April 2026


Dispute Grows as Government Moves to Formalise Buddhist Claim at Vedukkunari Hill

Dispute Grows as Government Moves to Formalise Buddhist Claim at Vedukkunari Hill

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — The Sri Lankan government is moving to designate Vedukunari Hill, a contested site in the Nedunkerny area of Vavuniya, as a protected forest zone, a step officials say is necessary to preserve an ancient Buddhist heritage site but one that has deepened unease among Tamil political leaders over how the island’s past is being officially defined. The issue resurfaced after the Minister of Buddhasasana, Religious and Cultural Affairs, Dr. Hiniduma Sunil Senevi, told Parliament


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

ITAK Backs No-Confidence Motion but Balks at Confronting Government

ITAK Backs No-Confidence Motion but Balks at Confronting Government

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — April 11, 2026 — Lawmakers from the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK) unanimously agreed to support a no-confidence motion against Power and Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody on Friday, but several members hesitated to take a leading role in publicly confronting the government, according to multiple party sources familiar with internal discussions. The motion, taken up in Parliament on Friday, prompted an online meeting of ITAK’s political committee and parliamentary group a


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Our Reporter

Hindu Groups Urge Official Recognition of Ancient Kathirgamam Pilgrimage Routeaft

Hindu Groups Urge Official Recognition of Ancient Kathirgamam Pilgrimage Routeaft

KARAITHIVU, Sri Lanka — Hindu organizations from Sri Lanka’s Northern and Eastern provinces have called on the government to formally recognize the historic Kathirgamam (Kataragama) pilgrimage route as a sacred pilgrimage, urging authorities to issue a gazette notification granting it official status. The appeal was made during a meeting held on Saturday at the Swami Vipulananda Memorial Hall in Karaithivu, where government officials and religious representatives gathered to discuss the future


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

Former LTTE Fighter Backs Sumanthiran for Northern Chief Minister

Former LTTE Fighter Backs Sumanthiran for Northern Chief Minister

KILINOCHCHI, Sri Lanka — A former member of the LTTE has publicly endorsed M. A. Sumanthiran as a candidate for Chief Minister of Sri Lanka’s Northern Province, urging Tamils to rally behind him and challenging critics to propose a more suitable alternative. The endorsement came from Tharan Sri, a former fighter of the LTTE’s Charles Anthony Brigade who now leads a regional civil group, the Vanni Tamil People’s Union, in a Facebook post. He said M. A. Sumanthiran had invited former militants to


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

Indian Tamils Who Built Sri Lanka’s Tea Economy Are Now Leaving It

Indian Tamils Who Built Sri Lanka’s Tea Economy Are Now Leaving It

By M.R. Narayan Swamy Indian-origin Tamils, descendants of indentured labourers brought to Sri Lanka in the 19th century, are steadily moving away from the tea plantations that once defined their existence. After generations of living a hand-to-mouth existence, many are finding success in new fields emerging as a more empowered ethnic group. Yet, for the tens of thousands who still toil in the tea estates poverty and entrenched racism remain daily realities. Community leaders speak about signi


M.R. Narayan Swamy

M.R. Narayan Swamy

India Helps Restore Sri Lanka’s Northern Railway, but Questions Over Its Fragility Persist

India Helps Restore Sri Lanka’s Northern Railway, but Questions Over Its Fragility Persist

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka — April 10, 2026 — After months of disruption caused by Cyclone Ditwah, passenger trains resumed full service on Thursday between Colombo and Kankesanthurai, restoring Sri Lanka’s most important north–south rail link just days before the Sinhala and Tamil New Year. For thousands of travelers in the Northern Province, the reopening offered immediate relief — and a familiar sense of uncertainty. “We can travel again, but we don’t know for how long,” said S. Tharmalingam, a sma


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

A Minister’s House — and the Questions It Built

A Minister’s House — and the Questions It Built

The photographs were clearly intended to project an image of simplicity. There was the President, the Prime Minister, and cabinet ministers — seated on ordinary plastic chairs, eating from simple plates like ordinary citizens at an almsgiving ceremony hosted by a senior government minister at his residence in Kaduwela. The images circulated widely on social media, amplified by the ruling National People's Power party's supporters. For a moment, they achieved their intended effect, drawing admir


Our Special Correspondent

Our Special Correspondent

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