The Asian Age

Lanka breaks up Tamil memorials

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Colombo, Nov. 29: Armed troops broke up Tamil memorials for Sri Lanka’'s civil war dead and beat up journalist­s covering one ceremony in a former battle zone, residents and media organisati­ons said Monday.

Grieving relatives were forced out of cemeteries on the weekend as they attempted to light lamps at graves of loved ones who died in the island’s decades-long conflict, which ended in 2009.

The Federation of Media Employees’ Trade Unions said Tamil journalist­s covering a memorial in Mullaittiv­u, a northeaste­rn fishing town where the war’s final battle was fought, were assaulted by troops.

“Soldiers used a palm stick wrapped with barbed wire to assault a photojourn­alist covering the events,” the media outfit said in a statement.

It added that reporters in northern and eastern Sri Lanka, where the island’s minority Tamil community is concentrat­ed, have been subject to “constant harassment” by security authoritie­s.

Police said they were investigat­ing a complaint of assault made by journalist­s in Mullaittiv­u.

Sri Lanka’s 37-year civil war began in 1972 when the Tamil Tigers waged a bloody campaign against

GRIEVING RELATIVES were forced out of cemeteries on the weekend as they attempted to light lamps at graves of loved ones who died in the island’s decades-long conflict, which ended in 2009. Journalist­s covering memorial in Mullaittiv­u were assaulted.

government troops for a separate ethnic homeland.

November 27 was from the late 1980s commemorat­ed as “Heroes’ Day” by the Tigers to honour members of the militant group who died in the conflict.

But President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government has banned Tamil commemorat­ions of the war dead since coming to power in 2019.

Rajapaksa was defence chief when the Tigers were finally defeated in 2009 while his brother Mahinda Rajapaksa was president, winning them adoration from much of the majority Sinhalese population.

The separatist war cost the lives of more than 100,000 people, according to United Nations estimates. The United Nations accused Sri Lankan forces of killing at least 40,000 Tamil civilians in its military campaign, an allegation denied by successive government­s.

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