New Approach: The Democratic Path to Peace in Sri Lanka. New Approach: The Democratic Path to Peace in Sri Lanka.

New Approach: The Democratic Path to Peace in Sri Lanka‪.‬

Harvard International Review 1996, Summer, 18, 3

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

THE PEOPLE'S ALLIANCE GOVERNMENT which assumed office in Sri Lanka in 1994 inherited a complex of issues often referred to as "the ethnic conflict," the discord between the Sinhalese and Tamil communities, which respectively comprise 74 percent and 13 percent of the country's population. Earlier administrations sought to solve the conflict through military defeat of the Tamil rebellion. Were military victory alone sufficient to resolve the conflict, the present government could claim some success in restoring peace and civil government to Jaffna, the northern city once the stronghold of the militant Tamil group, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). But the present government of Sri Lanka has taken the position that only meaningful political and economic change can truly resolve the conflict. The issues underlying the ethnic discord can only be successfully addressed by a comprehensive and feasible constitutional arrangement that provides for power sharing between the central government and peripheral areas. Such an arrangement would devolve responsibility for development-related decisions to the diverse sections of the Sri Lankan nation. In order to follow an approach that recognizes both the military dimension of the conflict and the underlying sources of discontent, the Sri Lankan government must pursue several objectives. It must defeat the LTTE, which alone among Tamil groups has rejected the option of peaceful negotiations preferred by the rest of the country. Second, the government's proposals on the wide devolution of power must be implemented with the consensus of the political parties represented in the parliament and with the approval of voters in a popular referendum. Third, rapid, equitable, and sustainable development initiatives must be pursued, combined with the reconstruction and rehabilitation of social and economic infrastructure in the wartorn areas. A successful conclusion to ethnic strife can only be achieved by a political settlement which has, as its principal aim, the development of a united, peaceful, and prosperous Sri Lankan nation.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
1996
22 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
15
Pages
PUBLISHER
Harvard International Relations Council, Inc.
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
249.1
KB

More Books Like This

Exploiting Ethnicity: Political Elites and Domestic Conflict (Reversing the Trend: ETHNIC CONFLICT) Exploiting Ethnicity: Political Elites and Domestic Conflict (Reversing the Trend: ETHNIC CONFLICT)
2007
Dying for Independence: World Separatist Movements and Terrorism. (World in Review). Dying for Independence: World Separatist Movements and Terrorism. (World in Review).
2003
Democracy's Resilience: Tradition, Modernity, And Hybridity in India (Features) Democracy's Resilience: Tradition, Modernity, And Hybridity in India (Features)
2011
Consequences of April 2006 Revolutionary Changes in Nepal: Continuation of Nepalese Dilemma (1). Consequences of April 2006 Revolutionary Changes in Nepal: Continuation of Nepalese Dilemma (1).
2006
Democracy in Lebanon Democracy in Lebanon
2016
India as an Emerging Power India as an Emerging Power
2004

More Books by Harvard International Review

The Truth About Empire: How Empire Benefits World Order in the 21st Century (An INTERVIEW WITH NIALL Ferguson) (Interview) The Truth About Empire: How Empire Benefits World Order in the 21st Century (An INTERVIEW WITH NIALL Ferguson) (Interview)
2007
Struggles in South Sudan: Five Months to Resolve 55 Years of Structural Violence (World IN REVIEW) Struggles in South Sudan: Five Months to Resolve 55 Years of Structural Violence (World IN REVIEW)
2011
Achieving International Justice: Human Rights Promotion and the Law (An INTERVIEW WITH BERTRAND Ramcharan) (Interview) Achieving International Justice: Human Rights Promotion and the Law (An INTERVIEW WITH BERTRAND Ramcharan) (Interview)
2005
Unique Perspective: Economic Trends in Today's World: An Interview with John Kenneth Galbraith. Unique Perspective: Economic Trends in Today's World: An Interview with John Kenneth Galbraith.
1996
A President's Report Card: Obama's First Year As President an Interview with Noam Chomsky (Interview) A President's Report Card: Obama's First Year As President an Interview with Noam Chomsky (Interview)
2010
Supply and Demand: Human Trafficking in the Global Economy (Features) Supply and Demand: Human Trafficking in the Global Economy (Features)
2011