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8 result(s) for "Bandaranaike, Sirima"
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Sri Lanka: The legacy of Bandaranaike
At the moment, Sri Lankan citizens are killing one another in industrial quantities in the Jaffna peninsula in the north, what one aid worker recently called \"the largest open prison in the world.\" The north of the island is home to most of the Tamil-speaking minority, a group so alienated by [Sirima Bandaranaike]'s policies that it eventually fell under the thrall of rebels devoted to the creation of a separate Tamil state called Eelam. The open Tamil fight for independence from Sri Lanka did not start until after the nationwide anti-Tamil pogroms of 1983, at a time when Bandaranaike was out of office. But it was she who did the most to legitimize the attitudes that eventually led to that tragedy. No individual is ever solely responsible for the wreck of an entire country, but Sirima Bandaranaike came pretty close. How ironic, therefore, that her daughter [Chandrika Kumaratunga] should be leading the effort to achieve a peaceful settlement with the Tamils. It is a thankless task, because the Tamil leadership has been radicalized to the point of intransigence while ethnic supremacism has become a staple of Sinhalese politics. In last week's election, she did not win enough seats in parliament to push through constitutional changes that would give Tamil-speaking areas more autonomy, and she still refuses to talk to the Tamil Tigers directly, but she is trying.
THE LEGACY OF SRI LANKA'S `MRS. B'
At the moment, Sri Lankan citizens are killing one another in industrial quantities in the Jaffna peninsula in the north, what one aid worker recently called \"the largest open prison in the world.\" The north of the island is home to most of the Tamil-speaking minority, a group so alienated by [Sirima Bandaranaike]'s policies that it eventually fell under the thrall of rebels devoted to the creation of a separate Tamil state called Eelam. The open Tamil fight for independence from Sri Lanka did not start until after the nationwide anti-Tamil pogroms of 1983, at a time when Bandaranaike was out of office. But it was she who did the most to legitimize the attitudes that eventually led to that tragedy. No individual is ever solely responsible for the wreck of an entire country, but Sirima Bandaranaike came pretty close. How ironic, therefore, that her daughter should be leading the effort to achieve a peaceful settlement with the Tamils. It is a thankless task, because the Tamil leadership has been radicalized to the point of intransigence while ethnic supremacism has become a staple of Sinhalese politics. In last week's election, she did not win enough seats in parliament to push through constitutional changes that would give Tamil-speaking areas more autonomy, and she still refuses to talk to the Tamil Tigers directly, but she is trying.
The Bandaranaike family legacy
At the moment, Sri Lankan citizens are killing one another in industrial quantities in the Jaffna peninsula in the north, what one aid worker recently called \"the largest open prison in the world.\" The north of the island is home to most of the Tamil-speaking minority, a group so alienated by Bandaranaike's policies that it eventually fell under the thrall of rebels devoted to the creation of a separate Tamil state called Eelam. The open Tamil fight for independence from Sri Lanka did not start until after the nationwide anti-Tamil pogroms of 1983, at a time when Bandaranaike was out of office. But it was she who did the most to legitimize the attitudes that eventually led to that tragedy. No individual is ever solely responsible for the wreck of an entire country, but [Sirima Bandaranaike] came pretty close. How ironic, therefore, that her daughter [Chandrika Kumaratunga] should be leading the effort to achieve a peaceful settlement with the Tamils. It is a thankless task, because the Tamil leadership has been radicalized to the point of intransigence while ethnic supremacism has become a staple of Sinhalese politics. In last week's election, she did not win enough seats in parliament to push through constitutional changes that would give Tamil-speaking areas more autonomy, and she still refuses to talk to the Tamil Tigers directly, but she is trying.
Bandaranaike, world's first woman prime minister, dies in Colombo
Sri Lanka's matriarch and the world's first woman prime minister, Ms Sirima Bandaranaike, died in Colombo yesterday, shortly after what turned out to be her final vote in parliamentary polls. Ms Bandaranaike (84), had been wheeled in to vote at their home constituency of Attanagalle, 36 km north-east of Colombo and was being driven back when she suffered a massive heart attack. Ms Bandaranaike's eldest daughter, Sunethra (57), said in a rare interview with a newspaper in August that their mother provided for them but lacked in showing affection.
World's first woman PM dies after voting
Sri Lanka's matriarch and the world's first woman prime minister, Sirima Bandaranaike, has died shortly after casting her ballot in parliamentary elections, her son, Anura Bandaranaike, said. Her only son, Anura, quit her Sri Lanka Freedom Party in 1993 after losing a succession battle to his sister, [Chandrika Kumaratunga], who went on to become president in November 1994. -- NZPA
Bandaranaike Legacy: Civil War And Ruins
ALMOST drowned out by the blare of daily horrors in the Middle East, the world's first elected female prime minister, Sirima Bandaranaike, died last week in Sri Lanka at the age of 84.