Evaluation:
Published: 01.12.1996.
Language: English
Level: Secondary school
Literature: n/a
References: Not used
  • Essays 'The Legitimacy of the Armed Struggle of the Tamil People', 1.
  • Essays 'The Legitimacy of the Armed Struggle of the Tamil People', 2.
  • Essays 'The Legitimacy of the Armed Struggle of the Tamil People', 3.
  • Essays 'The Legitimacy of the Armed Struggle of the Tamil People', 4.
Extract

Quote "Democracy may mean acceding to the rule of the majority, but democracy also means governments by discussion and persuasion. It is the belief that the minority of today may become the majority of tomorrow that ensures the stability of a functioning democracy. The practice of democracy in Sri Lanka within the confines of a unitary state served to perpetuate the oppressive rule of a permanent Sinhala majority.
It was a permanent Sinhala majority, which through a series of legislative and administrative acts, ranging from
disenfranchisement, and standardisation of University admissions, to discriminatory language and employment policies, and state sponsored colonisation of the homelands of the Tamil people, sough to establish its hegemony over people of Tamil Eelam.

Atlants