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11 - Post-armed Conflict Trajectories in Sri Lanka

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2014

Sumanasiri Liyanage
Affiliation:
University of Peradeniya
Thilanka Silva
Affiliation:
Sri Lanka
Priyankar Upadhyaya
Affiliation:
UNESCO Professor and Director at Malaviya Centre for Peace Research, Banaras Hindu University, India
Samrat Schmiem Kumar
Affiliation:
Research Fellow at the Department of Cultural Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo, Norway
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Summary

Introduction

The armed conflict in Sri Lanka arose as a manifestation of tensions between the two main ethnic groups in the country, i.e. the Sinhalese and the Tamils with its roots dating back to the British Colonial rule. Communal Representation which was an offshoot of the ‘divide and rule policy’ employed by the British Empire in administering colonies created diminutive cracks in the otherwise harmonious Sri Lankan society. The ‘Sinhala only Act’ deepened the crevices. The approximate cause of armed conflict came about in July 1983 when militants belonging to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (hereafter LTTE, which was one among many Tamil militant groups organized for creating a separate state for the Tamil nation in the North and East of the country) conducted an organized ambush on the Sri Lanka Army killing 13 soldiers. The events that ensued in the days thereafter are etched in the annals of modern Sri Lankan history as one of the bloodiest months the land has ever seen. Popularly known as ‘Black July’ this event is generally regarded as the commencement of full-scale hostilities between the Government of Sri Lanka (hereafter GoSL) and the LTTE.

After nearly three decades of war, the armed conflict that ravaged the economy, polity, society and culture in Sri Lanka finally came to an end on 18 May 2009 as the security forces of the Government of Sri Lanka succeeded in comprehensively defeating the LTTE which was renowned as one of the most powerful and ruthless secessionist groups. Almost the entire top leadership of the LTTE was decimated in the final phase of the military operation. The number of fatalities in the last phase of the battle is yet unknown. The Secretary, to the Ministry of Defence, has recently stated that casualties in the last phase of the war may be in the vicinity of 7000 people. Other estimates project higher numbers ranging from 10,000 to 20,000 people. It displaced internally about 275,000 people.

Type
Chapter
Information
Peace and Conflict
The South Asian Experience
, pp. 200 - 220
Publisher: Foundation Books
Print publication year: 2014

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