| Sri Lanka is the name of the island earlier      known as Ceylon and situated at the Southern extremity of the Indian Subcontinent,      separated from it at its narrowest point by 22 miles of sea called the Palk Strait. It  covers an area of 25,322 square miles almost the size of Ireland or  Tasmania and has a population of 18 million. Both the Sinhala and the  Tamil nations co-existed in the island for over 2,500 years, and shared  the rule of the island separately. Population ratio is approximately  74% Sinhala speaking and 26% Tamil speaking: Of the Sinhalese 93 % are  Buddhists and 7% Christians. Of the Tamil speakers, 60 % are Hindus, 28  % Muslims and 12 % Christians. The sources of the national conflict in Sri Lanka are      historical, economic, cultural & religious. In the words of David Selbourne of Ruskin      College, Oxford, it is "a true national question, if ever there was one". Both the Tamil People & Sinhalese people are      indigenous people of Sri Lanka. Early history records that they had their own monarchs and      kingdoms. They were conquered by the colonial powers separately and in  different periods      in history. They existed as separate communities until the British brought them together      in 1883 under a single administration (for the very first time in their long history). The European Colonial Era 1505 - Arrival of Portuguese - They first        occupied the low country Sinhalese areas in the south west of the Island. 1621 - Jaffna Tamil Kingdom fell to the        Portuguese (more than a century later). 1656 - Dutch occupied areas which were        under Portuguese control. 1802 - Treaty of Amiens - Dutch        possessions ceded to the British. 1815 - The Sinhalese Kandyan Kingdom in        the central parts conquered by the British, having annexed the Tamil Vanni Kingdom in the        north. 1833 -The British unified the island        based on the recommendations of Cole Brook - Cameron Commission (purely for administrative        convenience). 1931 - Donoughmore constitution - State        Council elected by Universal suffrage (the first people to exercise universal suffrage in        Asia). 1947 - Soulbury constitution adopted        & general elections held for the parliament of Ceylon. The Sinhala-Colonial Era 1948 - British grant independence under        the Soulbury constitution.The parliament, with its entrenched Sinhalese majority, legislates to disenfranchise        Tamils of [recent] Indian origin who have lived there for generations and have always exercised        their franchise. The Tamil people lost almost half of their representation in the        parliament.
 The state aided colonisation of Sinhalese people in Tamil areas promoted to annex Tamil        homelands and further reduce Tamil representation in the parliament.
 1956 - The Sinhalese Language was made        the only official language by legislation, disadvantaging Tamil people in dealing with the        state administration and denying them equal access to education and employment. 1957 - Bandaranaike - Chelvanayakam Pact        between the Sinhalese Prime Minister SWRD Bandaranaike and Tamil leader SJV Chelvanayakam        QC to meet some of the demands of the Tamil people. 1958  - The Pact was unilaterally abrogated by the Sinhalese Prime Minister  to pacify the extreme elements among the Sinhalese Buddhists. (He is  the father of the President of Sri Lanka Chandrika Kumaratunga (1995 -  ) He was assassinated by a Buddhist monk for his pact with the Tamils  in 1959. 1965 - Senanayake - Chelvanayakam Pact -        entered into, with another Sinhalese Prime minister Dudley Senanayake, and was never        implemented by the Sinhalese government. 1969 - The Privy Council in London        directs the Supreme Court in Sri Lanka to review the constitutionality of the Official        Language Act, since it violated s.29(2) the constitution. 1971 - The government responds by        abolishing appeals to Privy Council. The Tamil people's only avenue to seek justice        through independent judiciary came to an end. 1972- The new Republican Constitution was        adopted and imposed on the Tamil people without their consent. The only legal        safeguard provided by the entrenched section 29(2) of the Soulbury constitution, described        by the Privy Council in London that they "represent the solemn balance of rights        between the citizens of Ceylon, the fundamental condition on which inter se they accepted        the constitution; and these are therefore unalterable under the constitution", was        scrapped. Tamil  parties walked out of the constituent assembly. With this Tamil  participation of the democratic process in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) came to  an end. 1973 - Through a process of        standardization the government restricts entry of Tamil students to universities and        institutions of higher education.  1974 - The 4th International        Tamil literary conference in Jaffna was broken up by the police, where many died and        several were injured. 1976 - All the main Tamil political        parties unite under the leadership of SJV Chelvanayakam QC and at their First National        Convention declare:  "The Convention resolves that the restoration and reconstitution of          the Free, Sovereign, Secular, Socialist state of Tamil Eelam based on the right of          self-determination inherent to every nation has become inevitable in order to safeguard          the very existence of the Tamil nation in this country." 1977 - Historical mandate of the Tamil        people - The Tamil people gave a clear mandate at the general elections to establish        their sovereignty. The manifesto called for: "… in the general Election the mandate of the Tamil Nation to          establish an independent, sovereign, secular, socialist State of Tamil Eelam that includes          all the geographically contiguous areas that have been the traditional homeland of the          Tamil-speaking people in the country. "The Tamil nation must take the decision to establish its sovereignty          in its homeland on the basis of its right to self-determination. The only way to announce          this decision to the Sinhalese Government and to the world is to vote for TULF. The          Tamil-speaking representatives who get elected through these votes while being members of          the National State Assembly of Tamil Eelam which will draft a constitution for the state          of Tamil Eelam and establish the independence of Tamil Eelam by bringing that constitution          into operation either by peaceful means or by direct action or struggle". The Tamil resolution also called on  "The Tamil youth in particular to come forward to throw themselves          fully in the sacred fight for freedom and flinch not till the goal of a sovereign          socialist state of Tamil Eelam is reached". (The  Sinhalese Prime Minister of Sri Lanka from 1970 to 1977 was Mrs.  Srimavo Bandaranalke the present Prime Minister and the mother of the  President Chandrika Kumaratunge [1995 - ). The Anti-Tamil Violence - The Tamil people have        been subjected periodically to communal violence. There have been anti-Tamil riots and        pogroms in 1956,1958,1977 and culminating in the 1983 massacres and holocaust. Military occupation & Police brutality - First        in 1961 and then in 1974, 1979, 1981 and from 1983. Many historical monuments including        temples and churches were destroyed. (Attested in two reports by the International        Commission of Jurists, and in several other reports of independent international human        rights organisations). The armed struggle by the LTTE on behalf of the Tamil        people arose as a rebellion against the tyranny of the Sinhalese state and its brutal        repression of Tamil people. It is a just cause in pursuance of their democratic        aspirations, and the historic mandate, and therefore is lawful. 1983 - Sri Lanka commenced arbitrary        arrests and detention without trial, torture and rape, violence against women, summary        executions of the Tamil people. The era of mass exodus of Tamil refugees internally and        internationally begins. 1987 - UN Resolution on Sri Lanka country        situation for violation of Human Rights. Unsuccessful Indo Sri Lanka Accord and the        occupation of Tamil territories by Indian Army. India commenced deliberate and        indiscriminate bombing and shelling of Tamil territories. 1990 - Withdrawal of Indian Forces.        Unsuccessful Negotiations with United National Party Government. Sri Lanka recommenced        deliberate and indiscriminate bombings of Tamil territories. Economic Embargo enforced to        the North and part of the East. 1995 to date  - Unsuccessful Negotiations        with People Alliance Government, with resumption of the war. |