The
Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka (ශ්රී ලංකා in Sinhala / இலங்கை in
Tamil) (known as
Ceylon before 1972) is a tropical
island nation off the
southeast coast of the
Indian subcontinent.
The island was known in ancient times as
Lanka,
Lankadeepa (Sanskrit for "resplendent land"),
Simoundou,
Taprobane (from the Sanskrit
Tāmaraparnī),
Serendib (from the Sanskrit
Sinhala-dweepa), and
Selan. During colonization, the island became known as
Ceylon, a name still used on occasion. Its unique shape and proximity to the
Indian mainland have led some to refer to the island as
India's Teardrop.
Life on Sri Lanka has been marred by more than two decades of
ethnic conflict, mainly between the national government and the Tamil minorities championed by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE, pronounced L-T-T) insurgency. In early 2002, the two sides agreed on a
ceasefire. The conditions of this ceasefire are currently under renogotiation, and the political stability of the country is uncertain.
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National motto: None
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| align=center colspan=2 style="background: #ffffff;" | image:LocationSriLanka.png
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Official languages
| Sinhala,
Tamil
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|
Other languages
|
English
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Capitals
|
Colombo1Sri Jayewardenepura (
Kotte)
2
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President
| Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga
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|
Prime Minister
|
Mahinda Rajapakse
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Area - Total
- % water
|
Ranked 119th 65,610 km²
1.3%
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Population - Total (2002)
-
Density
|
Ranked 51st 19,607,519
298/km²
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Independence St. of Westr Realm Status
|From
British Empire December 11, 1931
February 4, 1948
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Currency
| Sri Lankan
Rupee
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Time zone
|
UTC +6
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National anthem
|
Sri Lanka Matha
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Internet TLD
|
.lk
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Calling Code
| 94
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| colspan="2" |
1 Executive Capital2 Legislative Capital
History
Sri Lanka's earliest known inhabitants were the
Wanniyala-Aetto. These people were displaced by the
Sinhalese some time before the dawn of recorded history in Sri Lanka.
Buddhism was introduced in the mid-
3rd century BC, and a great civilization developed at such cities as
Anuradhapura (kingdom from
200 BC to 1000 AD) and
Polonnaruwa (c. 1070 to 1200).
There are two different Tamil community one Native Tamil and others are imigrated
Tamils from southern India also came to the island (exactly how many, and when, is a matter of debate). By the
13th century, there was a substantial Tamil society in the north and many fishing communities elsewhere along the island's coastline.The refernce of Native tamils in Tamil Literature and concept of
Kumari Kandam in Tamil literature, Tamil poetry from the lankan Tamil ( often Srilankan tamils were refered as Ilath Tamil in literatures) dating back from 3AD , proves their nativity. The Tamils here developed a culture and polity distinct from their mainland cousins. Relations between the Tamils (of India and Sri Lanka) and the Sinhalese were complex, sometimes peaceful and sometimes warlike, with invasions in both directions and substantial intermixing.
Buddhism ushered in a new civilization in Sri Lanka after the arrival of the Arahat
Mahinda Thera, son of
Emperor Asoka, who was ruler of the Magadha empire in India. Devanampiya Thissa, the king at the time of Mahinda Thero's arrival, embraced Buddhism and facilitated its spread by constructing temples and Buddhist institutions throughout the country.
South Indian rulers, mostly of Tamil descent, attacked Sri Lanka on a number of occasions starting in the
3rd century BC. Occasionally, such invasions resulted in Tamil rule of the island for extended periods. Several Sinhala kings are noted for driving back the Tamil invasions and retaking the capital.
City of [[Matale]]
After the
Polonnaruwa kingdom, the Sinhalese capital moved between several cities over the next centuries, partially to circumvent foreign invasion. The capital settled in
Sri Jayewardenepura (
Kotte) when coastal regions were occupied by the
Portuguese in the
16th century. The Portuguese were followed by the
Dutch in the
17th century. During both Portuguese and Dutch rule of the coastal areas, the interior, hilly region of the island remained independent, with its capital, the city of
Kandy. The entire island was ceded to the
British Empire in 1796 and became a crown colony in 1802. As Ceylon
http://www.glue.umd.edu/~pkd/sl/facts/name_origin.html, it became independent in 1948. In 1972, its name was changed to Sri Lanka, and in 1978 the legislative and judicial capital was moved from Colombo to nearby Sri Jayewardanapura Kotte. The flag was also changed as orange and green vertical bars were added, representing the Tamil and Muslim minority populations.
Tensions between the Sinhalese majority and the Tamil minority erupted in violence in 1983 following the killing of 13 soldiers of Sri Lankan Army in Jaffna. This led to riots throughout the country and the deaths of hundreds of Tamils over a three-day period; many more became refugees. Tens of thousands have died on both sides in the subsequent ethnic war that continues to fester.
The [[2004 Indian Ocean earthquake.]]
After two decades of fighting, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the government began a ceasefire in
December 2001.
Norway is mediating the peace process. The international anti-terrorism focus may have influenced the main Tamil rebel group to seek the ceasefire, as the LTTE was declared a terrorist organization by the United States of America, the
United Kingdom,
Australia,
India, and
Canada.
The
impact on Sri Lanka was severe. The south and east coasts were devastated by the 10-metre high tsunami, and tens of thousands died.
Politics
The president of the
republic, who is directly elected for a six-year term, serves as
head of state,
head of government and
commander in chief of the armed forces. The president is responsible to parliament for the exercise of duties in accordance with the
constitution and laws. The incumbent may be removed from office by a two-thirds vote of parliament, with the concurrence of the Supreme Court. The president appoints and heads a
cabinet of ministers responsible to parliament. The president's deputy is the prime minister, who leads the ruling party in parliament.
The Sri Lankan
Parliament is a unicameral 225-member legislature. Members are elected by universal (adult) suffrage on the basis of a modified
proportional representation system by district to a six-year term. The primary modification is a unique "bonus seat" provision, where the party that receives the largest number of valid votes in each constituency gains an additional or "bonus" seat (''see'' Hickman, 1999). The president may summon, suspend, or end a legislative session and dissolve parliament any time after it has served for one year. Parliament reserves the power to make all laws. Since its independence in 1948, Sri Lanka has remained a member of the
Commonwealth of Nations.
Parliament was dissolved on
February 7, 2004 by President
Chandrika Kumaratunga. New elections were held on
April 2 and the new parliament convened on
April 23.
See also: Sri Lankan parliamentary election, 2004
Provinces
Hindu temple, [[Colombo]]
Sri Lanka consists of 9 provinces:
Geography
Map of Sri Lanka
The island of Sri Lanka, lies within the
Indian Ocean, with the
Bay of Bengal to the northeast. It is separated from the
Indian subcontinent by the
Gulf of Mannar and the
Palk Strait.
According to Hindu mythology, a land bridge to the Indian mainland. known as
Adam's Bridge, was constructed during the rule of
Rama. It is now mostly submerged, with only a chain of limestone shoals remaining above
sea level. According to temple records this natural
causeway was formerly complete, but was breached by a violent storm (probably a
cyclone) in 1480.
The pear-shaped island consists mostly of flat-to-rolling coastal plains, with mountains rising only in the south central part of the island. Amongst these, are
Adam's Peak and Pidurutalagala, the latter being the highest point at 2,524 m.
Mosque in [[Galle]]
The Sri Lankan
climate is tropical, characterized by
monsoons: the northeast monsoon lasting from December to March, and the southwest monsoon from June to October. The lowest
gravitational field on Earth lies just off the coast of Sri Lanka.
The administrative and commercial capital is
Colombo, but parliament is located in nearby
Sri Jayewardanapura (
Kotte). Other major cities include
Jaffna,
Galle, and
Kandy.
Ecology
Sri Lanka is the country with the highest
species richness in the world and home to several forest
ecoregions, whose flora and fauna is related to that of southern India. The southwest portion of the island, where the influence of the moisture-bearing southwest monsoon is strongest, is home to the Sri Lanka lowland rain forests. At higher elevations they transition to the Sri Lanka montane rain forests. Both these
tropical moist forest ecoregions bear strong affinities to those of India's
Western Ghats.
The northern and eastern portions of the island are considerably drier, lying in the
rain shadow of the central highlands. The Sri Lanka dry-zone dry evergreen forests are a
tropical dry broadleaf forest ecoregion, which, like the neighboring
East Deccan dry evergreen forests of India's
Coromandel Coast, is characterized by
evergreen trees, rather than the dry-season
deciduous trees that predominate in most other tropical dry broadleaf forests.
These forests have been largely cleared for agriculture, timber or grazing, and many of the dry evergreen forests have been degraded to thorn scrub,
savanna, or thickets. Several preserves have been established to protect some of Sri Lanka's remaining natural areas. The island has three
biosphere reserves, Hurulu (established 1977), Sinharaja (established 1978), and Kanneliya-Dediyagala-Nakiyadeniya (KDN) (established 2004).
Economy
Sri Lanka is historically famous for its
cinnamon and
tea (introduced by the British in the
19th century). Since independence, it has been moderately socialist. In the last 20 years, Sri Lankan governments have increasingly pursued
privatization, and moved towards market-oriented policies and export-oriented trade. While
tea and
rubber are still important, the most dynamic sectors are now food processing, textiles and apparel, food and beverages, telecommunications,
insurance, and banking. By 1996, plantation crops made up only 20 percent of exports (compared with 93 percent in 1970), while textiles and garments accounted for 63 percent.
The
GDP grew at an average annual rate of 5.5 percent during the early
1990s, until a drought and a deteriorating security situation lowered growth to 3.8 percent in 1996. The economy rebounded in 1997-2000, with average growth of 5.3 percent. 2001 saw the first economic contraction in the country's history, due to a combination of power shortages, budgetary problems, the global slowdown, and
continuing civil strife. Signs of recovery appeared after the government and the LTTE signed the 2002 ceasefire. The Colombo stock exchange reported the highest growth in Asia for 2003, and today Sri Lanka has the highest per capita income in South Asia.
Demographics
Beach in Welligama, southern Sri Lanka
About 75 percent of the population belongs to the
Sinhalese majority, which is predominantly
Buddhist, mostly following the
Theravada tradition. The other major group on the island is the
Tamils, who constitute 18+7 ( Hindu and Muslim) percent of the population. They are predominantly
Hindu, and live mostly in the north and east. Both
Sinhala and
Tamil languages have enjoyed official status since the Indo-Lanka accord in 1989. English, the link language in the present constitution, is the mother tongue of roughly 10 percent of the population, and is spoken and understood widely. All three languages are used in education and administration.
Smaller minorities include the (Tamils, mostly Sunni)
Muslims (7%), the
Burghers of mixed European descent (1%) and the
Wanniyala-Aetto or
Veddahs, the few remaining descendants of earlier cultures. Buddhism (70%) and Hinduism (15%) are the dominant religions.
Christians represent 8% of the population, including 7% Catholics and 1% Protestants.
Culture of Sri Lanka
See also:Music of Sri Lanka
Famous Sri Lankans
- Leading cricketer, the wicket taker "Murali" Muttiah Muralitharan also see Sri Lankan cricketers list
- Photographer Lionel Wendt
- Architect Geoffrey Bawa
- Artist George Keyts
- UK rapper M.I.A.
- BBC Radio 1 D.J Nihal
- Canadian author Michael Ondaatje grew up in Sri Lanka. His novel Running in the Family captures some of his family's experiences. His brother is the philanthropist Christopher Ondaatje
- British science-fiction author Arthur C. Clarke has lived there since 1956.
- The Hindu newspaper placed Sri Lankan broadcaster Vernon Corea, a pioneer of Radio Ceylon, among the top five broadcasters in the world.
Miscellaneous
Sri Lanka is the world's leading cinnamon exporter.
Sizeable
expatriate communities exist in the UK,
Australia,
Canada, the US, and
France, where second generation citizens of Sri Lankan origin demonstrate a sense of cultural heritage by way of intra-community fundraising events, charity dinner dances, and online communities such as
Lankansoc.
Reference
- Hickman, J. 1999. "Explaining the Two-Party System in Sri Lanka's National Assembly." Contemporary South Asia, Volume 8, Number 1 (March), pp. 29-40 (A detailed description of the effects of the bonus seat provision).
See also
Former parliament building, [[Colombo]]
External links
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