Elephant Pass War Memorial
A dramatic roadside monument on the narrow isthmus that guards the gateway to the Jaffna Peninsula, scene of some of the war's fiercest battles.
The quiet capital of Sri Lanka's northern Vanni region, a rebuilding town of paddy fields and reservoirs that carries the raw history of the civil war's final chapter.
Kilinochchi is the main town of the Kilinochchi District, set on the A9 highway roughly midway between Vavuniya and Jaffna in the flat, dry Vanni heartland. Once the de facto administrative capital of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the town was almost entirely destroyed in the closing months of the war and has since been steadily rebuilt. Today it is a working agricultural town surrounded by paddy fields and irrigation tanks, best known to travellers as a place of poignant war memorials, the vast Iranamadu reservoir and easy access to the birdlife of Chundikkulam. It offers an authentic, off-the-beaten-path glimpse of the recovering north rather than polished tourist attractions.
The town grew around the A9 road and the northern railway line in the colonial and post-independence era. During the civil war it became the political and administrative centre of the LTTE from the late 1990s, holding government-style offices, courts and a police force. The Sri Lankan Army captured Kilinochchi on 2 January 2009 after prolonged fighting, a turning point that preceded the end of the war a few months later. Much of the town lay in ruins and has been reconstructed since, with the railway restored to Kilinochchi in 2014.
A dramatic roadside monument on the narrow isthmus that guards the gateway to the Jaffna Peninsula, scene of some of the war's fiercest battles.
One of Sri Lanka's largest irrigation reservoirs, a vast sheet of water southeast of Kilinochchi rimmed with birdlife and rural calm.
A lagoon-and-mangrove national park northeast of Kilinochchi, a haven for migratory water birds and wintering greater flamingos.
A striking monument in the centre of Kilinochchi town commemorating the army's capture of the LTTE's former capital in 2009.
A much-loved roadside Ganesha temple on the A9 where travellers stop to break a coconut and pray for a safe onward journey.
Halal and Vegetarian-friendly options are tagged below. Kosher food is not commercially available here; observant travellers usually self-cater or contact a Chabad house.
South Indian Vegetarian · Budget
A simple pure-vegetarian South Indian eatery serving crisp dosai, idli, vadai and rice-and-curry thalis at low prices, a reliable meat-free stop on the A9.
Sri Lankan, South Indian · Budget
A popular town-centre restaurant on the A9 serving Sri Lankan and South Indian rice and curry, kottu, fried rice and short eats, with plenty of vegetable dishes for meat-free travellers.
Sri Lankan Muslim, Halal · Budget
A dependable halal eatery on the highway serving biryani, kottu, rice and curry and short eats, a handy halal option for travellers passing through Kilinochchi.
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