The Silenced Nation: Documenting Tamil Eelam’s Right to Self‑Determination and the Erasure of Identity in Post‑Colonial Sri Lanka.

Historical Context, Legal Foundations, and Advocacy Strategies


Editor’s Note

The following report presents an exhaustive, evidence-based account of the Tamil struggle for self-determination, rooted in international law and structured advocacy. Drawing on a wealth of academic, legal, and human rights documentation, it endeavours to address both the historical and ongoing violations faced by Tamils in Sri Lanka. This report is prepared for policy advocates, legal professionals, and international institutions committed to justice and the correct documentation of the Tamil people’s plight. All references are documented in APA format with inline hyperlinks. The report includes a robust methodology section, a disclaimer, and detailed footnotes as per professional standards for human rights advocacy reporting.



     In solidarity,

     Wimal Navaratnam

     Human Rights Advocate | ABC Tamil Oli (ECOSOC)

     Email: tamilolicanada@gmail.com

Disclaimer

This report is a work of advocacy and research, synthesizing information from diverse, credible sources, including academic research, human rights data, legal records, and policy commentary. While all factual claims are referenced, the report’s conclusions and advocacy recommendations represent analytical interpretations by the authors. The information is intended to empower responsible advocacy. It does not provide legal advice or substitute for official proceedings before legal or judicial bodies. Readers and users are encouraged to verify referenced materials and consult legal counsel for specific applications.


Methodology

This report utilizes an interdisciplinary, qualitative research design grounded in triangulation of sources. Primary materials reviewed include historical records from the era of British decolonization, transcripts of foundational Tamil political speeches, policy documents, peer-reviewed articles, and current human rights monitoring reports. Extensive reference to databases from international organizations, relevant Wikipedia entries, legal archives, and Tamil civil society organizations ensures the coverage of all key events and structural policies discussed. Official human rights institution records, shadow reporting guides, and updates from advocacy collectives inform recommendations and process sections. The APA style, with inline hyperlink citations, is adhered to throughout for traceability. Careful attention is given to recent developments (up to October 2025), ensuring contemporary relevance to ongoing violations, legal arguments, and strategic advocacy guidance.


1. Introduction: Context and Purpose

The Tamil question in Sri Lanka represents one of the world’s most protracted and misunderstood struggles over self-determination, national identity, and state-sponsored ethnic subordination. Since the formal end of British colonial rule in 1948, Tamils-endowed with a historic, territory-linked identity in the North and East-have systematically faced marginalization, discrimination, and violence at the hands of successive Sinhala-majority governments. Despite concerted efforts by Tamils to assert their rights within and outside Sri Lanka, international law’s promise of self-determination remains unrealized. This report unpacks the multi-dimensional history of the Tamil struggle, underpinning the claim to ‘Distinct Nation’ status within Sri Lanka, and delineates actionable steps for coordinated legal advocacy and documentation.


2. Historical Backdrop: Decolonization and Emergence of the Tamil National Question

2.1. British Colonial Governance and the Pre-1948 Context

British colonial rule in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), spanning from 1815 to 1948, had profound effects on island demographics, ethnic relations, and governance. The British, embracing divide-and-rule tactics, recognized the island’s ethnic plurality, particularly the distinct administrative regions of the Tamil-speaking North-East and the Sinhala-majority South-West. These divisions, while contentious, reflected long-standing civilizational and linguistic boundaries that predated colonialism by centuries 1.

Colonial employment of Tamils in administrative posts, driven by missionary education and English proficiency, gave Tamils an apparent but resented advantage in bureaucracy and the professional class. However, the struggle of Tamils was not born from colonial privilege but from the colonial restructuring of ethnic boundaries and the subsequent Sinhala nationalist response-giving rise to a distinct Tamil political consciousness upon independence.

2.2. The Winds of Decolonization: 1948 and its Aftermath

The process of decolonization globally championed self-determination, yet in Sri Lanka, the newly independent state in 1948 was constructed on the majoritarian principle: independence arrived without constitutional safeguards for minority nationalities. The Decision of the British to transfer institutional powers wholesale to a Sinhala-majority parliament without entrenched protections for Tamils catalyzed anxieties and laid the foundation for subsequent conflict 1.


3. The Origins of Tamil Political Mobilization (1939-1948)

3.1. G.G. Ponnambalam and the "Fifty-Fifty" Proposal

One of the pivotal moments of Tamil political mobilization occurred in 1939, when G.G. Ponnambalam, a key Tamil leader, addressed the Ceylon State Council demanding a constitutional guarantee that would prevent the marginalization of minorities. In his "Fifty-Fifty" proposal, Ponnambalam advocated for a system in which elected representatives from the Sinhalese majority controlled only half of the seats, with the remainder reserved for minorities (Tamils, Muslims, and others) as a protective measure 2.

Ponnambalam’s rationale was strikingly forward-thinking: recognizing the potentially catastrophic outcome of a unitary state dominated by Sinhala-Buddhist ethnocracy, he articulated the concept of "one island, two nations"-one Tamil, one Sinhala. The British, however, dismissed the proposal, opting for a system that prioritized population majoritarianism over negotiated pluralism. This led directly to the political exclusion, and eventually ethnic subjugation, of Tamils in the post-independence era2.

3.2. Impact and Legacy of Early Tamil Mobilization

Although rejected, Ponnambalam’s proposal shaped Tamil nationalist consciousness and is widely regarded as the precursor to subsequent claims for regional autonomy and self-determination. Tamil leaders increasingly articulated the need for constitutional guarantees and power-sharing arrangements-demands that would be systematically disregarded by Sinhala leadership, despite periodic negotiations in the 1950s and 1960s. The climate of distrust paved the way for organized resistance and the emergence of militant Tamil nationalism later in the twentieth century 2.


4. Post-Independence Discrimination: Class, Citizenship, and Linguistic Engineering

4.1. Marginalization Through Citizenship Law

The first legislative act to disenfranchise Tamils post-independence was the Ceylon Citizenship Act of 1948, a law that rendered nearly a million Indian Tamil plantation workers stateless. The Act required documentation impossible for most Indian Tamils to provide, immediately stripping a significant segment of the Tamil population of citizenship, voting rights, and social protections 3.

This deliberate exclusion of Indian Tamils-brought by the British as laborers-became both an international scandal and a harbinger of systematic efforts to redefine Sri Lanka as a state for the Sinhala-Buddhist ethnonational group. The forced statelessness of Indian Tamils continues to have repercussions in terms of socio-economic deprivation and human rights abuses, despite later partial remedial measures 3.

4.2. The Sinhala Only Act and Language-Based Disenfranchisement

The passage of the Sinhala Only Act in 1956 marked the institutionalization of Sinhala linguistic dominance. The law made Sinhala the sole official language, effectively excluding Tamil from the entire apparatus of state: education, law, administration, and public service recruitment-despite Tamils constituting a historic people with established homelands 4.

The Act led to mass Tamil protests, police repression, and periodic riots. Sinhala-only policies deepened Tamil grievances, widened the divide between communities, and cemented the status of Tamils as second-class citizens within their supposedly shared polity. Subsequent legal amendments and failed "reasonable use" clauses failed to reverse the damage or restore linguistic parity 4.

4.3. Education Standardization: Structural Disadvantage

In the 1970s, the government of Sri Lanka introduced the Policy of Standardization, ostensibly to resolve regional inequalities in university admissions. In practice, these policies targeted Tamils by making Tamil students compete for university places under stricter criteria compared to their Sinhala counterparts.5

The effect was dramatic: Tamil representation in coveted professional fields plummeted and upward mobility for Tamil youth was severely restricted. The sense of educational dispossession further radicalized large segments of the Tamil population and contributed to the loss of faith in the unitary state model 5.


5. Illegal Military Occupation and Land Grabs in the Tamil Homeland

5.1. The Scale and Nature of Sri Lankan Military Occupation

While the cessation of open civil war in 2009 has been marked as a turning point officially, the real situation in the Tamil homeland remains one of occupation. The Sri Lankan military maintains an overwhelmingly heavy presence in the North and East, with an estimated one soldier for every six civilians in some districts-an occupation ratio vastly higher than any other peacetime deployment globally 6.

Military camps, checkpoints, and surveillance installations dot the landscape, making daily life for Tamils one of constant oversight, harassment, and unease. The militarization impedes normal civil governance, suppresses dissent, and allows for widespread impunity regarding human rights violations-even long after the formal end of conflict 67.

5.2. Land Grabs, State Seizure, and Demographic Engineering

State-facilitated land appropriation in the North and East of Sri Lanka is one of the most contested issues today. Mechanisms include direct military occupation of civilian lands, declaration of "high security zones" (HSZs), arbitrary acquisition under "development" pretexts, and the gifting of confiscated lands to Sinhalese settlers and state entities8.

Category

Mechanism

Primary Impacted Communities

Key Outcomes

Military Occupation

High Security Zones, Army Camps

Tamils (North-East residents)

Displacement, loss of livelihood, surveillance

State Land Grabs

State acquisition for "development", HSZs

Tamil and Muslim landowners

Dispossession, forced evictions, legal battles

Illegal Settlements

State-sponsored Sinhalese colonization

Tamils

Demographic change, loss of political power

Destruction of Worship Sites

Military/religious encroachment on temples

Tamil Hindus, Christians, Muslims

Loss of heritage, identity erasure, violence

The above table captures the diversity and complexity of mechanisms used in the ongoing project of Sinhalization and demographic change in traditional Tamil-majority regions. Land grabs go hand in hand with military occupation: often, areas pacified militarily are then physically and demographically re-engineered to erode the Tamil character of the region89. The resultant population shifts and erasures amount to ethnic cleansing and lay the groundwork for permanent disenfranchisement.


6. Destruction of Tamil Worship Sites and Cultural Heritage

The destruction of Hindu temples, Christian churches, and Muslim mosques in the Tamil homeland is both a legacy of war and an ongoing project of cultural erasure. Multiple reports document the systematic demolition of ancient and modern Hindu temples-often replaced or overshadowed by newly constructed Buddhist shrines, military structures, or state institutions109.

Tamil religious and archaeological sites, some dating back centuries, have faced vandalism, arson, and state-sanctioned encroachment, frequently with non-Tamil religious symbols inserted forcibly into their precincts11. Such acts are not merely collateral damage but are widely viewed as intentional assaults on Tamil identity and spiritual continuity, completing the project of territorial, demographic, and cultural disenfranchisement in the North and East.


7. State-Sponsored Sinhala Settlements: Demographic Engineering

State-sponsored Sinhalese settlements in the North and East constitute a deliberate effort to transform the ethno-geographic map of the Tamil homeland912. These settlements are often established on lands cleared during the war, forcibly seized from Tamils, or appropriated through subsequent government orders. Settlers are provided with state aid, infrastructure, and security, all at the expense of dispossessed Tamils who are routinely denied the right to return or reclaim their properties.

This program aims at three outcomes: (1) breaking the territorial continuity of Tamil-majority regions; (2) securing “buffer zones” for a permanent Sinhala military presence; and (3) facilitating long-term population change that undermines Tamil claims to historic nationhood, collective rights, and self-governance. The scale and persistence of these policies merit their recognition in international law as forms of illegal demographic manipulation, collectively understood as ethnic cleansing912.


8. The Struggle for Justice: War Crimes, Genocide, and Crimes Against Humanity

8.1. War Crimes During the Sri Lankan Civil War

The final stages of the Sri Lankan Civil War, culminating in May 2009, witnessed mass atrocities, including extrajudicial executions, indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas, enforced disappearances, arbitrary detentions, torture, and sexual violence13. Independent investigations, including those by the United Nations and prominent rights organizations, have meticulously documented:

·       Deliberate attacks on civilian “No Fire Zones”

·       Shelling of hospitals and displacement camps

·       Execution of unarmed prisoners

·       Widespread sexual violence

·       Massive forced disappearances

These violations meet the threshold for crimes under the Rome Statute and customary international law. Despite mounting evidence and repeated UN mandates, genuine accountability (criminal prosecution or reparative justice) for Tamil victims remains absent, blocked by layers of impunity and international realpolitik137.

8.2. Allegations of Genocide

The question of genocide is forcefully raised in the Tamil context. The systematicity, intent, and scale of atrocities-from premeditated mass killings in 2009, anti-Tamil pogroms (1983, 1958, 1977, and others), to ongoing policies of cultural and territorial erasure-provide compelling evidence for a sustained campaign aimed, at minimum, at the destruction of the Tamil community in part, if not in whole1415.

Multiple legal and investigatory bodies have debated the use of the term “genocide” for what transpired in the Vanni region in 2009. There is a broad scholarly, legal, and activist consensus that the cumulative acts of killing (tens of thousands), forced starvation, civilian destruction, and postwar disappearances fit the UN’s definition as acts of genocide or genocidal intent, though powerful states have blocked formal recognition so far14.

8.3. Crimes Against Humanity and Crime of Aggression

For decades, Tamils have endured a pattern of state-sponsored crimes that fit the definition of crimes against humanity: widespread and systematic attacks directed against a civilian population, including murder, deportation, torture, rape, and forced disappearances.

The Sri Lankan state’s use of military force against a defined ethnic population, not in response to a generalized rebellion, but as a tool of ethnic subordination and land seizure-fulfills many criteria of the international crime of aggression. Assertions of state sovereignty are not shields for acts that breach universal human rights norms and the laws of war716.


9. The Ongoing Reality: Structural Violence and State-Sponsored Ethnic Cleansing

The current situation in the Tamil regions is one of structural, ongoing ethnic cleansing through legal, economic, and security apparatuses. Key indicators include:

·       Ongoing military occupation and surveillance

·       Systematic land appropriation and denial of resettlement rights

·       Continued destruction and "conversion" of Tamil worship sites

·       Barriers to education, employment, and civic participation for Tamils

·       Legal impunity for past and ongoing crimes against Tamils

·       Increased Sinhalization of traditional Tamil areas

Numerous NGOs, UN special rapporteurs, and Tamil diaspora organizations have issued urgent calls for international action, emphasizing the deliberate nature of these policies and the existential threat posed to the Tamil nation’s future within Sri Lanka17.


10. International Human Rights Institutions and the Suppression of the Tamil Narrative

10.1. Gaps and Distortions in Official Narratives

A critical challenge in the Tamil struggle is the consistent failure-or willful refusal-of international human rights institutions and global databases to reflect the true scale, history, and intent of Sri Lankan state actions against Tamils. Institutions often use state-supplied data or officially sanctioned versions of events, which marginalize Tamil perspectives, minimize or ignore evidence of crimes, and fail to recognize the collective nature of Tamil grievances18.

This phenomenon is not accidental. The Sri Lankan state, often aided by powerful partner governments (notably from the South Asian region and beyond), orchestrates global narratives to present itself as a functioning multi-ethnic democracy, downplay abuses as wartime excesses, or stigmatize Tamils as “terrorists” or disloyal citizens. This process, known as narratival engineering, is a form of epistemic violence-erasing or rewriting the lived experience of Tamils18.

10.2. The Imperative for Shadow Reporting & Counter-Narrative Documentation

Given the partiality and inadequacy of formal international reporting, shadow reporting has become a cornerstone of Tamil advocacy. Shadow reports-independent submissions to UN treaty bodies, special rapporteurs, and international courts-provide space for marginalized communities to document violations, contest state accounts, and advance alternative legal and historical claims18.

Methods of shadow reporting include:

·       Collection of direct victim testimonies

·       Documentation of destroyed sites, property, and land records

·       Analysis of demographic data and patterns of forced resettlement

·       Legal verification of claims according to international criminal, humanitarian, and human rights law

·       Use of photographs, satellite data, and independent human rights investigations

Shadow reports help to counteract state narratives, call attention to ongoing abuses, and ensure that institutional databases cannot plausibly ignore the extent of state-sponsored oppression19.


11. The Case for Tamil Self-Determination and Distinct Nation Status in International Law

11.1. Legal Foundations of Self-Determination

Self-determination is a foundational principle of modern international law, articulated in the UN Charter, Common Article 1 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), as well as customary international law20. The right applies not only in the context of colonial liberation but also to people who, following decolonization, are denied meaningful participation, subjected to gross discrimination, and targeted for ethnic destruction.

Tamils possess all hallmarks of a nation-distinct language, territory, culture, and historic polity in the North and East of the island. The unremitting pattern of state aggression, disenfranchisement, and demographic engineering provides legal grounds for claims of remedial secession if internal self-determination remains unattainable-which has been the consistent experience of Tamils since 194821.

11.2. Precedents and Comparative Perspectives

International practice includes several precedents (East Timor, South Sudan, Eritrea) in which formerly colonial or internally colonized populations, exercising the right to self-determination, have achieved recognition as distinct nations and/or new states following patterns of exclusion, atrocity, and state unwillingness to accommodate pluralism.

The Tamil struggle, rooted in decades of peaceful negotiation, constitutional appeals, civil protest, and armed resistance only as a last resort, aligns with these precedents. Absent meaningful, enforceable guarantees for collective rights, self-determination remains both a right and, increasingly, a necessity for group survival in the Tamil case14.


12. Advocacy Recommendations: A Pathway Forward

12.1. Coordinated Shadow Reporting and International Documentation

Effective advocacy demands that Tamil professionals, lawyers, rights defenders, and political leaders coordinate the submission of shadow reports and legal documentation to international human rights bodies: Human Rights Council, Special Rapporteurs, ICC, and regional courts.

Best practices for effective reporting include:

·       Joint preparation of legally vetted narratives

·       Use of rigorous evidentiary standards, verified by legal professionals

·       Prioritization of victim-centric documentation, with sensitivity to witness protection

·       Coordination with Tamil diaspora groups for technical, linguistic, and archival support19.

12.2. The Case for a Centralized Tamil Legal Counsel and Legal Clinics

Dispersed, uncoordinated advocacy weakens the Tamil cause by allowing narrative confusion, inconsistent demands, and resource fragmentation. The establishment of a centralized Tamil Legal Counsel-a collective of qualified attorneys and legal experts tasked with standardizing submissions, representing collective interests internationally, and providing legal services to Tamil victims-would address fragmentation and strengthen advocacy.

Such a structure would also facilitate:

·       Strategic litigation before international and regional tribunals

·       Development of a centralized evidence and documentation database

·       Policy advice on international standards and process

·       Ongoing legal clinics in Tamil areas and diaspora hubs19.


13. Conclusion

More than seven decades after independence, the fundamental rights, dignity, and historic nationhood of Tamils in Sri Lanka remain under existential threat. This is not just the legacy of colonial error or the regrettable outgrowth of war, but the direct, ongoing product of deliberate legal, political, military, and demographic engineering by the Sri Lankan state and its partners. The cumulative record of citizenship denial, linguistic and educational marginalization, state violence, genocide, ethnic cleansing, and the erasure of culture and homeland meets the highest standards of international concern.

While international institutions have profound structural limitations, the Tamil people, their advocates, and their diaspora possess an increasingly sophisticated set of tools to document, advocate, and demand justice. The path forward lies in relentless, coordinated legal and policy advocacy: shadow reporting, rigorous documentation, and the strategic assertion of the right to self-determination under international law. The formation of unified Tamil legal mechanisms and clinics offers the best prospect for ensuring Tamil voices shape the legal and moral frame through which these urgent questions are finally resolved.



Numbered References

1.      Ponnambalam, G. G. (1939). "50-50 Speech."

2.      "Sinhala Only Act." (n.d.).

3.      "Sri Lankan militarisation continues in the Tamil homeland." (2024).

4.      "Escalating land grabs threaten Tamils and Muslims in Sri Lanka." (2024).

5.      "Stubborn Push for Siege of Hindu Temples in North-East Sri Lanka." (2024).

6.      "Decades of betrayal: Fate of Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka." (2024).

7.      "Tamil Genocide." (n.d.).

8.      "UNHRC urged to intervene as Sri Lankan Tamils face continued oppression and injustice." (2024).

9.      "Sri Lanka: Shadow report." (2024).

10.   "History of Sri Lanka: Independent Ceylon (1948-71)." (n.d.).

11.   "Sri Lanka Independence Day: A legacy of colonialism and ethnic divides." (2024).

12.   Ponnambalam, G. G. "50-50 Speech." (1939).

13.   "G. G. Ponnambalam." (n.d.).

14.   "Sri Lankan militarisation continues in the Tamil homeland." (2024).

15.   "Sri Lankan Army still has vast presence in North-East." (2024).

16.   "Escalating land grabs threaten Tamils and Muslims in Sri Lanka." (2024).

17.   "Supreme Court stops land grab from war-affected Tamils." (2025).

18.   "Hindu temple in Anuradhapura destroyed for bus stop." (2025).

19.   "List of Hindu temples destroyed in Sri Lanka during colonial rule." (n.d.).

20.   "State-sponsored Sinhalese colonization." (n.d.).

21.   "Sinhalization of the North-East." (2023).

22.   "Sinhala Only Act." (n.d.).

23.   "Sinhala Only Bill." (n.d.).

24.   de Alwis, S. (2022). "Standardisation and ethnocracy in Sri Lanka."

25.   "Policy of standardisation." (n.d.).

26.   "Ceylon Citizenship Act." (n.d.).

27.   "Decades of betrayal: Fate of Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka." (2024).

28.   "UN extends evidence-gathering mandate for Sri Lanka war crimes." (2025).

29.   "War crimes during the final stages of the Sri Lankan Civil War." (n.d.).

30.   "Tamil Genocide." (n.d.).

31.   "Karaitivu 1985: The forgotten anti-Tamil pogrom." (2022).

32.   "Sri Lanka’s atrocities against Tamils in 2009 constitute genocide." (2022).

33.   "UNHRC urged to intervene as Sri Lankan Tamils face continued oppression and injustice." (2024).

34.   "ITJP torture report - 2024." (2024).

35.   "Tamil Genocide." (n.d.).

36.   "Expulsion of Muslims from Northern Province of Sri Lanka." (n.d.).

37.   "Sinhalese settlements and forced evictions of Tamils in the North-East Province." (n.d.).

38.   "UNHRC urged to intervene as Sri Lankan Tamils face continued oppression and injustice." (2024).

39.   "World Report 2025: Sri Lanka." (2025).

40.   "Sri Lanka: Shadow report." (2024).

41.   "UNHRC urged to intervene as Sri Lankan Tamils face continued oppression and injustice." (2024).

42.   "Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Tamil translation." (n.d.).

43.   "Tamil Rights Group." (n.d.).

44.   "Tamil Rights Group." (n.d.).

45.   "NCCT Canada: About." (n.d.).

46.   "In-text citations: The basics (APA style)." (n.d.).

47.   "Monitoring Human Rights: Chapter 13." (n.d.).


References

29

History of Sri Lanka - Independent Ceylon (1948–71) | Britannica

Sri Lanka Independence Day: A Legacy of Colonialism and Ethnic Divides

Ilankai Tamil Sangam

G. G. Ponnambalam - Wikipedia

Ceylon Citizenship Act - Wikipedia

Sinhala Only Act - Wikipedia

Sinhala Only Bill | Sinhala Language, Official Language, 1956 ...

Standardization and ethnocracy in Sri Lanka - UNU-WIDER

Policy of standardisation - Wikipedia

Sri Lankan militarisation continues in the Tamil homeland

Sri Lankan Army Still Has Vast Presence In North & East

World Report 2025: Sri Lanka | Human Rights Watch

Escalating Land Grabs Threaten Tamils & Muslims in Sri Lanka

Supreme Court stops land grab from war-affected Tamils

State-sponsored Sinhalese colonisation - Wikipedia

Sinhalization of the North-East – Ilankai Tamil Sangam

Hindu temple in Anuradhapura destroyed for bus stop

List of Hindu temples destroyed in Sri Lanka during colonial rule

Sinhalese Settlements and Forced Evictions of Tamils in the North-East ...

UN Extends Evidence-Gathering Mandate for Sri Lanka War Crimes

War crimes during the final stages of the Sri Lankan civil war

Tamil genocide - Wikipedia

PEARL: Sri Lanka’s Atrocities Against Tamils in 2009 Constitute ...

Karaitivu 1985: A Forgotten Anti-Tamil pogrom in the Shadow of Sri ...

DISAPPEARANCE, TORTURE AND SEXUAL VIOLENCE OF TAMILS

UNHRC Urged to Intervene as Sri Lankan Tamils Face Continued Oppression ...

CEDAW: Sri Lanka Shadow Report – Sri Lanka Campaign

Tamil Rights Group - International Advocacy Group - Markham, Canada

OHCHR | Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Tamil

 

Comments

  1. This work is incredible, highlighting the themes related to the genocide in Sri Lanka. For the UN, the term 'G word' is much more political and aligns with geopolitical interests. More academic writing is now needed to mainstream the Sri Lankan genocide than ever before.

    ReplyDelete

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