City
Epaper

30 Indian fishermen repatriated from Sri Lanka to India, says Indian High Commission

By ANI | Updated: April 7, 2026 08:45 IST

Colombo [Sri Lanka], April 7 : 30 Indian fishermen were repatriated from Sri Lanka on Tuesday and are on ...

Open in App

Colombo [Sri Lanka], April 7 : 30 Indian fishermen were repatriated from Sri Lanka on Tuesday and are on their way home, the Indian High Commission to Sri Lanka said on Tuesday.

Sharing the details in a post on X, the High Commission also posted the picture of the fishermen.

https://x.com/IndiainSL/status/2041343054041461160?s=20

Earlier in March, 14 detained Indian fishermen from Sri Lanka were repatriated.

https://x.com/IndiainSL/status/2032401940131586411?s=20

Previously, Sri Lankan MP Harsha de Silva toldthat the issue of Indian fishermen in Sri Lanka is a perennial issue and will not go away soon, because both sides depend on fishing for a living.

"This is a perennial issue, you know it's not going away because I think on both sides of the straits, you know, folks are depending on fish for their living. These are not, you know, big corporates these are small fishermen, and when the Indian trawlers come, and you can see the satellite images, you know, they do not come in dozens but rather in hundreds, and they go back, so the issue, I think, is a complicated one. You can't just say this is the line so you stay here, and you know somehow stay on this," he said.

Silva then said that it is more of a legal issue than a political.

"Yes, every foreign minister and deputy foreign minister worked on this. It is about bottom trawling and whether bottom trawling is a traditional fishing method, and you know, does it destroy the seabed? But as I said, I think the solution is economics-related, not legal," he said.

On February 22, 12 fishermen along with one boat from Pamban were apprehended by the Sri Lankan Navy while fishing in the Gulf of Mannar between Dhanushkodi and Thalaimannar. The Sri Lankan Navy seized a boat belonging to a fisherman identified as David from Pamban.The incident triggered unrest among fishermen in Pamban, with more than a hundred boats from the Pamban South Wadi Fishing Port having ventured into the sea at the time of the apprehension.

The issue of frequent arrests of Indian fishermen by Sri Lankan authorities has remained a longstanding concern between the two countries, particularly affecting fishing communities in Tamil Nadu.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyKandla Port pioneers methanol bunkering in step toward green shipping

TechnologyCoal dispatch begins from Gare Palma Sector–2 mine, boosting energy link between Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra

BusinessKandla Port pioneers methanol bunkering in step toward green shipping

BusinessCoal dispatch begins from Gare Palma Sector–2 mine, boosting energy link between Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra

NationalKandla Port pioneers methanol bunkering in step toward green shipping

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia and Austria set to deepen partnership during Chancellor Stocker's upcoming Delhi visit

InternationalAustrian Chancellor Christian Stocker to visit India; will discuss "strengthening bilateral cooperation" with PM Modi

InternationalSince 28 Feb, around 8,15,000 passengers travelled to India from West Asia amid conflict: MEA

InternationalOil shock to drag growth, raise inflation: IMF

InternationalBishops in Pakistan dimayed after court validates marriage of Christian minor