The EconomistA SMALL island-country of 20m people, what significance does Sri Lanka have in international affairs? Oddly, quite a bit. As a democracy with a long history of decent social indicators, which began to liberalise its economy in the 1970s, Sri Lanka had long been touted—at least by the West—as a model for the rest of Asia. Then its long civil war, which only ended in 2009, drew scrutiny from distant powers, notably from North America and Europe, which are home to large Tamil diaspora. Tamil fighters made early use of suicide bombers, a grisly method later associated with Islamist extremists in other conflict zones.