Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day (or simply Mullivaikkal Day; Tamil: முள்ளிவாய்க்கால் நினைவு நாள்Muḷḷivāykkāl Niṉaivu Nāḷ) is a remembrance day observed by Sri Lankan Tamils to remember those who were killed during the final stages of the Sri Lankan Civil War. It is held each year on 18 May, the date on which the civil war ended in 2009, and is named after Mullivaikkal, a village on the northeastern coast of Sri Lanka which was the scene of the final battle of the civil war and the site of the Mullivaikkal massacre.
The Sri Lankan government, which formerly declared 18 May as Victory Day, celebrates the day with military parades.[17] The day is also a commemoration for dead military personnel who are celebrated as "war heroes".[18] However, there was no official commemoration for the thousands of Tamil civilians killed in the civil war despite the government's own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission recommending that all citizens killed during the war be commemorated on National Day (4 February).[19][20] Instead, the government has virtually banned Tamils from commemorating their war dead.[21][22] In the run up to 18 May, security is tightened in the Tamil-majority Northern and Eastern provinces and schools and universities are closed to prevent any public commemoration.[23][24][25]
The government and its security forces regard any commemoration by Tamils to be commemoration of the LTTE, not civilians.[26] The security forces claim that Tamils may commemorate dead LTTE members in private but there have been reports of the military entering homes to prevent commemoration.[27][28]
Despite the security restrictions, Tamils in Sri Lanka hold small events on 18 May, which they call Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day, to commemorate those killed.[31][32][33] Public commemorations are dealt with harshly by Sri Lankan security forces,[34][35] and Sri Lankan Tamil politicians have been arrested for commemorating Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day.[36][37]
In the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, political parties, youth organizations, and social movement groups organize a number of remembrance events across the state.[38][39][40]
Amongst the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora, where there are no restrictions on commemorating Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day, large public gatherings are held.[41][42][43][44]
In 2022, the Parliament of Canada adopted a motion to mark May 18 as Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day.[45] In 2023, Mayor of BramptonPatrick Brown commemorated Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day with a ground breaking for a Tamil Genocide monument to be built in the city of Brampton.[46]