Sirimavo Bandaranaike: Perbedaan antara revisi

Konten dihapus Konten ditambahkan
Borgx (bicara | kontrib)
k typo
Tidak ada ringkasan suntingan
Baris 1:
'''Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike''' ([[17 April]] [[1916]] - [[10 Oktober]] [[2000]]) adalah mantanseorang [[politikuspolitisi]] [[Sri Lanka]]. DiaWanita pernahini menjabat sebagai [[Perdana Menteri Sri Lanka|Perdana Menteri]] [[Sri Lanka]] untuk tiga kali kurun waktu, yaitu pada periode [[1960]]-[[1965]], [[1970]]-[[1977]], dan [[1994]]-[[2000]],. danIa merupakan perdana menteri wanita pertama di dunia. DiaIa juga mantanseorang pemimpinKetua [[Partai Kebebasan Sri Lanka]]. Dia(''Sri adalahLanka Freedom Party'') dan istri dari perdana menteri Sri Lanka sebelumnya, [[Solomon Bandaranaike]],. danSuaminya juga atasannya untuk ketiga kali saat dia menjabat sebagai perdana menteri. Ia juga seorang ibu dari presiden ketigaPresiden Sri Lanka ketiga, [[Chandrika Kumaratunga]], yang merupakanmana atasannyaia disendiri kalisebagai ketigaperdana diamenteri menjabatuntuk sebagaimasa perdanajabatan menteriketiga kalinya. DiaIa juga merupakanseorang ibu dari Menteri Pariwisata Sri Lanka [[Anura Bandaranaike]], Menteri Pariwisata Srilanka, dan [[Sunethra Bandaranaike]], yang tampil sebagai seorang [[filantropis]].
 
==Latar Belakang Politik==
<!--On her husband's assassination, Bandaranaike took over the leadership of his [[Sri Lanka Freedom Party]], which he had formed and led to election victory in [[1956]], and kept it for ''40'' years until her death. She became prime minister on [[July 21]], [[1960]] and ruled her country on and off throughout the 1960s and 1970s until she was crushingly defeated in a general election in [[1977]]. In [[1980]], she was expelled from parliament for abuse of power, and banned from public office for seven years.
 
A staunch [[socialist]], Bandaranaike continued her husband's policies of nationalizing key sectors of the economy, such as banking and insurance. Unfortunately, she was on a roller-coaster ride from the moment she took office and within a year of her [[1960]] election victory she declared a ''state of emergency''. This followed a [[civil disobedience]] campaign by part of the country's minority [[Tamil people|Tamil]] population who were outraged by her decision to drop [[English language|English]] as an official language and her order to conduct all government business in [[Sinhala]], the language of the majority [[Sinhalese]]. This they considered a highly discriminatory act and an attempt to deny Tamils access to all official posts and the law. This lead to an increase in Tamil militancy which escalated under succeeding administrations.
 
Further problems arose with the President's state takeover of foreign businesses, particularly the petroleum companies, which upset the [[United States|Americans]] and the [[British Empire|British]], who imposed an aid [[embargo]] on [[Sri Lanka]]. As a result, Bandaranaike moved her country closer to [[China]] and the [[Soviet Union]] and championed a policy of nonalignment. At home, she crushed an attempted military coup in [[1962]]. In [[1964]], she entered into a historic coalition with the [[Lanka Sama Samaja Party]] (LSSP). At the end of that year, she was defeated on a confidence vote, losing the general election that followed. Six years later she bounced back, her [[United Front (Sri Lanka)|United Front]] winning a substantial majority in the [[1970]] elections.
 
Her second term saw a new Constitution introduced, which ended the country's status as a [[Commonwealth realm]]. [[Ceylon]] was renamed [[Sri Lanka]] and declared a republic. But after just 16 months in power, a left-wing youth uprising almost toppled her government: Sri Lanka's small ceremonial army could not deal with the insurgency. She was saved by her skillful foreign policy when the country's non-aligned friends rushed to her help. In a rare move, both [[India]] and [[Pakistan]] sent troops to [[Colombo]] to aid Bandaranaike in crushing the insurgency. In those tough political years, she turned herself into a formidable leader. ''"She was the only man in her cabinet"'', one of her officials commented during the height of the insurgency.
 
The [[1973]] oil crisis had a traumatic effect on the [[Sri Lanka|Sri Lankan]] economy; the government had no access to Western aid and her socialist policies stifled economic activity. Rationing had to be imposed. Bandaranaike became more and more intolerant of criticism and forced the shutdown of the Independent newspaper group, whose publications were her fiercest critics. Earlier she had nationalized the country's largest newspaper, ''Lake House'', which has remained the government's official mouthpiece.
 
==Style of functioning==
Known to her fellow Sri Lankans as "Mrs. B," she could skillfully use popular emotion to boost her support, frequently bursting into tears as she pledged to continue her dead husband's policies. He, Prime Minister [[Solomon Bandaranaike]], was shot dead by a [[Buddhist]] [[monk]] in [[1959]]. Her opponents and critics called her the ''"weeping widow"'' .
 
==Decline==
By [[1976]], Bandaranaike was more respected abroad than at home. Her great triumph that year was to become chairman of the [[Non-Aligned Movement]] and host the largest heads of state conference the country had ever seen. Despite her high standing internationally, she was losing Sri Lankan support rapidly amid allegations of corruption and against the background of a rapidly declining economy . Nothing, it seemed, could save her. She suffered a crushing election defeat in [[1977]] and was stripped of her civic rights. The [[1980]]s were her dark days - she became a political outcast rejected by the people who had once worshipped her. Banadaranaike spent the next 17 years in opposition warding off challenges to her leadership of the ''Freedom Party'', even from her own children. Always the politician, she played her ambitious daughter, Chandrika, and son, Anura, against one another, holding on to control despite losing every subsequent general election. She finally met her match in Chandrika who outmaneuvered her mother to become Prime Minister of Sri Lanka in [[1994]], when a Freedom Party-led coalition won power in the general elections, and President the following year.
 
Bandaranaike became Prime Minister again, but the constitution had changed since her last tenure; she, as the Prime Minister was subordinate to her daughter, the President. She remained in office until her death, but had little real power. She died on election day, having cast her vote for the last time.-->
 
 
{{start box}}
{{succession box|
title=[[Perdana Menteri Sri Lanka]]|
before=[[Dudley Senanayake]]|
after=[[Dudley Senanayake]]|
years=[[21 Juli]] [[1960]]&ndash;[[27 Maret]] [[1965]]}}
{{succession box|
title=[[Perdana Menteri Sri Lanka]]|
before=[[Dudley Senanayake]]|
after=[[Junius Richard Jayewardene]]|
years=[[29 Mei]] [[1970]]&ndash;[[23 Juli]] [[1977]]}}
{{succession box|
title=[[Perdana Menteri Sri Lanka]]|
before=[[Chandrika Kumaratunga]]|
after=[[Ratnasiri Wickremanayake]]|
years=[[14 November]] [[1994]]&ndash;[[10 Agustus]] [[2000]]}}
{{end box}}
 
{{bio-stub}}