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Strike in Lanka to protest de-merger

All public activity comes to a standstill in protest against SC?s order to de-merge the North and East provinces, reports PK Balachandran.

Updated on: Oct 25, 2006 11:21 PM IST
None | By , Colombo
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All public activity came to a standstill in northeastern Sri Lanka on Wednesday in protest against the Sri Lankan Supreme Court’s order to de-merge the Tamil-speaking Northern and Eastern provinces.

HT Image
HT Image

Sources in Batticaloa, Amparai, Trincomalee and Jaffna districts told Hindustan Times that government offices and schools did not function. There was no public transport.

Most of the shopkeepers in most towns in the ethnically mixed East, except in predominantly Muslim towns like Kattankudy, Sammanthurai and Akkarapattu, had downed their shutters.

Akkaraipattu is the stronghold of government minister Athaullah, who is a vocal advocate of de-merger.

But even in the predominantly Muslim towns, half of the shops were closed. Locals said this was probably because of Eid.

If some shops were open in the Tamil areas it was because the Karuna group, a breakaway group of the LTTE, assisted by the Security Forces, was going around forcing traders to open their establishments, said Ariyanenthiran, a Tamil National Alliance MP for Battialcoa district.

M Sahabdeen, a Muslim columnist based in the East, said that 90 per cent of the Muslims of the Eastern Province were against the de-merger because it would not help the Muslims.

 
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