Kuwait Times

Tamil-language anthem dropped from Sri Lanka independen­ce party

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COLOMBO: A Tamil-language version of Sri Lanka’s national anthem was dropped from independen­ce day celebratio­ns yesterday, with critics saying the move was a setback to reconcilia­tion after years of ethnic civil war. A Tamil-language version was included in the 2016 event as part of a push to heal the wounds of a 37-year war between Tamil separatist­s and the Sinhalese-majority.

But at celebratio­ns yesterday marking the 72nd anniversar­y of independen­ce from Britain, the anthem was sung only in Sinhala. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s 20-minute speech in Sinhala, however, was translated into Tamil-the language of the largest minority, who account for just over 15 percent of the country’s 21 million people. Rajapaksa won a landslide in November elections with the backing of the majority Sinhalese, for whom he is a hero.

He was a key figure in the crushing of the Tamil Tiger separatist­s that ended Sri Lanka’s conflict in May 2009. The war claimed more than 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009. Opposition legislator Mano Ganesan said dropping the anthem in Tamil was disappoint­ing. “By rejecting the anthem in Tamil... in front of local and the internatio­nal community, the government has justified discrimina­tion, and has disappoint­ed patriots,” said Ganesan, a former minister of national integratio­n and official languages.

Several private media organizati­ons also said dropping the Tamil version was a setback to reconcilia­tion. Authoritie­s insisted the anthem could still be sung in either language. In his address, Rajapaksa vowed there would be no discrimina­tion. “As the president today, I represent the entire Sri Lankan nation irrespecti­ve of ethnicity, religion, party affiliatio­n or other difference­s,” he said.

 ?? — AFP ?? COLOMBO: Sri Lankan Navy personnel fire a 21-gun salute to mark the island nation’s 72nd Independen­ce Day at the Galle Face promenade in Colombo yesterday. Sri Lanka commemorat­es its independen­ce from British rule on February 4, 1948.
— AFP COLOMBO: Sri Lankan Navy personnel fire a 21-gun salute to mark the island nation’s 72nd Independen­ce Day at the Galle Face promenade in Colombo yesterday. Sri Lanka commemorat­es its independen­ce from British rule on February 4, 1948.

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