The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 01, 2025
Today: April 01, 2025

For Sri Lanka's minority Tamils, election does not offer hope

September 20, 2024
Navesh Chitrakar - Reuters

By Navesh Chitrakar

A close-up view of bullet holes on the wall of an old house standing before Sri Lanka's 27-year-long civil war, on a street in Jaffna

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka (Reuters) - Scarred by a decades-long civil war and struggling to survive in Sri Lanka's crippled economy, ethnic minority Tamils in the island nation say they have little hope that Saturday's presidential election will improve their lot by much.

Tamils form 12% of the country's 22 million population, but have long been electorally sidelined, as most candidates belong to the majority Sinhala population and many Tamils say they have no hope of a better future from those candidates.

A 26-year civil war between Tamil insurgents, who wanted a separate Tamil nation in the north and east of the country, and government forces ended in 2009. Rights groups accuse both sides of abuses during the conflict in which 40,000 people died, according to U.N. estimates.

"After we recovered from the losses that we faced during the war, we faced the Corona virus pandemic and the economic crisis ... I don't have any hope," Paramasamy Thanabalasingam, a 62-year-old fisherman in Jaffna, capital of the Northern Province, told Reuters.

Sri Lanka votes on Saturday to elect a new president for a five-year term, the first election since a severe shortfall of dollar reserves pushed the South Asian island into its worst financial freefall in decades.

Traditionally, Tamils have voted for Tamil parties which are active in northern Sri Lanka, but Thanabalasingam says their vote is now split among many factions which claim to represent the minority's concerns.

"As of now, only a Sinhala candidate can be a president, there is a Tamil candidate as well but our Tamil politicians are split in several ways," he said.

"The decision (of who will be president) will be made by the majority Sinhala people, that is why I feel there wonโ€™t be any change," he said.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe, a Sinhalese standing for the first time as an independent candidate, is among the 38 candidates contesting Sri Lanka's presidential election on Saturday. The election is shaping to be a close race between Wickremesinghe, opposition leader Sajith Premadasa, and Marxist-leaning politician Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

Thanabalasingam says he and his family were displaced during the civil war, and the COVID-19 pandemic coupled with Sri Lanka's economic crisis has worsened their condition.

Muththu Sivamohan, 66, secretary of a farmersโ€™ union in

Iranaimadhu, also in the Northern Province, said most Tamil farmers are slowly recovering from the 2022 economic collapse but are deep in debt due to expenses incurred during the crisis.

"There has been no economic development in recent years," he said. "We are of the view that there has to be a change in the government to put an end to the corruption culture."

"At the same time, we cannot compromise on our rights for the sake of development. Thatโ€™s why we decided to support the Tamil candidate as our first choice," he said.

(Reporting by Navesh Chitrakar; Writing by Shilpa Jamkhandikar; Editing by YP Rajesh and Michael Perry)

Share This

Popular

Americas|Asia|Business|Economy|Finance

Chile's Codelco agrees on $666 million in loans from Japan's JBIC, commercial bank

Chile's Codelco agrees on $666 million in loans from Japan's JBIC, commercial bank
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Stock market today: Wall Street falls as data suggests the trade war is hurting manufacturers

Stock market today: Wall Street falls as data suggests the trade war is hurting manufacturers
Asia|Travel|World

80 years after World War II, Okinawaโ€™s battle sites are still giving up bones and bombs

80 years after World War II, Okinawaโ€™s battle sites are still giving up bones and bombs
Asia|Environment|Health|Political|World

Rescue hopes fading four days after quake kills more than 2,700 in Myanmar and Thailand. Hereโ€™s what we know

Rescue hopes fading four days after quake kills more than 2,700 in Myanmar and Thailand. Hereโ€™s what we know

Asia

Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets

Stocks rise, gold at record as investors await Trump tariff clarity

Stocks rise, gold at record as investors await Trump tariff clarity
Asia|Celebrity|Entertainment

South Korean superstar Kim Soo Hyun tearfully denies controversial claims about relationship with late actress

South Korean superstar Kim Soo Hyun tearfully denies controversial claims about relationship with late actress
Asia|Business|Economy|Europe|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Global deal activity disappoints, M&A revenue falls as Trump pursues tariffs

Global deal activity disappoints, M&A revenue falls as Trump pursues tariffs
Asia|Business|Economy|Food|World

China pledges fair ruling in beef tariff investigation

China pledges fair ruling in beef tariff investigation