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Sri Lanka
Education
Education
In
Sri Lanka schooling is compulsory for children from 5 to 15 years of
age. Free education to the university level is provided by the state. In
the late 1980s, Sri Lanka had about 10,200 elementary and secondary
schools, of which most were government institutions. The state schools
were staffed by about 140,100 teachers and contained more than 3.8
million pupils. The University of Sri Jayewardenepura in Colombo,
founded as the University of Ceylon in 1942 and renamed in 1978, is one
of the country's major institutions of higher education. In the late
1980s more than 34,000 students were enrolled in the country's ten
universities.
Sri
Lanka, formerly Ceylon, island republic in the Indian Ocean off the
southeastern coast of India, a member of the Commonwealth of Nations.
Sri Lanka is separated from India by the Palk Strait and Gulf of Mannar.
Lying between the two nations is a chain of tiny islands known as Adam's
Bridge. Sri Lanka is somewhat pear-shaped, with its apex in the north.
The greatest length from north to south is about 440 km (about 273 mi);
the greatest width is about 220 km (about 137 mi). The total area of Sri
Lanka is 65,610 sq km (25,332 sq mi). The administrative capital and
largest city of Sri Lanka is Colombo.
Sri Lanka's coast, particularly the west, south, and southeast, is
palm-fringed and indented by lagoons and inlets. The more rugged
northeastern coast contains Trincomalee Harbor, considered one of the
best natural harbors in the world. On the southwestern coast other
harbors include the largely artificial one at Colombo and one at Galle.
Land and Resources
An outstanding feature of the topography of Sri Lanka is a mountainous
mass in the south central part of the country, the highest point of
which is the peak of Pidurutalagala (2524 m/8281 ft). In the upland area
are two plateaus, Nuwara Eliya and Horton Plains, which are major
centers of commercial tea plantations. The plateaus are noted for their
cool, healthful climate. North of the mountains, and extending south, is
an arid and gently rolling plain known as the dry zone.
Rivers and streams that are broken by rapids are especially numerous in
the mountainous south central region. The longest river is the Mahaweli
Ganga, which empties into the Indian Ocean south of Trincomalee. Other
rivers include the Kelani, the mouth of which is near Colombo; the Kalu,
which reaches the sea near Kalutara on the southwestern coast; and the
Aruvi Aru, which flows northwest across the dry zone to a point near
Mannar.
Climate
Because Sri Lanka is situated near the equator, the climate is generally
hot and humid. The hill and mountain areas, however, are cool, and the
humidity is relatively lower in the dry zone. The average annual
temperature is 32.2° C (90° F) in the lowlands and 21.1° C (70° F) in
the higher mountainous regions.
Precipitation is characterized by wide seasonal and regional variations.
The monsoon season in the southwest is from May to November, at which
time the rainfall is exceptionally heavy. In the northern dry zone the
main precipitation of about 1016 mm (about 40 in) annually occurs during
the monsoon season, which begins in the first week of November. Most
crops in the dry zone, however, require irrigation. The hills and the
lowlands of the southwestern section, which is known as the wet zone,
normally have some rainfall throughout the year, but peaks occur in May
and June and in October and November.
Natural Resources
The natural resources of Sri Lanka are chiefly agricultural, but most of
the land is not easily cultivated. The mineral deposits of the country
are limited.
Plants and Animals
Sri Lanka is noted for the beauty and variety of its vegetation. Dense
tropical jungles occupy extensive areas in the southwest, and the upper
mountain slopes are thickly forested. Many varieties of palm, including
the areca, coconut, and palmyra, flourish in the lowlands along the
coast. Mangroves and screw pines abound in coastal areas. Numerous
varieties of timber trees, notably mahogany and many species of
resin-yielding fruit trees, are indigenous to the wet zone. Among the
timber trees that are common in the drier sections of the island are
ebony and satinwood. Ferns, water hyacinths, orchids, acacias,
eucalyptus trees, and cypresses flourish in various regions.
The animal life of Sri Lanka, including many species that may be in
danger of extinction, is varied and includes the cheetah, leopard,
several species of monkey, and elephant. The island contains numerous
species of birds and reptiles.
Population
About 74 percent of the population of Sri Lanka is of Sinhalese descent.
The largest minority groups are the Sri Lankan Tamils and the Indian
Tamils, which together account for about 18 percent of the population.
The remaining population includes the descendants of Moors (Arabs),
Burghers (Dutch), Malays, and Veddas.
Population Characteristics
The population of Sri Lanka (1991 estimate) was 17,240,000, yielding an
estimated overall population density of 263 people per sq km (681 per sq
mi).
Political Divisions
Sri Lanka is divided into nine provinces and 24 administrative
districts. Each district is headed by an appointed district minister.
Principal Cities
Less than one-quarter of Sri Lanka's population lives in urban
communities. Colombo had a population (1990 estimate) of 615,000. Most
of the foreign trade of the island is routed through Colombo, and the
city has been an important fueling station for ships that pass through
the Suez Canal. Other important cities are the rapidly expanding suburb
of Colombo, Dehiwala-Mount Lavinia, with a population of 196,000; the
seaport of Jaffna, with a population of 129,000; the ancient capital
city of Kandy, with a population of 104,000; and the tea-producing
community of Galle, with a population of 84,000.
Religion
Buddhism, which was introduced into Sri Lanka in the 3rd century BC, is
the prevailing faith. As practiced in Sri Lanka, Buddhism also exhibits
elements of both Hindu and Islamic traditions. About 69 percent of the
population is Buddhist, 15 percent is Hindu, 8 percent is Christian, and
8 percent is Muslim.
Language
The official language of Sri Lanka is Sinhala, or Sinhalese, spoken by
more than 70 percent of the population. Tamil, a Dravidian language of
southern India, is spoken by people living in the northern and eastern
provinces. English, the official language of the country until 1957, is
still widely used.
Culture
Religion plays an important role in Sri Lanka; a revival of Buddhism was
associated with the rise of Sinhalese nationalism. Most public holidays
are based on religious festivals. The annual torchlight temple
procession, or Perahara, in which ornamentally covered elephants and
hundreds of dancers participate, draws thousands of devotees.
Pilgrimages also play an important role here. The most important
pilgrimage is to the top of Adam's Peak. Muslims believe that Adam and
Eve lived here after they left the Garden of Eden. Buddhists visit a
rock on the peak that they believe contains one of Buddha's footprints.
Another important pilgrimage is to the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy,
where it is believed that one of Buddha's teeth is enshrined.
Sinhalese society, although Buddhist, is stratified along caste lines.
Ceylon Tamil society reproduces the caste features found in India,
although in modified form.
The Colombo National Museum Library (1870), incorporating the collection
of the Government Oriental Library, is the largest in Sri Lanka. The
oldest library is the Department of National Archives in Colombo, which
contains the official records of the Dutch Administration from 1640 to
1796, the British Administration from 1796 to 1948, and the independent
nation from 1948 to the present.
Middle Stone Age implements such as bones and grinding stones have been
unearthed in the Bandarawela region in the south; some late Stone Age
tools of ground quartz were discovered nearby. Early Buddhist pottery
and iron artifacts have been found throughout the country. Hindu burial
relics dating from the 3rd century BC have been discovered in the
North-Western Province. The National Museums of Sri Lanka, with branches
located in Colombo, Kandy, Ratnapura, Anuradhapura, Galle, and
Trincomalee, contain collections of archaeological finds and historical
documents of the country.
Economy
Sri Lanka's economy is predominantly based on agriculture. Most of the
people are subsistence farmers, who make a living by growing rice on
their small plots. A large export trade in tea, rubber, and coconuts is
the dominant commercial activity; most businesses engaged in producing
these goods were nationalized in the middle and late 1970s. The
government also controlled banking and insurance, as well as mining and
the manufacture of such basic goods as fertilizers, textiles, cement,
and petroleum. Consumer goods manufacturing and retail businesses
remained in private hands. In the late 1970s the government launched a
new program to accelerate economic growth that included the elimination
of various state monopolies to allow for more private-sector
competition; the government sought to promote foreign investment in
export-oriented industries in the mid-1980s. High unemployment and
ethnic violence dimmed Sri Lanka's economic prospects beginning in the
late 1980s.
Agriculture
About 29 percent of Sri Lanka's land area is under cultivation. Tea
covers only 12 percent of the cultivated acreage, but it accounts for
about one-fourth of the country's export earnings. Tea, rubber, and
coconuts together made up nearly 35 percent of Sri Lanka's export
earnings in the late 1980s.
Rice is the basic food of the people and the principal crop of the
island. More acreage is devoted to the cultivation of rice than to any
other crop; the annual output in the late 1980s was 2.5 million metric
tons. Vegetables are grown in small amounts, but they are mostly
cultivated by farmers for their own private consumption. Considerable
quantities of sugar, wheat, and rice are imported.
Animal husbandry is of comparatively little importance to the economy of
Sri Lanka. In the late 1980s the island contained about 1.8 million
cattle, 1.1 million buffaloes, 503,000 goats, and 9 million chickens.
Pigs and sheep are also raised.
Forestry and Fishing
Local timber needs are satisfied by government-owned woodlands. The
annual timber harvest in the late 1980s was about 8.8 million cu m
(about 311 million cu ft); more than 90 percent of the harvested wood
was used for fuel. The fishing industry is restricted to a small coastal
fringe and contributes relatively little to the national economy; the
annual catch in the late 1980s amounted to approximately 190,000 metric
tons.
Mining
Although mineral resources are generally limited, Sri Lanka is an
important source of high-grade lump amorphous graphite, used in the
manufacture of carbon brushes for electric motors. Output of natural
graphite in the late 1980s reached 7450 metric tons annually. Ilmenite,
rutile, and zircon are also mined for commercial uses. Limestone is
mined for a government-owned cement factory at Jaffna. Other minerals
include salt, mica, kaolin (a fine clay), glass sands, and precious and
semiprecious stones.
Manufacturing
Mechanized industry is relatively limited in Sri Lanka, and in the late
1980s it accounted for only about 16 percent of the country's yearly
gross domestic product. The more important industrial enterprises, most
of which are entirely or partly government owned, produce such goods as
steel, tires, cement, textiles, clothing, sugar, cigarettes, paper and
leather goods, electronic equipment, refined petroleum, chemicals,
ceramics, and processed food.
Energy
In the late 1980s Sri Lanka had an installed electricity generating
capacity of about 1.1 million kilowatts, and an annual production of
about 2.7 billion kilowatt-hours. More than 80 percent of the power was
produced by hydroelectric facilities.
Currency and Foreign Trade
The Sri Lankan rupee, consisting of 100 cents, is the monetary unit (45
rupees equal U.S.$1; 1992). In the late 1980s annual imports cost $2
billion and exports earned $1.5 billion. The chief exports were tea and
rubber, followed by coconut products, clothing, graphite, and precious
and semiprecious stones. Foodstuffs, mainly rice, flour, and sugar, make
up a significant share of imports. Other imports include petroleum
products, machinery, and transportation equipment. Sri Lanka's chief
trading partners are Japan, Great Britain, the United States, Germany,
Iran, and India.
Transportation
A network of about 27,200 km (about 16,900 mi) of paved roads connects
most regions of the island; the best-developed road system is that in
the plantation areas. Operated railroad track totals about 1450 km
(about 900 mi).
Sri Lanka has three international airports. The government-owned
airline, Air Lanka, provides domestic and international service.
Communications
All electronic communications in Sri Lanka are government controlled.
The country has about 15 daily newspapers with a combined daily
circulation of more than 780,000. In the late 1980s the largest daily
was the Dinamina, published in Colombo. During this period Sri Lanka had
more than 125,000 telephones, 3.2 million radio receivers, and 500,000
television sets. Television broadcasting began in Colombo in 1979.
Labor
In the late 1980s about 6.6 million Sri Lankans were economically
active, mostly unskilled workers. About one-third of all workers were
organized in some 1500 trade unions. Progressive labor legislation has
been enacted, covering minimum wage, health, and welfare, but
enforcement has proven difficult because of staff shortages.
Government
Sri Lanka is an independent member of the Commonwealth of Nations,
governed under a constitution adopted in 1978.
Executive
The chief of state and head of government of Sri Lanka is a president,
who is elected directly to a term of six years. The president appoints
the prime minister and members of the cabinet, and may dismiss
parliament at will.
Legislature
According to the 1978 Sri Lanka constitution, the unicameral parliament
is the “legislative power of the people.” The 225 members of parliament
are elected directly by a system of proportional representation.
Political Parties
The major political party in Sri Lanka is the United National party (UNP),
a democratic socialist party. Other parties include the Sri Lanka
Freedom party (SLFP) and several Tamil separatist groups.
Local Government
Sri Lanka is divided into 24 administrative districts. Each district is
presided over by an appointed district minister. Other local government
units include 12 municipal councils and 39 urban councils.
Judiciary
The Sri Lankan judiciary consists of a supreme court, the court of
appeal, the high court, district courts, magistrates' courts, and
primary courts. The chief justice of the supreme court and two
subordinate justices appointed by the president make up the Judicial
Service Commission, which has appellate and review powers in criminal
cases and exclusive powers in the most serious criminal offenses.
Defense
In the late 1980s the armed forces in Sri Lanka were made up of an army
of 40,000 people, a navy of 5500, and an air force of 3700.
Health and Welfare
In the late 1980s Sri Lanka had about 2340 physicians and 45,800
hospital beds. Average life expectancy at birth was 72 years for women
and 67 years for men. The infant mortality rate declined from 63 deaths
per 1000 live births in the mid-1960s to 31 in the late 1980s.
History
According to Hindu legend the greater part of Sri Lanka was conquered in
prehistoric times by Ramachandra, the seventh incarnation of the supreme
deity Vishnu. The written history of the country begins with the
chronicle known as the Mahavamsa. This work was started in the 6th
century AD and provides a virtually unbroken narrative up to 1815. The
Mahavamsa was compiled by a succession of Buddhist monks. Because it
often aims to glorify or to degrade certain periods or reigns, it is not
a wholly reliable source despite its wealth of historical material.
Ancient Sinhala
The Mahavamsa relates that the island was conquered in 504 BC by Vijaya,
a Hindu prince from northeast India. After subjugating the aboriginal
inhabitants, a people now known as Veddas, Vijaya married a native
princess, encouraged emigration from the mainland, and made himself
ruler of the entire island. However, the realm (called Sinhala after
Vijaya's patrimonial name) that was inherited by his successors
consisted of the arid region lying to the north of the south-central
mountain system.
Members of the dynasty founded by Vijaya reigned over Sinhala for
several centuries. During this period, and particularly after the
adoption in the 3rd century BC of Buddhism as the national religion, the
Sinhalese created a highly developed civilization. Extant evidence of
their engineering skill and architectural achievements includes remnants
of vast irrigation projects, many ruined cities, notably the ancient
capital Anuradhapura, and numerous ruined shrines (dasobas).
Foreign Control
From the late 3rd century AD to the middle of the 12th century, Sinhala
was dominated by Tamil kings and by a succession of invaders from
southern India. Native princes regained power briefly in the late 12th
century and again in the 13th century. From 1408 to 1438 Chinese forces
occupied the island of Sinhala, which had been partitioned into a number
of petty kingdoms.
In 1517 the Portuguese, having established friendly relations with one
of the native monarchs, founded a fort and trading post at Colombo.
Their sphere of influence expanded steadily thereafter, mainly as a
result of successful wars of conquest, and by the end of the 16th
century they controlled large sections of the island. Consequently, in
1638 and 1639, when the Dutch launched the first of a series of attacks
on Portuguese strongholds in the island, they found numerous allies
among the natives. The struggle ended in 1658 with the Dutch gaining
control of most of the island, although the kingdom of Kandy remained an
independent entity.
British Rule
In 1795, following the occupation of the Netherlands by France, the
British government dispatched an expeditionary force against Sri Lanka.
The Dutch capitulated early in the next year, and in 1798 the British
made all the island, except the kingdom of Kandy, a crown colony. By the
provisions of the 1802 Treaty of Amiens, which terminated the second
phase of the Napoleonic Wars, the country was formally ceded to Great
Britain. The kingdom of Kandy was also occupied in 1803 and annexed to
the crown colony in 1815. The British period of rule was marked by
abortive native rebellions in 1817, 1843, and 1848. Tea and rubber
estates were developed. In this period violent social-religious
struggles between the Sinhalese peasants, mostly Buddhists, and the
moneylenders and traders, chiefly Muslims, also occurred, and all the
native peoples struggled continuously for representative government and
national freedom. The first substantial victory in the struggle for
self-government came after more than one century, when, in 1931, Great
Britain promulgated a new constitution that granted the indigenous
people semiautonomous control over national affairs.
During World War II (1939-1945) Sri Lanka was an important base of
operations in the Allied offensive against the Japanese and a major
source of rubber, foodstuffs, and other materials vital to the war
effort.
Independence
On February 4, 1948, the colony became an independent member of the
Commonwealth of Nations; Sir Henry Moore was installed as
governor-general and D. S. Senanayake, leader of the United National
party (UNP), became prime minister. An ancient Sinhalese flag was
adopted as the flag of the new state.
The foreign ministers of the Commonwealth of Nations assembled at
Colombo in January 1950, and drafted a tentative plan for the economic
development of Southeast Asia. As finally formulated, the Colombo Plan
allocated nearly $340 million of Commonwealth funds for a variety of
projects designed to advance the Sri Lankan economy, notably irrigation
works and hydroelectric plants.
When D. S. Senanayake died in 1952, his son, Dudley Senanayake, who
belonged to the same party, was named prime minister. In 1954 Sri Lanka
declined to join the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, which was
formed as a defensive alliance by the United States, Great Britain, and
six other nations. On December 14, 1955, the republic of Sri Lanka was
admitted to membership in the United Nations.
The Bandaranaikes
The UNP lost the elections held in April 1956, and Solomon West Ridgeway
Dias Bandaranaike, leader of the Sri Lanka Freedom party, became prime
minister. Sri Lanka subsequently adopted a policy of neutrality in the
disputes between the Communist and non-Communist countries. The United
States agreed in early 1958 to provide the country with technical
assistance and a grant of about $780,000 for economic projects. The
Soviet Union and Sri Lanka signed trade and economic agreements at about
the same time. Shortly afterward the country accepted a loan of about
$10.5 million from China.
On September 25, 1959, Prime Minister Bandaranaike was shot by a
Buddhist monk and died the following day. In the general elections of
March 19, 1960, the UNP won the greatest number of votes, and two days
later Dudley Senanayake again became prime minister in a minority
cabinet, which quickly lost parliamentary confidence. New general
elections held on July 20 resulted in the victory of the Sri Lanka
Freedom party now led by Sirimavo Bandaranaike, widow of the late prime
minister, and she was sworn in as prime minister the next day.
On December 31, 1960, a bill was passed making Sinhalese the only
official language of the country. Representatives of the Tamil-speaking
minority led mass demonstrations against the measure in early 1961. To
cope with the situation, a state of emergency was declared, the Tamil
Federal party was forbidden to operate, and strikes were declared
illegal. Sinhalese-Tamil relations continued to be strained until
January 1966, when Tamil was made the official administrative language
in the northern and eastern parts of the island.
The Republic
With the nation in a period of economic decline, Dudley Senanayake was
returned to power in the 1965 legislative elections. His policy of
nonalignment, economic development, and increased domestic production
did not satisfy the voters, as high unemployment, food shortages, and
labor unrest continued. In 1970 a leftist coalition headed by Sirimavo
Bandaranaike won the elections; the new government began to move the
country toward socialism. In March 1971 a brief but violent armed revolt
took place, sparked by leaders of the Marxist-oriented People's
Liberation Front. By September, the Bandaranaike government had almost
completely suppressed the rebellion. In that month the Senate was
abolished and the House of Representatives was renamed the National
Assembly. On May 22, 1972, the country, until then known as Ceylon,
officially became the socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, when the assembly
adopted a new constitution. Bandaranaike continued as prime minister,
and William Gopallawa was appointed president.
In 1977 Bandaranaike's government was decisively defeated at the polls.
She was replaced as prime minister by Junius R. Jayewardene, leader of
the UNP. His government in 1978 replaced the 1972 constitution with one
providing for an executive president, an office which Jayewardene then
assumed. Reversing the socialist trend of his predecessor, he achieved
some initial economic gains. By 1980, however, inflation and falling
wages led to a general strike, which the government thwarted only by
calling out troops. Later in the year Bandaranaike was expelled from the
National Assembly and barred from voting or standing for election for
seven years. The supreme court had previously found her to have abused
her power during her years as prime minister. Jayewardene won reelection
to a second six-year presidential term in October 1982. Subsequently, in
December, a government proposal to extend the life of parliament until
1989 was approved by popular referendum.
In 1983 a civil war began between the Sinhalese-dominated government and
the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The LTTE is a group
that seeks to create a separate nation for the Tamil minority in the
northern and eastern portions of Sri Lanka. In June 1987, after an
agreement with Jayewardene, Indian troops moved into northern Sri Lanka
to enforce a peace agreement between the Sinhalese and the Tamils.
Warfare subsided, and Jayewardene retired in 1988; Ranasinghe Premadasa
was elected to succeed him that year, defeating Bandaranaike.
Premadasa's UNP retained its majority in the parliamentary elections of
February 1989, and the last Indian troops departed in March. The period
of relative peace was short-lived. In 1991 and 1992 several major
battles were fought between the army and the LTTE, and in early 1993 the
government was rocked by two assassinations. On April 23 Lalith
Athulathmudali, who had founded the opposition Democratic United
Liberation Front in 1991, was shot to death during a political rally. A
week later, during the annual May Day parade, President Premadasa was
assassinated by a suicide bomber who allegedly was a member of LTTE.
Days later the Parliament unanimously elected UNP member Dingiri Danda
Wijetunga, who previously was the premier, to serve as president until
the next national election. In November 1993 LTTE forces managed to
seize a government military base in Pooneryn, which is about 32 km (20
miles) southeast of Jaffna. Several days later government forces drove
the rebel forces back, and recovered the base. The fighting was some of
the worst between the Sri Lankan government and rebel Tamil forces; the
Sri Lankan government estimated that about 1200 people were missing or
killed. Since fighting between the two groups began in 1983, more than
18,000 people have been killed. In parliamentary elections held in
August 1994, the People's Alliance party defeated the UNP, and Chandrika
Bandaranaike Kumaratunga became prime minister.
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