Welcome to this blogg. More than 80 million tamil people live in many countries across distant seas. There is no state without a Tamil - but there is no state for the tamils. Velkommen til denne bloggen. Her vil jeg oppdatere nyheter om tamiler og deres kamp for et selvstyre både på Sri Lanka og utenfor øya. என்னுடைய இந்த இணைத்தளத்திற்கு வருகை தந்தமைக்கு நன்றி: தமிழன் இல்லாத நாடில்லை, தமிழனுக்கென்று ஓர் நாடில்லை
Monday, 13 December 2010
Sri Lanka scraps Tamil version of its national anthem
Sri Lanka has scrapped the Tamil version of its national anthem at official and state functions, a move likely to further alienate the ethnic Tamils in the country.
Now the national anthem--'Sri Lanka matha....' can only be rendered in the majority Sinhala language at official functions, the Sri Lankan cabinet decided.
The decision was taken at the last cabinet meeting headed by the President Mahinda Rajapksha, who pointed out that no country in the world uses the national anthem in other than one language, the 'Sunday Times' reported today.
"The move will mean that the current Tamil version will no longer be played at any official or state functions"
The Sinhala version is widely used across the country except for the north and east where a majority speaks Tamil.
"A directive to use only the Sinhala version is to be sent out by the Ministry of Public Administration.
All government establishments will be called upon to adhere to this decision" the paper added.
President Rajapaksa told ministers that in no other country was the national anthem used in more than one language. He cited an instance where one time Prime Minister, the late Sirimavo Bandaranaike, had walked out of a function in the north where the national anthem was played in Tamil.
He said there could not be two national anthems and that it was a shortcoming that must be rectified. "We must all think of Sri Lanka as one country," Rajapaksa was quoted as saying by Sunday Times.
Minister Wimal Weerawansa supported President Rajapaksa's proposal. He said that even in neighbouring India, where around 300 languages were used, the national anthem was only in Hindi.
However, two Ministers voiced their dissent. National Languages and Social Integration Minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara said the move would not be a suitable one.
Minister Rajitha Senaratne also endorsed the same view. Later, the Cabinet decided to adhere only to the Sinhala version of the national anthem.
Kilde: The times of India
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