Nimalan Soundaranayagam
Honourable Ashley Nimalanayagam Soundaranayagam MP | |
---|---|
Member of the Sri Lanka Parliament for Batticaloa District | |
In office 2000–2000 | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Morokottanchenai, Batticaloa, Sri Lanka | 6 November 1950
Died |
7 November 2000 50) Kiran, Sri Lanka | (aged
Political party | Tamil United Liberation Front |
Spouse(s) | Christina Jeyaranji Soundranayagam |
Profession | Teacher |
Religion | Christian |
Ethnicity | Sri Lankan Tamil |
Ashley Nimalanayagam Soundaranayagam (6 November 1950 – 7 November 2000) was a Sri Lankan Tamil teacher, politician and Member of Parliament.
Soundaranayagam was born on 6 November 1950, in Morokkotanchenai, Batticaloa District in Eastern Sri Lanka.[1] He was a school principal.[2]
He was elected to Parliament to represent the Kalkudah Electoral District in the 2000 parliamentary elections .[3] He secured the position with a total of 15,687 personal preference votes.[4]
Soundaranayagam was assassinated on 7 November 2000 in Kiran,less than a month after the October 10 elections.[2][5] His private secretary who was travelling with him during the assassination, had only sustained minor injury during the attack, and was later held on suspicion by the police.[6] The assassination was blamed on Karuna Amman, the Eastern Regional Commander for the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.[7][8]
The assassination brought out the public's frustration both at LTTE, and also at the Sri Lankan government. The LTTE were criticized for their long history of assassinating Tamil political figures who sought and end to ethnic conflicts through democracy. The Sri Lankan government on the other hand, were criticized for not acting against these assassinations and protecting the democratic freedom of the Tamil people.[8]
References
- ↑ "Soundranayagam, Ashley Nimalanayagam". Parliament of Sri Lanka.
- 1 2 "Batticaloa MP shot dead". TamilNet. 7 November 2000.
- ↑ "General Election 2000 Preferences" (PDF). Department of Elections, Sri Lanka.
- ↑ "Pararajasingham elected on final count".
- ↑ Subramanian, Nirupama (8 November 2000). "TULF MP shot". The Hindu.
- ↑ "Private Secretary to assassinated TULF MP arrested".
- ↑ Jeyaraj, D. B. S. (16 March 2008). "Assassinating Tamil Parliamentarians: The unceasing waves". The Nation (Sri Lanka).
- 1 2 "Special Report No 17 - Rewarding Tyranny: Undermining the Democratic Potential for Peace". University Teachers for Human Rights. 7 October 2003.