2025: A Year of Reckoning


In Mannar, local communities mobilized against sand mining extraction projects and wind farm developments that threaten the island’s fragile ecology and cultural heritage. Although renewable energy is crucial for Sri Lanka’s future, environmental concerns raise urgent questions about transparency, governance and survival for local communities.
While parliament celebrated its highest-ever number of female representatives, this milestone was marred by digital violence and sexist abuse towards them. Additionally, the tragic suicide of a young schoolgirl Amshi, exposed a culture of failing to protect victims of sexual abuse. Initiatives for LGBTIQ-inclusive tourism were met with fierce online vitriol, misunderstanding inclusivity as a threat of ‘promoting homosexuality.’ These incidents suggest that while the political surface has shifted, there is a deep-seated social conservatism that remains entrenched in society.
On November 28th, Cyclone Ditwah, the most destructive natural disaster since the 2004 tsunami, claimed over 650 lives and affected over a million people. The tragedy exposed institutional failures, and state negligenceleft the population vulnerable despite accurate scientific forecasts. Critically, Ditwah laid bare the reality of climate injustice. The impact was disproportionately severe for the Hill Country Tamil community in Nuwara Eliya and Badulla. Living in landslide-prone plantation settlements, this socio-economically marginalized group bore the brunt of the storm’s fury. While local communities self-mobilized amidst global media silence, the state’s response faced immediate scrutiny.
Looking towards 2026, we must now find ways to learn from this disaster and navigate the road to recovery.








