When a barrage of artillery slammed into Sivalinga Maheswary's town in Sri Lanka's northeast, her husband and son were among those killed.Sivalinga was one of the few survivors, but she lost her right arm in the shelling on the frontline of the country's civil war.The guns have since fallen silent but 90,000 widows like Sivalinga are now struggling to earn enough to feed themselves and their children. The number of widows is almost as high as the death toll caused by the decades-long war.101 East examines the plight of Sri Lanka's forgotten war widows and asks how the island nation's new regime will help thousands of widows struggling to survive.