Sri Lanka deports British tourist for her Buddha tattoo
Court says it was an insult to the island's main religion.
COLOMBO:
Sri Lanka on Thursday deported a British tourist for having a tattoo of Buddha on her arm which a court said was an insult to the island's main religion.
Legally, there is no ban on a Buddha tattoo in Sri Lanka, but the predominantly Buddhist nation is very sensitive about its religion.
Naomi Coleman, a 37-year-old nurse left on a London-bound flight after being detained since her arrival on Monday from neighboring India.
"I just want to get out of this place. I have come twice to Sri Lanka, but I have never faced this with my tattoo," Coleman told Reuters by telephone shortly before she was deported.
"If there is a rule like this, Sri Lankan authorities should clearly say that Buddha tattoos are banned. I am a practicing Buddhist and Buddhism is all about compassion and kindness."
Buddhism is accorded the "foremost place" in Sri Lanka's constitution and about 70 percent of the island's 20 million people are Buddhist.
Authorities spotted Coleman's tattoo upon her arrival in Sri Lanka.
Senior immigration official Chulananda Perera said the court had decided to deport Coleman partly because she could have been "vulnerable" if allowed to stay.
"Some Sri Lankans could get offended," Perera told Reuters.
It was not the first time a tourist with such a tattoo has run into trouble in Sri Lanka. In 2013, authorities denied entry to a British man for his tattoo of Buddha.
Sri Lanka on Thursday deported a British tourist for having a tattoo of Buddha on her arm which a court said was an insult to the island's main religion.
Legally, there is no ban on a Buddha tattoo in Sri Lanka, but the predominantly Buddhist nation is very sensitive about its religion.
Naomi Coleman, a 37-year-old nurse left on a London-bound flight after being detained since her arrival on Monday from neighboring India.
"I just want to get out of this place. I have come twice to Sri Lanka, but I have never faced this with my tattoo," Coleman told Reuters by telephone shortly before she was deported.
"If there is a rule like this, Sri Lankan authorities should clearly say that Buddha tattoos are banned. I am a practicing Buddhist and Buddhism is all about compassion and kindness."
Buddhism is accorded the "foremost place" in Sri Lanka's constitution and about 70 percent of the island's 20 million people are Buddhist.
Authorities spotted Coleman's tattoo upon her arrival in Sri Lanka.
Senior immigration official Chulananda Perera said the court had decided to deport Coleman partly because she could have been "vulnerable" if allowed to stay.
"Some Sri Lankans could get offended," Perera told Reuters.
It was not the first time a tourist with such a tattoo has run into trouble in Sri Lanka. In 2013, authorities denied entry to a British man for his tattoo of Buddha.