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Home > Ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka


 

1 Overview

Since independence (from the British Empire in 1948), the struggle between majority Sinhala-speaking Buddhists and minority Tamils (mostly Hindu) was a regular feature of political life in Sri Lanka. There was also occasionally significant personal and property violence, and since 1983 there has been on-and-off civil war, mostly between the government and the LTTE -- the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Tens of thousands have died in the war, which has included terrorist tactics by the LTTE, village-scale slaughters on both sides, government "disappearances", etc. Hundreds of thousands of refugees are displaced internally or have fled to Tamil Nadu and around the world. The largest concentration of Lankan Tamils outside the country is in Toronto.

2 Background and origins

Concerns about minority representation were expressed and given some attention during the independence struggle, but nothing was incorporated into the new governmental structure. Official and unofficial governmental preference for Sinhalese became a sore spot with Tamils as they lost employment and educational opportunities.

Sinhalese argue that Tamils received preferential treatment under British rule. By the time of independence, there were more British built schools in Tamil dominated Jaffna than in the rest of the island. There also was a disproportionate number of Tamils in the civil service, medicineSee drugs, medication, and pharmacology for substances that treat patients. This article is about medical practice. Medicine is a branch of health science concerned with restoring and maintaining health and wellness. Broadly, it is the practical science o and lawThis article is about law in society. For other possible meanings, see law (disambiguation). Law (a loanword from Danish-Norwegian lov , in politics and jurisprudence, is a set of rules of conduct which mandate or proscribe (or both) specified relationshi. Tamils claim that measures taken by the Sinhalese-majority governments discriminated against them. Examples include the Sinhala-only Act of 19561956 is a leap year starting on Sunday. see link for calendar) Events January January 1 End of Anglo- Egyptian Condominium in Sudan. January 16 President Gamal Abdal Nasser of Egypt vows to reconquer Palestine January 26 1956 Winter Olympic Games open in, which restricted many government jobs to Sinhala speakers, and changes in university admissions policies which greatly reduced the number of Tamils getting higher education.

In the decades after independence, Tamils supported a more federal system through the Federal Party. The concept of a separate nation, Tamil EelamTamil Eelam is the name given to a separate Tamil state that rebels in the northern and eastern provinces of Sri Lanka are fighting for. Overview The concept of Eelam or homeland was proposed by the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) in 1976. TULF was a, was proposed by the Tamil United Liberation FrontThe Tamil United Liberation Front (in Sinhala: Tamil Vimuktasi Peramuna is a political group in Sri Lanka, which seeks autonomy or independence for the Tamil-populated areas of Sri Lanka, which they call Tamil Eelam. On May 4, 1972 several Tamil political (TULF) in 19761976 is a leap year starting on Thursday (link will take you to calendar). Events January January 12 UN Security Council votes 11-1 to admit the Palestinian Liberation Organization January 15 Would-be Gerald Ford presidential assassin Sara Jane Moore is s. TULF was a coalition of Tamil parties who went on to campaign in the 1977For the album by Ash, see 1977 (album). Events January 1 First woman Episcopal priest ordained January 6 EMI sacks the Sex Pistols January 18 Scientists identify a previously unknown bacterium as the cause of the mysterious " legionnaire's disease" Januar elections for an independent state for Tamils in Sri Lanka. They won and went to Parliament to represent the northern and eastern provinces. The government banned TULF representatives from parliament for advocating an independent state. Talk and nonviolence actions continued, but youths started to form militant groups, some funded by bank robberies, and military presence in the north also grew.

A deadly attack on the military in the north sparked riots in Colombo and elsewhere in 1983. Thousands of Tamils died in the violence, and many more fled Sinhalese-majority areas. This is usually taken as the beginning of the ethnic conflict. Attacks and counterattacks became common, and support on both sides for violence grew.

Initially there was a plethora of different resistance groups. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam's position, attempting to learn from the PLO, was that there should be only one. Over time the LTTE, often bloodily, merged with or eliminated almost all the other groups.



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