Tamil students complete 194km walk calling for release of political prisoners

Jaffna University students completed their 194km protest walk to Anuradhapura prison on Saturday and met with Tamil political prisoners who were hunger striking for their release.

The students and Tamil civil society members persuaded the political prisoners to suspend their hunger strike on health grounds, and all parties said they would look to Tamil political representatives one last time to secure the detainees’ futures.

While the students received support during their walk from Tamil locals along the route, an altercation occurred outside Anuradhapura prison when five Sinhalese men approached and vocalised their opposition to the students’ campaign.

The students also published a memo to the United Nations calling for pressure to secure the release of the political prisoners.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Global and entity tokens are replaced with their values. Browse available tokens.

Restricted HTML

  • You can align images (data-align="center"), but also videos, blockquotes, and so on.
  • You can caption images (data-caption="Text"), but also videos, blockquotes, and so on.
  • Global and entity tokens are replaced with their values. Browse available tokens.
  • You can embed media items (using the <drupal-media> tag).

We need your support

Sri Lanka is one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a journalist. Tamil journalists are particularly at threat, with at least 41 media workers known to have been killed by the Sri Lankan state or its paramilitaries during and after the armed conflict.

Despite the risks, our team on the ground remain committed to providing detailed and accurate reporting of developments in the Tamil homeland, across the island and around the world, as well as providing expert analysis and insight from the Tamil point of view

We need your support in keeping our journalism going. Support our work today.

link button