The UK has always had a strong, albeit small, population of Sri Lankan Tamils deriving from colonial era immigration between Sri Lanka and the UK, but a surge in emigration from Sri Lanka took place after 1983, as the civil war caused living conditions deteriorate and placed many inhabitants in danger. "Tamil" is not one of the predefined tick-box answers for the ethnicity question on the
UK Census. The tick-box options under the "Asian" category include "Indian", "Pakistani" and "Bangladeshi", but respondents can also tick an "Any other Asian" or simply "other" box and write in their own answer. In the
2011 Census, the number of respondents writing in "Tamil" was 24,930 in
England, 128 in
Wales, 99 in
Scotland and 11 in
Northern Ireland. In the
2021 census, 68,178 people wrote in "Tamil" in England, 803 in Wales and 24 in Northern Ireland. 123 people wrote in "Tamil" in Scotland's 2022 census. The number of people in
England and Wales that speak
Tamil as their main language was recorded as 125,363 in the 2021 census. In Scotland's 2022 census, the number was 2,469. with a 2006
Human Rights Watch report putting the number of
Sri Lankan Tamils in the UK at 110,000. A 2009 article in the
FT Magazine put the number of Tamils at up to 200,000. They are spread out throughout the country. The largest population of British Sri Lankan Tamils can be found in London, chiefly in
Harrow (North West London),
East Ham and across
Redbridge (East London) and
Tooting (South London), although Tamil population can be find across North, East and South London. The community generally has far lower birth rates in comparison to other South Asian ethnic groups, with one child for two parents being the norm. == Socioeconomics ==