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Ethnic Conflict: The Tamil-Sinhalese Conflict in Sri Lanka

The document summarizes the ethnic conflict between the Tamil and Sinhalese ethnic groups in Sri Lanka. It discusses the origins and demographic breakdown of the groups, as well as the political, economic, and social tensions that have led to violence and civil war over the decades. It outlines the formation and goals of the militant Tamil Tigers group (LTTE), India's involvement in peace negotiations, and the ongoing challenges around achieving a lasting peace agreement.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views34 pages

Ethnic Conflict: The Tamil-Sinhalese Conflict in Sri Lanka

The document summarizes the ethnic conflict between the Tamil and Sinhalese ethnic groups in Sri Lanka. It discusses the origins and demographic breakdown of the groups, as well as the political, economic, and social tensions that have led to violence and civil war over the decades. It outlines the formation and goals of the militant Tamil Tigers group (LTTE), India's involvement in peace negotiations, and the ongoing challenges around achieving a lasting peace agreement.

Uploaded by

Eswar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

Ethnic Conflict

The Tamil-Sinhalese
Conflict in Sri Lanka

PLS 405: Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Democracy


Tamils in Sri Lanka

• 6th Amendment, Sri Lanka


Constitution
– “No person shall directly or indirectly,
in or outside Sri Lanka, support,
espouse, promote, finance, encourage
or advocate the establishment of a
separate State within the territory of
Sri Lanka”.
– Anyone who contravenes that provision
becomes liable to the imposition of
civic disability for up to 7 years, the
forfeiture of his movable and
immovable property... the loss of his
passport... the right to engage in any
trade or profession... In addition if he
is a Member of parliament, he loses
the seat.
2 / 34
Sri Lanka: Geography

• Indian Ocean island


• Size:
– 65,610 sq km
• Land Use:
– Around 30% of the total land is
dedicated to crop cultivation

5 / 34
Sri Lanka: Population

• Population:
– 19,668,000 (2005)

– Sinhalese: 78%
– Tamil: 18%

6 / 34
Sri Lanka: Religion

• Buddhism is dominant religion


• Division:
– Buddhist: 70%
– Hindu: 15%
– Christian: 8%
– Muslim: 7%

• Tamils are primarily Hindu


• Why?

7 / 34
Sri Lanka: Language

• Official Languages:
– Sinhala 90%
– Tamil 20%

• English Proficiency:
– English 10%

8 / 34
Sri Lanka: Government

• Official Title:
– Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri
Lanka
• Capital:
– Colombo
• President:
– Mahinda Rajapakse
• Prime Minister:
– Ratnasiri Wickremanayake

9 / 34
A Brief History

• The Sinhalese arrived in late


6th century BCE
• Tamil presence is noted
throughout the country’s
written history but its origins
are not dated
• Portuguese arrived in 1505 and
took control by 1517
• Dutch took control in 1638
• Britain took control by 1796
• Independence granted in 1948

10 / 34
Majority and Minority

• Many myths and legends


fabricated by the “Bhikkus” to
convince generations of
Sinhalese that the Hindu Tamils
should be considered a threat
• They tried to shape Sinhalese
national consciousness by
deliberately exaggerating
historical events

11 / 34
Majority or Minority?

• Sinhalese community began to


view itself as a small minority
living under the shadow of
grave threat posed to its
identity

• Tamil minority comprises two


distinct groups:
• Jaffna Tamils – Descendents of
first tribes
• Indian Tamils – Descendents of
Indian indentured servants

12 / 34
Sources of Contention

• Tensions rose due to Tamils


having a perceived economic
advantage over Sinhalese
– Adoption of Sinhala as official
language following independence
angered Tamils
– Lack of equal political opportunity
• Soulbury Commission 1944
– Provided on paper protection
against prejudicing of minority
interests that could easily be
overturned by constitutional
amendment
– Increase in Sinhalese Buddhist
Nationalism 13 / 34
New Trouble for Tamils

• PM Dudley Senanayake laid


down strict requirements for
citizenship that very few Indian
Tamils could meet
– Vast majority of Indian Tamils
became suddenly stateless and the
overall Tamil capacity to defend
their rights was reduced
– Successive governments enacted
discriminatory legislation and
policies and initiated programs of
colonization of traditionally Tamil
areas by Sinhalese peasants
– Tamils felt increasingly
marginalized
14 / 34
The LTTE

• Why did they think that


militancy was their only
remaining option?
– Sri Lanka is/was a democracy
• The Tamil New Tigers formed
– The largest and most powerful
militant group was the LTTE,
founded in 1972 as the Tamil New
Tigers
• The Tamil New Tigers joined
with several other militant
organizations to form the LTTE,
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
15 / 34
The LTTE

• As with many militancy groups,


it split
– In 1981, a faction broke away from
the LTTE to form the People’s
Liberation Organization of Tamil
Eelam (PLOTE)
– Rash of similar groups began
appearing in the 1980s

• Why would militancy groups be


prone to schisms?

16 / 34
The LTTE

• Initially, the violence:


– Assassination of political figures

• Changed:
– Eventually became a civil war

• What would make it change?


– The government’s stance during
anti-Tamil riots of 1983 made the
LTTE widen their target areas

17 / 34
Tamil Demands and
Sinhalese Responses
• Tamils seek political autonomy
(or independence) based on
their “right” to their territorial
homeland (Eelam) in the north
and east of the island
– Belief in this right stems from the
relative autonomy enjoyed prior to
British rule
– This claim is rejected by Sinhalese
who claim:
• It is their “religious-ethnic
destiny” to control the entire
island
• The Tamils are invaders
18 / 34
Internationalization

• Who does the international


community support and why?
– International community was
generally sympathetic to Tamil
cause

• Military help for Sri Lanka


– Received arms from several South
Asian states
– Counterinsurgency training from
Mossad

19 / 34
Internationalization

• India’s position
– India’s foreign intelligence agency
operated training camps in India
where Tamil insurgent groups were
trained in guerilla warfare and the
operation of sophisticated weapons
systems

• Why would India not support


the Sri Lankan government?

20 / 34
Indian Intervention

• Peace Talks (1983)

• Tamil demands: The Sri Lankan


government must recognize:
– The Sri Lankan Tamils as a distinct
nationality
– The Tamil traditional homeland in
the northern and eastern provinces
– The Tamil right of self-
determination
– The Sri Lankan citizenship of all
Tamils on the island, including
Indian Tamils

21 / 34
Indo-Sri Lankan Accord

• Signed in July 1987

• Provided for:
– Cessation of hostilities,
– Surrender of arms by the Tamil
insurgent groups
– Return of the Sri Lankan military to
the barracks
– India guarantor of the accord
– An 8000-strong Indian
peacekeeping force (IPKF)

22 / 34
Indo-Sri Lankan Accord

• Problems:
– No Tamil organization was a party
to the accord
– Insurgent groups were upset that it
did not grant the right to self-
determination
– Extremist Sinhalese politicians and
parts of the military were against it
– IPKF was not supposed to engage
in military action
• Later was ordered to crack
down on anyone who violated
the accord
• Poorly prepared for this task
23 / 34
Indo-Sri Lankan Accord

• Result:
– Resistance against accord grew
– Revival of militant Sinhalese
nationalism under the People's
Revolutionary Front (JVP)

• The End:
– In 1990, the Indian government
withdrew the IPKF

24 / 34
The Decade of the 1990s

• The departure of the IPKF led to


renewed fighting in the
northern and eastern provinces
and a very bloody JVP
insurrection in the south
• In 1995, the LTTE breaks a
cease-fire agreement after
three months

25 / 34
The Decade of the 1990s

• The LTTE came to be seen as


the main obstacle to peace by
the international community

• They were accused of:


– Drug trafficking and arms
smuggling to finance their fight
– Condemned for killing civilians
– Using torture
– Using children and women as
frontline combatants

26 / 34
Enter Norwegian

• Norway gets results!


– After months of talks with
government officials and LTTE
representatives, Norwegian
facilitators reached an indefinite
cease-fire agreement on February
23, 2002

27 / 34
Enter Norway

• The face-to-face talks began in


Thailand in September 2002
– The LTTE agreed to accept
autonomy and self-governance in
northeastern Sri Lanka
• December 2002:
– Agreement on federal political
system that would allow for Tamil
self-determination in Tamil-
dominated areas

28 / 34
Suspension of Peace Talks

• During the peace talks the LTTE


and the Sri Lankan government
continued to send contradictory
signals:
– The LTTE continued military build-
up and started to recruit heavily
and refused to rule out the option
of secession
– The Sri Lankan military also
recruited heavily and drew up
plans for a modernization of the
armed forces
• The LTTE abruptly suspended
the peace talks in April 2003
29 / 34
Today

• Skirmishes between LTTE rebels


and government forces were
decreasing until April 2006
– Riots broke out in the northeast
and explosions killed 16 people
– On 11 May 2006, the LTTE
attacked a Naval convoy
– The attack was seen as the most
blatant violation to date of the
2002 peace agreement
– On 16 October 2006, a LTTE
suicide attack on a Sri Lankan
naval convoy killed 93 sailors and
wounded 150 others
30 / 34
Today

– Peace talks ceased, and attacks by


LTTE rebels and government forces
have resumed

31 / 34
Current Prospects for Peace

• Rajapakse entered two-day


talks with the LTTE in Geneva
on 28 October 2006
• The talks, which were the first
in eight months, covered the
humanitarian crisis in Sri Lanka
– The first day of the negotiations
was dominated by back-and-forth
recriminations
– The second failed due to
disagreement on access to the
Jaffna peninsula
– The talks were deemed a failure

32 / 34
Current Prospects for Peace

• The LTTE’s top negotiator died


in late 2006
• Around the same time the
government enacted legislation
to increase its search and arrest
powers, aimed at the LTTE
• So far, more than 60,000
people have died in the Sri
Lankan conflict, over 3,000 of
those since late 2005

33 / 34
Comments?

34 / 34

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