Rajarata University, reported her missing and provided key digital clues to police, including transaction alerts and QR-based fuel payment records, which helped trace the suspects.

Police arrested the daughter and her 21-year-old partner in Trincomalee on Friday and brought them back to Jaffna for further questioning.

Background and Motive

Police sources said preliminary investigations suggest the killing may have stemmed from tensions over the daughter’s relationship.

According to police, the daughter had entered into a registered marriage with the suspect after turning 18, without her mother’s consent. The relationship reportedly broke down within months, with the daughter returning home and filing for divorce, citing abuse.

Despite this, the couple remained in contact through social media, including Instagram, and had discussed reconciliation, police said.

Police sources added that the suspect had previously been arrested multiple times in connection with drug-related activities, and toxicology tests indicated drug use, according to investigators.


Share this post

Be the first to know

Join our community and get notified about upcoming stories

Subscribing...
You've been subscribed!
Something went wrong
Kneeling, Beaten: Tamil Fisherman Accuses Navy Intelligence of Abuse in Batticaloa

Kneeling, Beaten: Tamil Fisherman Accuses Navy Intelligence of Abuse in Batticaloa

April 8, 2026 BATTICALOA, Sri Lanka — A fisherman in eastern Sri Lanka has filed a formal complaint with the Human Rights Commission, accusing Navy intelligence personnel of subjecting him to prolonged physical abuse and public humiliation following his arrest over the alleged use of a banned fishing net, according to documents submitted to the commission on Wednesday. The fisherman, identified as Nandheesan, said he was detained on April 5 while fishing off Chettipalayam beach in Batticaloa b


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

The Leader Prabhakaran Was Not — But Laldenga Was

The Leader Prabhakaran Was Not — But Laldenga Was

By M.R. Narayan Swamy It was in 1966 that the Mizo National Front (MNF) launched its guerrilla war against the Indian state. This was nine years before Velupillai Prabhakaran shot dead the Mayor of Jaffna, and a decade before Sri Lanka witnessed the birth of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The comparison is striking not only in timeline but also in scale: Prabhakaran’s envisioned Tamil Eelam spanned roughly 18,000 to 19,000 square kilometres, not far off from Mizoram’s approximatel


M.R. Narayan Swamy

M.R. Narayan Swamy

Sri Lanka Sells Seized Indian Fishing Equipment in Jaffna Amid Ongoing Maritime Strain

Sri Lanka Sells Seized Indian Fishing Equipment in Jaffna Amid Ongoing Maritime Strain

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka — April 7, 2026 — The Sri Lankan government auctioned gas cylinders, cooking stoves and batteries seized from Indian fishing boats on Tuesday, drawing large crowds to a public sale in Jaffna that offered a rare glimpse into how the state disposes of assets taken during maritime enforcement operations in the Palk Strait. The auction, organized by the Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, featured equipment confiscated from both Sri Lankan and Indian vessels — some of i


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

How Oil Writes History in Blood

How Oil Writes History in Blood

By Nilantha Ilangamuwa Never forget: the Iran–Iraq war raged for eight brutal years. Iran survived. Saddam Hussein, once courted by the West for strategic gain, was dragged from his hideout near Tikrit and executed after a deeply flawed Iraqi tribunal. Today, Trump toys with another reckless scheme to destabilise Iran, a continuation of his “decapitation project,” even as Tehran struggles with fractures demanding the immediate redesigning and re‑engineering of its governing structure in the sty


Nilantha Ilangamuwa

Nilantha Ilangamuwa