ECONOMYNEXT – President Ranil Wickremesinghe said the government is committed to providing Malaiyaha Tamils with land titles and ensuring their right to education.
“The current government’s policy to uphold the rights of all Sri Lankan citizens, regardless of their background,” Wickremesinghe was quoted as saying at the Naam Irannura (We are 200) event, according to a statement from the president’s media division.
The Naam Irannura event held at Sugathadasa stadium yesterday (02) commemorated 200 years since the Indian Origin Tamils arrived in Sri Lanka from India.
A project to construct 10,000 houses in Kotagala with Indian assistance also commenced in Kotagala.
Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman placed the foundation stone for the housing project in the lower part of Mount Vernon Estate, Dimbula, Kotagala.
Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena said the program was the first time a comprehensive project had been initiated by the Sri Lankan government to fully “integrate the community into Sri Lankan society,” a statement quoted him as saying.
In August during a Parliamentary debate over a viral video of an estate manager harassing a Malaiyaha family living on estate land, minister of estate infrastructure development Jeevan Thondaman said the biggest issue with workers in the estate sector is that they are not considered as citizens of this country.
“They are considered more or less as assets and liabilities within the estates,” he said.
“There’s about 200,000 people in the estates who are workers and another 800,000 of their family members who are not given any rights, and not even recognised.”
Indian finance minister Sitharaman highlighted the substantial contributions of the Malaiyaha Tamil people to the Sri Lankan economy and expressed readiness for cooperation in the government’s efforts to secure their rights. (Colombo/Nov3/2023)