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Sri Lankan Tamils felt alienated because:
(i) Government adopted majoritarian measure to establish Sinhala Supremacy. In 1956, an Act was passed to recognise Sinhala as the only official language thus disregarding Tamil.
(ii) The governments followed preferential politics that favoured Sinhala applicants for university positions and government jobs.
(iii) A new Constitution stipulated that the state shall protect and foster Buddhism.
(iv) Sri Lankan Tamils felt that none of the major political parties led by the Buddhist Sinhala leaders were sensitive to their language and culture.
(v) As a result, the relations between the Sinhala and Tamil communities strained overtime and it soon turned into a Civil War.
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| Non-cooperation |
Civil-Disobedience |
| It was launched on September 5th, 1920 and it ended on 5th February 1922 | It began on March 12, 1930, through the launch of the Salt Satyagraha |
| The Non-Cooperation Movement sought to bring the working of the government to a standstill by not cooperating with the administration. | The Civil Disobedience Movement was an attempt at paralysing the administration by breaking some specific rules and regulations. |
| There was large scale participation of Muslim working class in the Non-Cooperation movement | The Civil-Disobedience movement saw less participation from the Muslim community due to the policy of divide and rule by the British and the communal propaganda of the Muslim League and the Hindu Mahasabha |
| The non-cooperation movement was geographically confined to certain parts of India | The civil disobedience movement saw widespread geographical coverage and mass participation in comparison to the non-cooperation movement |
| The movement was called off in 1922 due to the Chauri-Chaura incident (Occurred on Feb 5th, 1922) | The movement was withdrawn after the signing of the Gandhi-Irwin pact |
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Soil erosion is the displacement of the upper layer of soil; it is a form of soil degradation. This natural process is caused by the dynamic activity of erosive agents, that is, water, ice, snow, air, plants, animals, and humans.
The agents of soil erosion are the same as the agents of all types of erosion: water, wind, ice, or gravity. Running water is the leading cause of soil erosion, because water is abundant and has a lot of power. Wind is also a leading cause of soil erosion because wind can pick up soil and blow it far away.
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