Kilinochchi

Kilinochchi (Tamil: கிளிநொச்சி, IAST Kilinocci, Sinhala: කිලිනොච්චි) is the main town of Kilinochchi District, Northern Province of Sri Lanka. Kilinochchi is situated at the A9 road some 100 km (62 mi) south-east of Jaffna. It was the administrative center and de facto capital of the LTTE (Tamil Tigers)[1] until 2 January 2009, when troops of the Sri Lankan Army recaptured the city.

Kilinochchi

கிளிநொச்சி
කිලිනොච්චි
Kilinochchi courthouse
Kilinochchi
Coordinates: 9°23′N 80°24′E
CountrySri Lanka
ProvinceNorthern
DistrictKilinochchi
DS DivisionKarachchi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (Sri Lanka Standard Time Zone)

History

Creation (1936)

The Kilinochchi town was established in 1936 as part of a colonization project that sought to ease overpopulation and unemployment in Jaffna.[2]

Kilinochchi is still part of Jaffna electoral division and it was separated from the Jaffna district in the 1980s as a new district. Most of the people living in this district are farmers and related to agricultural work. Most of the people were migrated from Jaffna to acquire government grants for land and to engage in paddy (rice) cultivation. They were then migrated overseas (Europe, US, Canada, Australia, etc.) during the civil war (1990 onward). The population is rising again after the end of the civil war.

Sri Lankan Civil War

LTTE troops in Kilinochchi, 2004

The LTTE first took hold of the town in 1990 when the Army withdrew its garrisons from Kilinochchi. Then the area was retaken by the Army during operations Sathjaya I, II, and III in September 1996. The town again fell into the LTTE's hand in September 1998 who held their administrative hub there until retreating during the Battle of Kilinochchi on 2 January 2009.[3]

Several institutions of the LTTE were forced to relocate from Kilinochchi to Tharmapuram, a town about 13 km in the east, by early October, 2008 in fear of death by advancing government troops. Security Forces Headquarters – Kilinochchi was established on June 29, 2009 in the town.

Demography

Most people living in Kilinochchi are Sri Lankan Tamils.

Economy

Kilinochchi is one of the major agrarian cultivation destinations in the island from the pre-historic times. Iranamadu (Ranamaduva) Tank, Kanakampikai Kulam (Pond), and Kilinochchi Kulam are the major irrigation source for paddy and various other cultivations.

Transport

Kilinochchi is connected to the Sri Lanka railways northern line via its railway station.

Media

Kilinochchi is served with all Jaffna- and Colombo-based newspapers. The Jaffna-based Uthayan has a regional office in Kilinochchi.

There have been discussions of not distributing Jaffna-based newspapers in the Vanni area, especially Uthayan. Uthayan is highly critical of inappropriate land acquisition in the Jaffna peninsula and the Vanni region by the Sri Lankan Military and Government.

Education

This district has one university faculty and several Government Colleges such as Faculty of Agriculture of University of Jaffna, Kilinochchi Central College, Hindu College, Uruthirapuram Maha Vidiyalayam school, Vaddakkachchi Maha Vidyalayam school, etc.

gollark: If you trust the whatsit.
gollark: There *are* a few hundred on at any given time.
gollark: Anyway, good luck, people of the discord! Hopefully one of us will win!How many people enter anyway?
gollark: What would you breed it with?
gollark: Of course, if it's invisible, we can't tell what color it is.

References

  1. IRIN (25 March 2010) "Sri Lanka: Former rebel capital struggles with returnee influx" AlertNet, Reuters, accessed 25 March 2010, archived at original IRIN page
  2. Manogaran, Chelvadurai (1987). Ethnic conflicts and reconciliation in Sri Lanka. University of Hawaii Press. p. 90. ISBN 0-8248-1116-X.
  3. "Ruined remains of rebel 'capital'", BBC, January 5, 2009
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