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Eastern Province, Sri Lanka

Province in Sri Lanka

Eastern Province, Sri Lanka

Summary

Province in Sri Lanka

FieldValue
<!-- See Template:Infobox settlement for additional fields and descriptions -->nameEastern Province
native_nameනැගෙනහිර පළාත
கிழக்கு மாகாணம்
settlement_typeProvince
<!-- images, nickname, motto --->image_skylineBatticaloa lagoon, sunset.jpg
imagesize250px
image_captionSunset over Batticaloa Lagoon
image_flagEastern Province Flag (SRI LANKA).png
anthem
image_mapSri Lanka Eastern Province locator map.svg
map_captionLocation within Sri Lanka
coordinates
coordinates_footnotes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSri Lanka
<!-- established --------------->established_titleCreated
established_date1 October 1833
established_title1Provincial council
established_date114 November 1987
founder
seat_typeCapital
seatTrincomalee
seat1_typeLargest City
seat1Kalmunai
parts_typeDistricts
parts_stylelist
p1Ampara
p2Batticaloa
p3Trincomalee
government_typeProvincial council
governing_bodyEastern Provincial Council
leader_titleGovernor
leader_nameJayantha Lal Ratnasekera
leader_title1Chief Minister
leader_title2MPs
leader_name2{{Collapsible list
titleList
<!-- display settings --------->unit_prefMetric
<!-- area ---------------------->area_footnotes
area_total_km29996
area_land_km29361
area_water_km2635
area_water_percent6.35
area_rank2nd (15.24% of total area)
area_note
elevation_m
population_footnotes
population_total1783214
population_rank6th (7.66% of total pop.)
population_as_of2024 census
population_density_km2auto
population_note
demographics_type1Ethnicity
demographics1_footnotes(2024 census)
demographics1_title1Sri Lankan Tamil
demographics1_info1678,549 (38.05%)
demographics1_title2Sri Lankan Moors
demographics1_info2703,561 (39.45%)
demographics1_title3Sinhalese
demographics1_info3392,114 (21.99%)
demographics1_title4Indian Tamil
demographics1_info42,421 (0.14%)
demographics1_title5Other
demographics1_info55,768 (0.41%)
<!-- demographics (section 2) -->demographics_type2Religion
demographics2_footnotes(2024 census)
demographics2_title1Muslim
demographics2_info1707,054 (39.65%)
demographics2_title2Hindu
demographics2_info2597,472 (33.50%)
demographics2_title3Buddhist
demographics2_info3389,119 (21.82%)
demographics2_title4Christian
demographics2_info489,435 (5.02%)
demographics2_title5Other
demographics2_info5134 (0.01%)
<!-- time zone(s) -------------->timezone1Sri Lanka
utc_offset1+05:30
<!-- postal codes, area code --->postal_code_typePost Codes
postal_code30000-32999
area_code_typeTelephone Codes
area_code026, 063, 065, 067
iso_codeLK-5
registration_plateEP
<!-- blank fields (section 1) -->blank_name_sec1Official Languages
blank_info_sec1Tamil, Sinhalese
<!-- website, footnotes -------->website
seat2_typeCities & Towns
seat2{{collapsible list

கிழக்கு மாகாணம் | Roshan Akmeemana | Wasantha Piyathissa | Muthumenike Rathwatte | P. Dayaratna | Cassim Faizal | M. K. A. S. Gunawardena | H. M. M. Harees | M. L. A. M. Hisbullah | Podiappuhamy Piyasena | Arun Hemachandra | R. Sampanthan | Basheer Segu Dawood | P. Selvarasa | M. S. Thowfeek | Imran Maharoof | Sriyani Wijewickrama | S. Yogeswaran | * Batticaloa | * Ampara | * Kattankudy | * Eravur | * Akkaraipattu | * Pottuvil | * Sammanthurai}} The Eastern Province ( Næ̆gĕnahira Paḷāta , Kiḻakku Mākāṇam) is one of the nine provinces of Sri Lanka, the first level administrative division of the country. The provinces have existed since the 19th century but did not have any legal status until 1987 when the 13th Amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka established provincial councils. Between 1988 and 2006 the province was temporarily merged with the Northern Province to form the North Eastern Province. The capital of the province is Trincomalee. Kalmunai is the largest and most populous city of Eastern Province.

History

[[Batticaloa Fort]], built by the Portuguese in 1628
Developed Batticaloa-Polonnaruwa Road
New Oddamavadi Bridge

In 1815 the British gained control of the entire island of Ceylon. They divided the island into three ethnic based administrative structures: Low Country Sinhalese, Kandyan Sinhalese and Tamil. The Eastern Province was part of the Tamil administration. In 1833, in accordance with the recommendations of the Colebrooke-Cameron Commission, the ethnic based administrative structures were unified into a single administration divided into five geographic provinces. The districts of Batticaloa, Bintenna (part of present-day Badulla District), Tamankaduva (present day Polonnaruwa District) and Trincomalee formed the new Eastern Province. Tamankaduva was transferred to the newly created North Central Province in 1873 and Bintenna was transferred to the newly created Uva Province in 1886.

The Indo-Lanka Accord signed on 29 July 1987 required the Sri Lankan government to devolve powers to the provinces and, in the interim, to merge the Northern and Eastern provinces into one administrative unit. The accord required a referendum to be held by 31 December 1988 in the Eastern Province to decide whether the merger should be permanent. Crucially, the accord allowed the Sri Lankan president to postpone the referendum at his discretion.

On 14 November 1987 the Sri Lankan Parliament passed the 13th Amendment to the 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka and the Provincial Councils Act No 42 of 1987, establishing provincial councils. On September 2 and 8 1988 President Jayewardene issued proclamations enabling the Northern and Eastern provinces to be one administrative unit administered by one elected Council. The North-East Province was born.

The proclamations were only meant to be a temporary measure until a referendum was held in the Eastern Province on a permanent merger between the two provinces. However, the referendum was never held and successive Sri Lankan presidents issued proclamations annually extending the life of the "temporary" entity.

The merger was bitterly opposed by Sri Lankan nationalists. The combined North-East Province occupied one fourth of Sri Lanka. The thought of the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam controlling this province, directly or indirectly, alarmed them greatly. On 14 July 2006, after a long campaign against the merger, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna political party filed three separate petitions with the Supreme Court requesting a separate provincial council for the East. On 16 October 2006 the Supreme Court ruled that the proclamations issued by President Jayewardene were null and void and had no legal effect. The North-East Province was formally de-merged into the Northern and Eastern provinces on 1 January 2007.

Much of the Eastern Province was under the control of rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam for many years during the civil war. The entire province was recaptured by the Sri Lankan military in 2007. Many community members blamed Pro-Government Tamil groups such as the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP). In 2008 due to the indiscriminate firearm use by various Tamil factions government planned to disarm Tamil Paramilitary groups. However the TMVP kept arms due to threat of LTTE and denied they were active in Civilian areas. TMVP was finally disarmed in 2009 after the LTTE was defeated.

The Eastern Province has received at least $500 million from international donors since coming under the control of the government of Sri Lanka in 2007, according to the International Crisis Group. Since the end of the war the Eastern Province has seen considerable development under the Nagenahira Navodaya (Eastern Revival) program which include various agricultural, infrastructural and social development projects. These include the construction and repairing of roads, schools, hospitals, resettlement of IDPs and construction of 88 Nanasala ICT education centers in the Eastern Province. Other Projects include reconstructing the Walai Iravu bridge which was destroyed by the LTTE, developing the Weber stadium in the Batticaloa town, increasing agricultural production, construction of Manmunai, Vavunativu and New Oddamavadi bridges, constructing 48,000 houses for people who live below the poverty line, developing the Trincomalee Harbour, construction of the Sampur Power Station, development of a maritime park and museum in Trincomalee, creation of the Sampur industrial zone, development of bus stands, canals and the Oluvil Harbour in Ampara district.

Geography

Fishing boats on Batticaloa lagoon

Eastern province has an area of 9996 km2.

The province is surrounded by the Northern Province to the north, the Bay of Bengal to the east, the Southern Province to the south, and the Uva, Central and North Central provinces to the west.

The province's coast is dominated by lagoons, the largest being Batticaloa Lagoon, Kokkilai lagoon, Upaar Lagoon and Ullackalie Lagoon.

Administrative units, cities and towns

Administrative units

The Eastern Province is divided into 3 administrative districts, 45 Divisional Secretary's Divisions (DS Divisions) and 1,085 Grama Niladhari Divisions (GN Divisions).

DistrictCapitalDistrict SecretaryDS
DivisionsGN
DivisionsTotal
Area
(km2)Land
Area
(km2)Population (2024 Census)Population
Density
(/km2)Sri Lankan Tamilstyle="width:70px;"Sri Lankan Moorsstyle="vertical-align:bottom; width:70px;"Sinhalesestyle="width:70px;"Indian Tamilstyle="vertical-align:bottom; width:70px;"Otherstyle="vertical-align:bottom; width:70px;"Total
AmparaAmparaThusitha P Wanigasinghe205074,4154,222125,751339,290276,583
BatticaloaBatticaloa143482,8542,610424,710160,2846,855
TrincomaleeTrincomaleeT. Thissa Ranjith de Silva112302,7272,529128,088203,987108,676
Total451,0859,9969,361678,549703,561392,1142,4217,233

Major cities and towns

City/townDistrictPopulation
(2012
est)
KalmunaiAmpara106,783
TrincomaleeTrincomalee99,135
BatticaloaBatticaloa92,332
KattankudyBatticaloa40,883
EravurBatticaloa25,582
AmparaAmpara20,309

Demographics

Population

The Eastern province's population was 1,783,214 in 2024. The province is the most diverse in Sri Lanka, both ethnically and religiously.

The population of the province, like that of the Northern Province, was heavily affected by the civil war. The war killed an estimated 100,000 people. Several hundred thousand Sri Lankan Tamils, possibly as much as one million, emigrated to the West during the war. Many Sri Lankan Tamils also moved to the relative safety of the capital Colombo. The conflict has also caused some of the Tamils, Moors and Sinhalese who lived in the province to flee to other parts of Sri Lanka, though most of them have returned to the province since the end of the civil war.

Ethnicity

YearTamilMuslimSinhaleseOtherTotal
No.No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%
1881 Census75,31858.96%43,00133.66%5,9474.66%
1891 Census86,70158.41%51,20634.50%7,5085.06%
1901 Census96,91755.83%62,44835.97%8,7785.06%
1911 Census101,18155.08%70,39538.32%6,9093.76%
1921 Census103,24553.54%75,99239.41%8,7444.53%
1946 Census136,05948.75%109,02439.06%23,4568.40%
1953 Census167,89847.37%135,32238.18%46,47013.11%
1963 Census246,05945.03%184,43433.75%108,63619.88%
1971 Census315,56643.98%247,17834.45%148,57220.70%
1981 Census410,15642.06%315,43632.34%243,70124.99%
2001 Censusn/an/an/an/an/an/a
2007 Enumeration590,13240.39%549,85737.64%316,10121.64%
2012 Census617,29539.79%569,73836.72%359,13623.15%
2024 Census680,97038.19%703,56139.45%392,11421.99%

Religion

Islam is the plurality religion in Eastern Province.

YearMuslimHinduBuddhistChristianOtherTotal
No.No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%style="width:60px;"No.style="width:50px;"%
1981 Census317,35432.54%372,46438.19%237,41624.34%47,112
2012 Census575,93637.12%539,57034.78%354,77222.87%80,801
2024 Census707,05439.65%597,47233.51%389,11921.82%89,435

Economy

Trincomalee Harbour plays a huge role in the province's economy

The Eastern Province has a primarily agriculture-based economy and is commonly known as the "Granary of Sri Lanka". It contributes 25% of national paddy production, 17% of national milk production, and 21% of national fish production. Maize cultivation is expanding, large scale maize cultivation with hybrid seeds and contractual marketing has increased production significantly and it is targeted to produce 25% of the country's maize requirement. The industrial sector contributed 34% of the Province's GDP and export processing zones like the Trincomalee EPZ and Sampur Heavy Industrial Zone have been developed to boost the industrial sector alongside the Trincomalee Harbour, which is being developed for break bulk, bulk cargo and industrial activities including heavy industries.

The province benefits from a large tourism industry with many seaside resorts and hotels situated mainly in lagoons as well as beaches such as Pasikudah, Nilaveli, Uppuveli and Kalkudah. Historic sites and other natural attractions such as Pigeon Island contribute to the industry.

Government and politics

Provincial council

Main article: Eastern Provincial Council

The 13th Amendment to the 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka established provincial councils. The first elections for provincial councils took place on 28 April 1988 in North Central, North Western, Sabaragamuwa, and Uva provinces.

Elections in the newly merged North-East Province were scheduled for 19 November 1988. However, the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF), which at that time occupied the North-East Province, rigged the elections in the north so that the Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) and Eelam National Democratic Liberation Front (ENDLF), two Indian backed paramilitary groups, won all of the 36 seats in the north uncontested. However, elections did take place for the 35 seats in the east. The Sri Lanka Muslim Congress won 17 seats, EPRLF 12 seats, ENDLF 5 seats and the United National Party 1 seat. On 10 December 1988 Annamalai Varatharajah Perumal of the EPRLF became the first Chief Minister of the North-East Provincial Council.

On 1 March 1990, just as the IPKF were preparing to withdraw from Sri Lanka, Permual moved a motion in the North-East Provincial Council declaring an independent Eelam. President Premadasa reacted to Permual's UDI by dissolving the provincial council and imposing direct rule on the province.

The north-east was ruled directly from Colombo until May 2008 when elections were held in the demerged Eastern Province (the Northern Province continued to be governed from Colombo).

Notes

References

References

  1. "Provinces of Sri Lanka". Statoids.
  2. "Provincial Councils". [[Government of Sri Lanka]].
  3. Mills, Lennox A.. (1933). "Ceylon Under British Rule (1795 - 1932)". [[Oxford University Press]].
  4. Medis, G. C.. (1946). "Ceylon Under the British". The Colombo Apothecaries Co..
  5. Medis, G. C.. (1946). "Ceylon Under the British". The Colombo Apothecaries Co..
  6. "Indo Sri Lanka Agreement, 1987". Tamil Nation.
  7. "The Constitution". [[Government of Sri Lanka]].
  8. "North-East merger illegal: SC". LankaNewspapers.com.
  9. Sambandan, V. S.. (14 November 2003). "Sri Lanka's North-East to remain united for another year". [[The Hindu]].
  10. [http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/asia/090430/eastern-province-offers-glimpse-post-war-sri-lanka East offers glimpse of post-war Sri Lanka] {{webarchive. link. (May 10, 2009 , by Maura R. O'Connor, Global Post, 1 May 2009)
  11. (2008). "TMVP to be disarmed".
  12. (9 April 2008). "Suicidal for us to disarm right now: TMVP".
  13. (12 February 2009). ""TMVP to disarm completely" Global Tamil News".
  14. link. (2009-05-13 , Asia Report No. 165, [[International Crisis Group]], 16 April 2009)
  15. "Northern Spring (Uthuru Wasanthaya) and Eastern Revival (Negenahira Navodaya) | ICES".
  16. "The Island".
  17. "Features | Sundayobserver.lk - Sri Lanka".
  18. "Daily Mirror - Sri Lanka Latest Breaking News and Headlines".
  19. "Development.lk".
  20. "Ampara to become major transport hub".
  21. "Features | Online edition of Daily News - Lakehouse Newspapers".
  22. "Area of Sri Lanka by province and district". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  23. (July 2021). "Sri Lanka: largest cities and towns and statistics of their population". World Gazetteer}}{{dead link.
  24. (20 May 2009). "Up to 100,000 killed in Sri Lanka's civil war: UN". [[ABC News (Australia)]].
  25. Harrison, Frances. (23 July 2003). "Twenty years on - riots that led to war". [[BBC News]].
  26. "A2 : Population by ethnic group according to districts, 2012". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  27. "Special Enumeration 2007, Ampara". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  28. "Special Enumeration 2007, Batticaloa". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  29. "Special Enumeration 2007, Trincomalee". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  30. "Demographic Changes by the LTTE Peace Secretariat, April 2008". Sangam.
  31. (Oct 30, 2025). "Basic Population Information by Districts and Divisional Secretary Divisions".
  32. "A3 : Population by religion according to districts, 2012". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  33. "Population by religion and district, Census 1981, 2001". Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka.
  34. "investineast.lk Eastern Province economy".
  35. "Sundaytimes.lk "Developing the varied resources of the Eastern Province".
  36. (19 January 2014). "ceylontoday Sampur Project Commences".
  37. "Investineast.lk Infrastructure".
  38. Fernando, Shashini. "A treasure of dreams just waiting to open - Nilaveli Beach".
  39. Fernando, Shashini. "An Ideal destination for a sea bath - Pasikuda beach".
  40. "Lapping up the luxury and the view on Nilaveli beach".
  41. "A 'hotel away from hotel' rises in the East {{!}} The Sunday Times Sri Lanka".
  42. [http://www.ices.lk/sl_database/ethnic_conflict/time_line.shtml Ethnic Conflict of Sri Lanka: Time Line - From Independence to 1999, ICES] {{webarchive. link. (December 12, 2009)
  43. [https://web.archive.org/web/20020427122344/http://www.atimes.com/ind-pak/DD20Df03.html Sri Lanka" The Untold Story by K T Rajasingham (via Asia Times)]
  44. "I'm no traitor, says Perumal, Sunday Island 10 September 2000".
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