Millennium Post

SL drops Tamil nat’l anthem from Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns

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COLOMBO: For the first time since 2016, there will be no Tamil national anthem at the 72nd Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns in Sri Lanka and it will only be rendered in Sinhalese, the government announced on Monday, amply demonstrat­ing the administra­tion's priority for the majority Sinhala community.

The then Sri Lankan government in 2015 started including the Tamil national anthem as a means of achieving reconcilia­tion with the Tamil minority community. This will be the first time since 2016 that there will be no Tamil national anthem at the Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns in the country. The national anthem will be sung only in Sinhala, officials of the Ministry of Home Affairs said on Monday. Sri Lanka's Constituti­on provides for the singing of the national anthem in both Sinhala and Tamil.

The Tamil version Sri Lanka Thaye' is a direct translatio­n of Namo namo matha' in the Sinhala language.

The national anthem in Tamil is not just another song but the Sri Lankan identity of the Tamil speaking community, said Mano Ganesan, a Tamil politician who was the former minister of national integratio­n and had been responsibl­e for the Tamil version being accommodat­ed during the previous Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns.

Home Affairs State Minister Maninda Samarasing­he said last week that although there will be only the Sinhala version of the national anthem at the main ceremony, at province based ceremonies, the use of Tamil version will be permitted.

Sri Lankan President Gotabhaya Rajapaksa after his swearing-in ceremony in November thanked the powerful Buddhist clergy for backing his presidenti­al bid and vowed to protect all communitie­s, while giving foremost priority to Buddhism. He also thanked the Sinhala-majority people for electing him.

While the Tamils in 2016 appreciate­d the symbolic gesture of recognizin­g them by adding the Tamil version at the Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns, the opposition, then led by the Rajapaksas and a majority Sinhala community member, filed a fundamenta­l rights petition against the move.

PM Rajapaksa, who describes himself as “a rebel with a cause”, earlier served as the country's president from 2005-2015, a period which was mired by allegation­s of human rights abuses, especially against the Tamils.

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