Interim
Self Governing Authority & Aftermath: 2003 - 2004 |
17 June 2003 |
Tokyo aid conference fails to restart Sri Lankan peace
process |
19 June 2003 |
LTTE will consider returning to negotiations when Sri Lanka
offers a practical conceptual framework for an interim administrative
structure
|
20 June 2003 |
Sri Lanka offers an "interim administrative council" to the LTTE,
conceding key demand to revive stalled Norwegian-backed peace talks...
|
27 June 2003 |
Pongu
Thamil urges steps to permanent peace
|
28 June 2003 |
Sea
Incident on 14th of June 2003 - SLMM Report |
20 July 2003 |
Sri Lanka Proposal for
Interim Administration - Discussion Document |
25 August 2003 |
Sri Lanka: From a
Unitary State to a Federal State - Paper presented by Eranthi
Premaratne at Institute of Federalism, University of Fribourg,
Switzerland.
|
2 September 2003 |
'Discussion Document': Sinhalese Politicians Learn Nothing and Forget
Nothing
says Dr.S.Sathananthan
"each party when in
Opposition has sabotaged the manoeuvres of the other in government
to defeat the Tamil National Movement. The unfolding shenanigans
over the Discussion Document are no different. The growing hostility
to the document does not even remotely imply that the Discussion
Paper seeks justice. The anti-Tamil hysteria should not under any
condition be misconstrued as "anti-peace"; that is a grave error.
The Discussion Document has nothing to do with peace based on
justice..."
|
9 September 2003 |
Speech by Federal Councillor Micheline Calmy-Rey, Head of the Department
of Foreign Affairs
"..This afternoon the Head of the
Peace
Secretariat of the Sri Lankan government and
of the LTTE
together with representatives of the Gender Sub-Committee created
for the peace process will meet to discuss various aspects of the
peace process. There have been no direct contacts of this kind, and
certainly none in public, since
peace negotiations
were broken off in April of this year. We are pleased that the
parties have taken the opportunity to hold these discussions in
Switzerland. This discussion is also highly topical, because within
the next two weeks
the LTTE plans to
present its proposals to the Sri Lankan government for peace
talks which hopefully will start soon afterwards. The government for
its part announced its proposals for the interim administration in
the north east of Sri Lanka in July..."
|
26 October 2003 |
D.B.S.Jeyaraj
on Draft LTTE proposals
"...Whatever the LTTE's
strategy and whatever the final document there is no doubt that a
painstakingly serious effort has been put into this counter proposal
drafting exercise. It is of great historical importance being the
first ever LTTE proposal of its kind. It is of a constitutionalist
yet revolutionary nature and envisages the radical restructuring of
Sri Lanka to preserve its unity and territorial integrity.."
|
26 October 2003 |
Details of LTTE
Draft Proposals
"Fundamentally, the LTTE
seeks to present a power sharing model with maximum powers for the
north eastern unit under the nomenclature of an interim
administrative set up. The Tigers want an interim administration
with wide powers to prevail for at least six years..."
|
28 October 2003 |
Sinhala owned Sri Lanka
Island Editorial on the 'draft' LTTE proposals. "Reinventing the Sri
Lankan State or creation of two states?" |
1 November 2003 |
LTTE Proposal
for Interim Self Governing Authority for the North-East |
1 November, 2003 |
Sri Lanka
Government Responds to ISGA, 1 November 2003 |
3 November
2003 |
U.S. Government supports resumption of peace negotiations
Applauding the Norwegian government for its
ongoing facilitation efforts, the U.S. Embassy in Sri Lanka said
that it also believed that "the U.S. Embassy has taken note of
the LTTE's delivery of counterproposals made in response to the Sri
Lankan Government's interim administration proposal for the North
and East. The Embassy urges both parties to build on this step by
resuming negotiations in a timely manner..."
|
4 November 2003 |
Sri Lanka Freedom Party
(SLFP) response to LTTE's proposals for an interim self governing
authority (ISGA) |
6 November 2003 |
US based Ilankai Tamil
Sangam on Kumaratunga's Coup & the Peace Process |
14 November 2003 |
President Kumaratunga talks
to the Financial Times
"The LTTE has now
surrounded the chief naval base of the country in Trincomalee, which
is also the second largest port in the country. They have surrounded
it with 17 camps put up in total violation of the ceasefire
agreement. And the government is doing nothing about it..."
|
19 December 2003 |
Dr. Robert C. Oberst on
Federal Solutions Amidst Chaos
"It should be kept in mind
that the LTTE presented the Interim Self-Governing Authority (ISGA)
proposals with a limited scope--namely to oversee the rebuilding of
the north and east. It is clearly intended to be a five-year plan
bridging the gap between the Memorandum of Understanding and a final
solution to the conflict. There are a number of features of interim
plans which need to kept in mind...."
|
28 December 2003 |
Comments on ISGA
Proposals and Precedence by Arivalan
"The well-researched and
thought-out proposals prepared for the LTTE by a team of eminent
expatriate legal experts, which included a former attorney general
of Sri Lanka, is not a work of fiction..."
|
3 January 2004 |
Aiding the Devil by
Saravanan Suresh Kumar
"By providing military aid
to Sri Lanka, India is weakening further the current troubled peace
process. We still seem to have not realized that the Sri Lankan
problem is not one that can be solved militarily..."
|
5 January 2004 |
Re-evaluating Concepts
of Sovereignty - Ana Pararajasingham
"Although an Indian type of
federalism is unworkable in the Sri Lankan context given the mutual
mistrust and the enormous price paid by Tamils in the war, India can
and indeed should play a role in formulating a solution under which
the Tamils and Sinhalese can share sovereignty..."
|
16 January 2004 |
Think, India, Think
says Sabesan from Melbourne Australia |
30 January 2004 |
Ramtanu Maitra on Covetous
Eyes on Sri Lanka's Strategic Jewel
"The recent revival of
interest in Trincomalee in the Pentagon can only be associated with
the growing overall US interest in
acquiring bases for intervention and rapid deployment for the sake
of developing a quick strike capability in the general area...."
|
January 2004 |
Sri Lanka
Peace Process at Cross Roads - Lessons, Opportunities and Ideas for
Principled Negotiations and Conflict Transformation - Tyrol
Fernando, Kumar Rupesinghe, Pakiasothy Saravanamuttu, Jayadeva Uyangoda,
Norbet Ropers |
1 April 2004 |
British
Refugee Sri Lanka Project Briefing
"The Norwegian special envoy Erik Solheim arrived
in Sri Lanka on 8 March and held discussions with the President,
Prime Minister and the LTTE. Although he expressed optimism, there
are grave doubts about the peace process. If UNF wins the election,
it may not be able to take forward the peace process and introduce
constitutional reforms, with a hostile President still in power. If
the UPFA succeeds, it will be saddled with the JVP which is opposed
to federalism, devolution and even negotiations with the LTTE. The
division within the LTTE is also likely to have impact in the peace
process. The delay in the peace process will cause delay in
international assistance and directly affect economic recovery and
the rehabilitation and resettlement of some 500,000 IDPs. At the
root of the problem lies the power struggle between the two major
political parties, without the cooperation of which, the peace
process is doomed. Observers say that the international community
has not concentrated on this issue and has so far failed to bring
sufficient pressure on these parties to enter into a sustainable
bipartisan agreement."
|
3 May 2004 |
What now for Sri Lanka peace? |
8 May 2004 |
Peace Process at Grave Risk says LTTE |
9 May 2004 |
Sri Lanka Sunday
Leader on the Peace Process and International Espionage and the Hidden
Third Force |
13 May 2004 |
"ISGA, blue print
for a future separate state" says Sri Lanka Foreign Minister Kadirgamar |
16 May 2004 |
Chandrika advised
against rushing into talks due to domestic political compulsions |
23 May 2004 |
We are awaiting the
announcement from Norway says LTTE |
26 May 2004 |
Deliberate
Destabilisation: Sri Lanka's military makes a move in the
east
"..If Sri Lanka's military
is tempted into exploiting the rules of the ceasefire to shift
the strategic balance in its favour, the LTTE will be
compelled, in the interests of self-protection, to respond..."
|
26 May 2004 |
Berlin Roundtable - Berghof Foundation
- New Perspectives in the Sri Lankan Peace Process - The Current
Political Situation and the Role of the International
Community |
May 2004 |
Development as a Precursor to Conflict Resolution: A Critical Review of
the Fifth Peace Process in Sri Lanka - N. Shanmugaratnam and K. Stokke
"...Since the end of the Cold War, the links
between intra-state armed conflicts and development in low and
middle-income countries have received an increasing amount of
attention from researchers, Western governments and aid agencies.
Scholars have explored the causal relations between underdevelopment
and internal wars by focusing on the effects of uneven access to
social and economic resources, opportunities and political power.
The importance of ethno-nationalist movements and elites in
constructing, transforming and politicising these inequalities in
order to mobilise support for armed struggle in multi-ethnic
societies has also been a major focus of several studies. At the
same time, development aid has undergone a partial shift from
�working around conflict� (i.e. providing development aid without
taking conflicts into account), through �working in conflict� (i.e.
offering humanitarian relief and development aid in a
conflict-sensitive manner), to �working on conflict� (i.e. providing
development assistance which aims to reduce and manage conflicts)
(Goodhand 2000, Japan Bank for International Cooperation 2003).
Multilateral agencies and major donor nations are increasingly
concerned with crafting transitions from war to peace in order to
mainstream �post-conflict� development. Peace, understood in the
minimalist sense as �absence of warfare� (Uyangoda and Perera 2003),
has been added to the conditionalities of development assistance to
countries with internal wars..... The situation was further
complicated when the LTTE was excluded from a donor conference held
in Washington in April 2003 because it remained banned by the US as
a �terrorist� organisation. On 21 April, the LTTE�s chief negotiator
Anton Balasingham wrote to the Prime Minister that his organisation
was temporarily withdrawing from the peace talks because of its
exclusion from the donor conference, the non-implementation of
agreed-upon measures and the continued sufferings of the displaced
Tamils. He also informed the government that the LTTE would not be
participating in the major donor conference on Sri Lanka to be held
on 8-9 June 2003 in Tokyo.
While the peace process stalled, the ceasefire continued to hold..."
|
12 June 2004 |
Kumaratunga hints at "an effective compromise" with the LTTE
"..We will establish a
continuing dialogue with all political leaders of the various
communities and groups represented in Parliament. This consultation
will proceed parallel to talks between the Government & LTTE with
the objective of keeping the country informed of the progress of
talks with the LTTE on one hand and of conveying to the LTTE the
views of all concerned parties. A negotiating team will be nominated
from among senior Cabinet Ministers, after dates for talks are
agreed upon. A National Council for Peace will be the apex body that
will coordinate these four institutions. This will be chaired by
President..."
|
13 June 2004 |
LTTE lambasts Chandrika's Duplicity
Blaming Sri Lanka's
President Chandrika Kumaratunge for "linking ISGA with permanent
political solution," as a "manipulative strategy to take forward the
peace process for a while and then to abort it," the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam called upon the International community to
recognize Ms.Kumaratunge's political duplicity and to "bring
pressure on her government to be principled and honest in political
negotiations".. The minority UPFA government faces dissolution any
time and such unstable political environment is unsuitable for
discussing serious matters related to "Tamil homeland, Tamil
nationalism and Tamil self-rule," the LTTE argued.
|
14 June 2004 |
Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga says there is no agreement
yet with the Tamil Tiger rebels about how to resume stalled peace talks.
She said she wanted to
discuss plans for self-government in rebel areas. But, in a TV
address, she stressed this could only be done as part of talks on a
final peace deal.
|
15 June 2004 |
Kumaratunga Prepares to Unleash the Sinhala Army warns
Dr.S.Sathananthan, Action Group of Tamils.
"...a
confederal system is the only constitutional basis for a final
and lasting settlement within a united Sri Lanka that ensures the
national rights of Tamils. However, despite their rhetoric about
"peace", Kumaratunga and her international backers are opposed to a
confederal system. They view Tamils as a "minority" and therefore
not entitled to
collective, national rights. Almost all foreign governments that
are sponsoring Kumaratunga are themselves busy manipulating and
controlling their own so-called "minorities". Politicians in those
governments come by and large from the respective majority nation in
each country.
Their
national interest is to defend the international system of States.
They are committed to defeating any internal military challenge to
any State anywhere (except of course liberation movements they
support for geopolitical advantage). In Sri Lanka they naturally
collude with the Sinhala politicians and support the Sinhala
government to crush LTTE's military power..."
|
18 June 2004 |
Slow Ebb: Prospects
for Peace are fading Slowly - Tamil Guardian Editorial
"...Having at one stage
agreed to discuss the LTTE's proposals for an Interim Self Governing
Administration (ISGA) for the Northeast with the movement, President
Chandrika Kumaratunga is (now that the international aid conference
has concluded) insisting the talks must be on a permanent solution
also...The glaring futility of a minority government seeking to take
on the fifty year old imbroglio of the ethnic question instead of
addressing short term and urgent measures to improve the quality of
a million people's day-to-day lives is apparently lost on her. The
ultranationalist Janatha Vimukthi Perumana (JVP) - part of Sri
Lanka's ruling coalition - is meanwhile railing against the ISGA.
The LTTE has every reason to believe that President Kumaratunga's
strategy is merely to resume negotiations, dismiss the ISGA at the
outset and then allow the talks to meander. This will allow her to
concentrate on her own political ambitions: ruling Sri Lanka after
her second - and, according to the present constitution, final -
term in office, while keeping the LTTE pinned to the table..."
|
21 June 2004 |
The Pursuit of Peace in
Sri Lanka - Bradman Weerakoon
"...There are some profound
questions to be addressed. * Can the modern state with its limited
resources resume its responsibilities as provider and protector?
* How does it act, in the face of the centrifugal forces generated
as a reaction to globalization, to win back the loyalty of
individuals who have withdrawn into their communal identities? * Can
the strong centre, as symbolized by the unitary constitution and the
executive presidential system hold? * Could a transformation of the
country's political and economic institutions in the direction of
federalism save the democratic state? ..."
|
25 June 2004 |
Cloaked Daggers:
Kumaratunga goads the Tigers while Delaying Talks - Tamil
Guardian Editorial
"...Infamous for her
political duplicity, President Kumaratunga has never also
bothered to conceal her militarist tendencies when it comes to
the Tamil question. Senior diplomats in Colombo have long been
well aware Karuna was under her protection � not least because
Colombo was seeking a foreign safe haven for him. In their
pointed call earlier this month for "both parties to do their
utmost to continue to respect and implement the ceasefire" the
co-chairs of Sri Lanka�s aid donors made clear the military�s
feigned innocence in the violence is not being readily accepted.
To little effect, however..."
|
27 June 2004 |
TNA's Thrust in
Sri Lanka Parliament - R.Sampanthan - Parliamentary Group
Leader, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) |
June 2004 |
Securing Peace: An Action Strategy for Sri Lanka - A Report Prepared
by Princeton University for the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS), June 2004
"In our view, resolution of the Sinhalese
political party struggle is the top priority. This
conflict�whatever the merits of the arguments�is selfish in the
short-term and self defeating in the long-term. The country is
ready for peace. The LTTE is ready to continue negotiations. The
world cannot understand why Sri Lanka does not move ahead to
peace. All parties need to seize this moment, honor their
constituents� faith in them, and settle their dispute
immediately. The critical next steps we explore in this report
will go unaddressed if this issue is not resolved
immediately."...
|
7 July 2004 |
Sri Lankan military�s intrigues with LTTE rebel faction threatens
ceasefire says International Committee of 4th International |
9 July 2004 |
ISGA critical to Peace Process, Tamil MPs tell US think tank in
Washington
"Even if we assume that
Sri Lanka's President is interested in peace talks, the JVP,
whose ambition is to capture power itself, is unlikely to
support any constructive dialogue with the LTTE.."
|
11
July 2004 |
US military intelligence team visits Palaly
|
14 July 2004 |
Colombo promoting Karuna to destroy LTTE with tacit approval of US
says US based think tank
Stratfor
"...The plan is to destabilize the Tigers,
bait the group into confrontation and ultimately launch an
offensive aimed at destroying the fractured Tamil movement once
and for all," the analysts at Strategic Forecasting (Stratfor)
said quoting unnamed sources inside the Sri Lankan
government....Colombo probably hopes a renewed guerrilla war
will be tempered by internal struggles and that, once weakened,
the Tigers can be destroyed, the US analysts said....According
to the US analysts, in the event of a renewed war �the Tigers
will likely end up weaker - perhaps no longer in a position to
make the demands for autonomy that helped cause the internal
strife in the first place.� �On the other hand, baiting a
wounded tiger could be a dangerous game," they cautioned.
|
21
July 2004 |
LTTE�s
official periodical Viduthalai Puligal
(Liberation Tigers)
"...Time is fast running out. The LTTE is
prepared to wait patiently to negotiate and resolve the Tamil
national question. But if the government has a hidden agenda to
protract the peace process and restage a game of deception
again, the Tamil people are not prepared to bear it anymore.
This thinking pattern of the Tamil people, a most reasonable one
at that, should be understood in the right perspective by the
government and the international community..."
|
22
July 2004 |
Curb activities of paramilitaries, SLMM urges SL
Government
''The SLMM has strongly urged the government
to take meaningful and effective action to curb the activities
of paramilitary groups including that of Karuna faction and the
EPDP'', Major General (retd) Trond Furuhovde, Head of Sri Lanka
Monitoring Mission told LTTE Head of Political Wing,
S.P.Thamilchelvan
|
27
July 2004 |
Norway fears for Sri Lanka peace
"Mediators
say they are not optimistic about the future of the island's
peace process after a wave of violence..."
|
4 August
2004 |
A tangled web we weave -
No talks on the basis of ISGA says United Peoples Freedom Alliance
(UPFA) led by Sri Lanka's President Ms Chandrika Kumaratunge
"United Peoples Freedom Alliance
(UPFA) led by Sri Lanka's President Ms Chandrika Kumaratunge
declared Tuesday that the Sri Lanka government will not
recommence peace talks with the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam) on the basis of the Interim Self Governing Authority
(ISGA) proposals submitted by the LTTE, State-run Sri Lanka
Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC) announced in its Wednesday
morning news bulletin in English, Sinhala and Tamil quoting
Minister Mr.Maithiripala Sirisena, the General Secretary of the
Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP).
...At the UPFA ex-co meeting the
leaders of the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) demanded the President to
make her stand clear on the resumption of peace talks with the
LTTE citing various media reports suggesting President Ms
Chandrika Kumaratunge was prepared to commence talks with the
LTTE on the basis of ISGA, sources said. JVP leaders earlier
warned that it would pull out from the UPFA government if it
resumed peace talks with the LTTE on the basis of its ISGA
proposals which they claimed to be the stepping stone for a
separate state..."
|
4
August 2004 |
A tangled web we weave -
Colombo denies it rejected LTTE proposal
"..Minister Maithripala Sirisena, the General
Secretary of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), has issued a
statement Wednesday denying "there is absolutely no truth in the
reports" that quoted him as saying that the Sri Lanka government
will not recommence peace talks with the LTTE on the basis of
the Interim Self Governing Authority (ISGA) proposals.
"Minister Sirisena says that the President at
an Executive Committee meeting of the ruling Alliance on 2nd
August 2004 stated there is no change in her Government�s
stance. The President maintains that the GOSL is willing to
discuss with the LTTE, its proposal for an interim
administration alongside the talks to reach a final solution
acceptable to all communities." said the statement.
State-run Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation
(SLBC) announced in its Wednesday morning news bulletin in
English, Sinhala and Tamil quoting Minister Sirisena, that the
Sri Lanka government will not recommence peace talks with the
LTTE on the basis of the Interim Self Governing Authority (ISGA)
proposals submitted by the LTTE."
|
10
August 2004 |
Sri Lanka's U turn attacked reports BBC
"Sri Lanka's main opposition has accused the
government of taking a cavalier and casual attitude towards the
peace process with Tamil Tiger rebels. United National Party
spokesman GL Peiris said the government had again changed its
stand on resuming talks..."
|
19
August 2004 |
President Kumaratunga "has shown her desire to
move forward on the peace process" -
Press Statement by Adam Ereli, Deputy Spokesman, U.S.
Department of State Washington, DC
"Deputy Secretary Armitage has reviewed the
situation in Sri Lanka with U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka Jeffrey
Lunstead, including the recurring acts of violence such as
assassinations and suicide bombings. In light of this
discussion, we urge the parties to take steps to work to rebuild
trust and schedule the promised talks as soon as possible.
President Kumaratunga has shown her desire to move forward on
the peace process launched with the2002 cease fire.
The
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam needs to respond positively and
enter talks with the Sri Lankan Government. The cease fire and a
return to negotiations represent the best hope for Sri Lanka's
future as a peaceful, prosperous, and unified nation. The United
States stands ready to implement commitments to aid in Sri
Lanka's reconstruction, but this will only be possible through a
continuation of the peace process.
Real progress towards
peace and an end to violence in word and deed can begin the
process of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam's entering the
political mainstream, and result in assistance for areas in the
north and east most affected by conflict. Assassinations and
suicide bombings are unacceptable. The recruitment of child
soldiers must cease."
|
25 August 2004 |
D.Sivaram on ISGA bashing: Much ado about nothing
"..The
ceasefire is the only tangible reality of the peace process.
All talk about talks is empty rhetoric. All those who do not
accept this fact are either scoundrels who are using the chance
to push their own ulterior agendas or are genuinely misguided
gulls who sincerely believe that things would start moving in
the right direction if only the Tigers and the UPFA sit across
the negotiating table. The ISGA, like all and sundry proposals
and plans prepared and submitted by the Tamils since 1978,
cannot be implemented neither in part nor in full, come what
may. It has been demonstrated ad nauseam and beyond all
reasonable doubt that even an iota of regional autonomy for the
Tamils beyond what has been granted under the
13th Amendment to the constitution is absolutely
impossible..."
more
|
28 August
2004 |
Tamils Should Realise They Stand Alone in a Hostile World -
Editorial, Northeastern Monthly
"...Every few months or so,
accusations of human rights violations are flung at the LTTE by
various local and international actors whose concern for human
suffering knows no bounds when it gives them an opportunity to
cause the Tiger rebels discomfiture. ..Surely no one is na�ve
enough to believe that Tamil children, who successive Sri Lankan
governments butchered and forced into deprivation and
displacement, are objects of such sanctity that their well-being
has become a matter of international concern? The agenda behind
such accusations is to exploit the child soldier issue so that
the LTTE is unable to replenish its cadre � the cadre it needs
if forced to fight again..."
more
|
29 August
2004
|
"We will remain strong" - Senior member of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam, V. Balakumaran in Oslo
"...LTTE has been
successfully resisting attempts to weaken its military and
political strength during the peace time with the same courage
and bravery it displayed during the time of war. Tamils seek a
just peace and not a peace with surrender. LTTE leadership will
not relent until political and social dignity is restored to the
lives of Tamil people. We are not 'Vadi Kattina Mutalkal'. We
are not stupid. The world has not come to Sri Lanka to save the
Tamils. They have come to save Sri Lanka. There are 50 countries
who have come to help Sri Lanka. We have only one country to
help us - and that is Sri Lanka (loud laughter) It is difficult
to win against an intelligent and strong soldier. Today, the
Tamil community has matured to that state... We are charting our
path successfully towards our nationhood and are in the verge of
entering a new era. Every Tamil should be cognizant of our
strength and be aware of where we are in our mission...
Palestinians have a lot of
resources and have the backing of many countries that support
their political aspirations. Still they are politically weak and
are not united. Liberation Tigers will not allow such a
situation to develop in the Tamil homeland." (audio:
Part 1 |
Part 2 |
Part 3 |
Part 4 | Courtesy:
TamilNatham )
|
31 August
2004 |
Ruling Sri Lanka Government Coalition Partner, Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) intensifies its campaign against Sri
Lankan peace talks - WSWS
"...As part of a campaign heightening communal
tensions in Sri Lanka, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) is
conducting a series of lectures throughout the island entitled
�Who are the true enemies of peace?�. While the JVP claims to be
in favour of peace, the entire thrust of these lectures, one of
which was delivered in Colombo on August 17, is to plunge the
country back to war....Efforts by Norwegian mediators to restart
the �peace process� have stalled amid a series of assassinations
and reprisals between the LTTE and a breakaway faction in the
country�s east headed by V. Muralitharan, also known as Karuna.
Growing evidence points to the involvement of the military in
supporting Karuna�s fighters as a means for undermining the
LTTE.
In this context, the JVP�s campaign is lining up with the most
warmongering sections of the armed forces...
The JVP�s propaganda secretary Wimal Weerawansa
gave the lecture at Colombo�s Youth Council Centre. He began by
demagogically denouncing all those promoting the peace talks as
stooges for the LTTE. He branded the previous United National
Front (UNF) government, which signed the ceasefire agreement
with the LTTE in 2002, as �Green Tigers��green being the UNF�s
official colour. The Norwegian facilitators, he declared, were
�White Tigers�. He accused various non-government organisations,
which were calling for negotiations, of �crowing for dollars�.
While not specifically calling for a return to war, Weerawansa
attacked the emphasis on peace, saying that it was the result of
bowing to the LTTE�s pressure. Peace, he said, had to take a
backseat, while �defence of the Motherland� had to be placed
ahead of all other demands. In a comment that can only be
interpreted as a warning to his UPFA allies, Weerawansa declared
that even the government�s survival had to take second place to
the defence of the country. �In all our endeavours the security
of the motherland has to stay at the pinnacle,� he said,
emphasising the need to �mobilise the masses to defeat this
so-called peace process�..."
|
2 September 2004 |
French diplomats meet TNA foreign affairs committee
�We told France if indeed talks on the ISGA
commence, there is a good chance that an agreement could be
reached in this matter. We said that this is exactly what
the Singhalese are afraid of, as it would mean that they would
no longer have a monopoly on power, and their hegemony over the
Tamil nation will cease for once and for all time. We also said
that it is for this reason that we suspect that the Sri Lankan
government t is trying to provoke the LTTE to another war by
destabilizing the east and supporting Tamil armed groups," said
Mr. Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam TNA MP Thursday
|
8 September 2004 |
Dr.S.Sathananthan on the International Community & the 'Peace
Process'
"...The spreading political support for the
LTTE is rapidly deepening because economic links between the
organisation and the Tamil people are expanding. The LTTE is the
largest employer in the NEP. .. So, in addition to its
undiminished military strength, the LTTE has acquired more
political power and set down deep economic roots among the Tamil
people.These developments have set off alarm bells among the
international community. The four core States (US, EU, Norway &
Japan) anticipated the Sinhala government would be intelligent
enough to play along with the Oslo Declaration... But the
Sinhala leadership, blinded by more than five decades of
anti-Tamil hysteria, has been utterly incapable of carrying out
this cosmetic ploy... States that intervene in political
conflicts employ internal think-tanks that chart out a plan of
action, alternative scenarios and contingency moves projected
over several years into the future. We must be utterly clear
that when Oslo initiated "talks" after the CFA, the Norway's
plan of action must have covered at least a five-year period and
tailored to achieve the strategic aim of the four core States.
That aim is to undercut Tamils' political support for the LTTE
and to emasculate the military power of the Tamil national
movement.. Clearly the devious plans of the
international community are running out of steam. This is the
opportunity New Delhi has been waiting for to outmanoeuvre the
Norway-led international initiative that minimised India's role
in Sri Lanka. The purpose of the conference Dr Swamy has
proposed must be understood in this context. It is a rescue
operation mounted apparently by New Delhi to salvage President
Kumaratunga's sinking political credibility. In return it
expects Kumaratunga will give India a pivotal role in addressing
the conflict. The tactic employed is to caricature the LTTE as
anti-democratic and the Norwegians as LTTE-lovers. The immediate
objective is to draw attention away from the glaring Sinhala
obduracy. Presumably this conference would be designed to send
New Delhi's "muscular message" to the Tamils...". .
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16 September 2004 |
Thamilchelven to
the JVP - Thinakural Editorial
"...Quoting Nelsen Mandela - "In this war one
will win and the other will lose. But even after the war the
winner and the loser have no choice but to talk by sitting at
the same table placed on a high ground full of ashes. You think
the victory will be yours. We think the victory will be ours.
But do not make a mistake by taking away the opportunity to
respect each other as valuable enemies. Though we do not have
the same views, though we are enemies, give us an opportunity to
respect you."
|
21
September 2004 |
Annotated Guide to Sri
Lanka President Chandrika Kumaratunga Address to UN and the
Response by the Tamil National Alliance
"...the statement made
by the President in the course of her address to the United
Nations that "the LTTE is refusing to return to the negotiating
table" is singularly unfortunate, as it does not reflect the
true factual position.
The lack of clarity, the contradictions within her own
government, and her inability apart from making
pronouncements to take definite action to commence talks are the
main stumbling blocks to the recommencement of the peace
process..."
|
22 September 2004 |
Dr.S.Sathananthan on the A to Z of Conflict Resolution in Sri Lanka
"..At first intermittent "talks" with the
national movement are mooted to legitimise the State's military
onslaught as unavoidable and indeed made necessary by the
"lawlessness" of the national movement. But when a military
stalemate ensues, then "talks" become the continuation of war by
other means. Having failed to disarm the national movement
through force, the State then manoeuvres to draw the movement
into "talks" with the principle objective of forcing it to
decommission weapons.This continuation of war by other means is
the so-called "peace process". If armed conflict is the power
struggle at the military level, "peace process" is the power
struggle at the political level..."
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23 September 2004 |
Ana Pararajasingham on International Community Can Help Forge Peace.
"Given the credentials of both writers,
(Sathananthan is a political scientist with a Ph.D. from
Cambridge and a visiting research Scholar at the Jawaharlal
Nehru University of International Studies; Taraki is the
pseudonym of Sivaram who has written extensively on the armed
struggle of the Tamil people for well over a decade), one needs
to give serious consideration to the essential thrust of this
argument, i.e. that the international community is pursuing a
plan to weaken the LTTE and prop up Colombo. .."
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1 October 2004 |
LTTE
Constitutional Affairs Committee meets in Geneva
"..The Constitutional Affairs Committee of the
LTTE led by Head of the LTTE's Political Wing
S.P.Thamilchelvan and comprising of Head of Thamileelam Police,
Mr.P.Nadesan, Head of Judiciary, Mr.Para, Secretary General of
LTTE Peace Secretariat, Mr.Pulithevan, and Amparai-Batticaloa
Political Head Mr.Kausalyan, joined by Chief Negotiator Mr.
Anton Balasingham and his wife Adele Balasingam, met with the
expatriate Legal and Constitutional experts who participated in
the original formulation of the ISGA in Geneva. The meeting was
chaired by Mr. S. P. Thamilchelvan, Head of the LTTE's Political
Wing..."
|
1 October 2004 |
Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (EDA) Press Release
Internal meeting of the "Constitutional
Affairs Committee" of the LTTE in Geneva from 1 to 7 October
"The EDA welcomes the fact that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) are holding the meeting in Geneva at their own
request. One purpose of the meeting is to prepare the next round
of negotiations in the peace process between the Sri Lankan
government and the LTTE.
On the margins of the meeting,
representatives of the EDA today held talks with an LTTE
delegation which included Anton Balasingham, chief LTTE
negotiator in the peace talks with the Sri Lankan government,
and Suppiah Paramu Tamilselvan, head of the political wing of
the LTTE.The EDA delegation was led by Ambassador Rodolphe S.
Imhoof, head of Political Affairs Division II, Asia/Oceania.
Top of the agenda was the present state of
the peace process in Sri Lanka. The EDA welcomes the LTTE's
continuing willingness to negotiate, and calls for peace talks
to be resumed as soon as possible. The EDA representatives
condemned all political murders and pointed out that the LTTE
has taken on extensive obligations with regard to respect for
human rights � including the recruitment of child soldiers � and
to the development of a pluralistic society in Sri Lanka. The
EDA holds the view that a possible interim administration of the
north east of Sri Lanka as decided in the peace talks should be
based on a federal structure within a united Sri Lanka.
Switzerland welcomes and supports Norway's role as a facilitator
in the peace process. Switzerland supports the peace process
with programmes of conflict transformation and projects to
strengthen human rights. It also provides advice on federalism
and mine clearance, as well as running reconstruction programmes
and providing development aid."
|
7 October 2004 |
Cease-Fire
under Pressure - Editorial, Thinakural, Colombo based Tamil Daily
"Although two and half years have passed since
the MOU was signed between the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL)
and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the resultant
Cease-Fire is still subject to several challenges. It is in this
context that Norway�s Deputy Foreign Minister Mr.Vidar Helgessen
has expressed concerns ...LTTE Political Head Mr. S.P.
Thamilchelvan had also expressed similar sentiments in Geneva in
calling for the disarmament of the para military groups as
stipulated in Clause 1.8 of the MOU. According to this clause
para military groups have to be disarmed. One cannot dismiss the
LTTE�s charge of the Government�s failure to comply with this
requirement. Many members of the LTTE who had attempted to carry
out political work in the Government Controlled areas of
Batticoala have been killed. These killings have occurred in
close proximity to the Sri Lankan Army camps. If the army was
not directly responsible for these acts, then it must be the
para military forces. Therefore, it is the Sri Lanka Government
that is answerable.
There are also killings which have taken place within areas
controlled by the LTTE. The LTTE claims to have evidence that
these killings too were by para military groups working in
tandem with the army. The only way in which to bring these
killings to an end is by disarming the para military units. It
is the Government�s responsibility to do so..."
more
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26 October 2004 |
Balasingham questions �Oslo Declaration� in new book
|
13 November 2004 |
Peace Process? What Peace Process?
The Words of a President concerned to
negotiate in good faith with the LTTE -
Sri Lanka President Interview with the Brahmin owned Hindu:
"..we have to go on with the process, because one
has to be knocking at the door. Even if you know that what is
beyond the door could be not very pleasant, that is the only
solution... for the first time (the LTTE) has split into
three. So things are changing. It is not because, I think, the
personality of Prabhakaran may change... I do not expect much
change from this particular leader. But movements change, other
people may change, circumstances and political conjecture
change. I think there is some hope.."
Comment: But Some things Never Change...President
Kumaratunga in the Sinhala owned Sri Lanka Sunday Times,
20 August 1995 - "I have studied
and acquired considerable knowledge on guerrilla warfare when I
was a student in Paris, and we knew how they would behave. We
conducted talks on the basis that the LTTE would not agree to
any peaceful settlement and lay down arms."
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17 November 2004 |
The Three Faces of President Kumaratunge's Government
"'There is no point in talking to the President alone. We must
talk to the government. Therefore the Coalition government must first clarify
its policy. Please tell the government that it must proclaim, in a single voice,
its policy regarding the ethnic problem and the peace efforts so as to
facilitate the next step in the peace effort.' Informed sources say that this is
the essence of the message that the LTTE has sent to the government through the
Norwegians...She is showing one face to the international community and
another face to the LTTE. At the same time her partners in her coalition are
showing yet another face to the Sri Lankans in the south."
|
19 November 2004 |
Knocking at
the Door?
- President Kumaratunga Speaks to the BBC
|
21 November 2004 |
Norway putting
pressure for peace talks: says Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka has complained to the United States that peace
broker Norway was putting undue pressure on it while sparing Tamil Tiger
rebels, a media report said. President Chandrika Kumaratunga lodged the
complaint in a telephone conversation with US Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage last week, the 'Sunday Times' here reported."The President
complained that the recent Norwegian peace delegation to Colombo had applied
pressure on her, while not doing the same to the rebels," the newspaper
said. more
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19 November 2004 |
US Deputy
Secretary Richard Armitage on 'consistency and forthrightness' - and truth?
"President Kumaratunga has been consistent and forthright in
her commitment to settling outstanding issues in the peace process in the
framework of a united Sri Lanka." US Deputy Secretary of State Richard
Armitage
"தூங்கிறவனை எழுப்பலாம், தூங்கிறவன் போல் நடிக்கிறவனை
எழுப்பவது கடினம்"
தமிழ் தேசிய தலைவர், வே.பிரபாகரன்
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27 November 2004 |
Velupillai Pirabaharan's Maha Veerar Naal Address
'Though we have entered into a ceasefire agreement and
observed peace for three years and participated in the peace talks for six
months, our people have not yet received any peace dividends. The
intolerable burden of the day-to-day life problems is suffocating our
people. Our people are desperately anticipating relief and resolutions to
their urgent existential problems. For these reasons we want the immediate
resumption of peace talks, based on our proposal, so that an interim
administrative authority can be established as early as possible to address
the grievances of our people. If some elements of our proposals are deemed
problematic or controversial, these issues can be resolved through
discussions at the negotiating table. Once the interim administrative
authority is institutionalised and becomes functional we are prepared to
engage in negotiations for a permanent settlement to the ethnic problem.
That is our position.
Our position is reasonable. We are advocating this
position in relation to the actuality of the concrete conditions prevailing
in the Tamil homeland. Nevertheless, President Kumaratunga is inviting us
for talks on a permanent solution, advancing a position that even an interim
administrative set-up should be worked out within the contours of a final
settlement. We can point out different reasons as to why she gives primacy
to talks on a permanent solution. One reason could be her strategy to
satisfy extremist racist elements, particularly to placate the JVP, who are
deadly opposed to our proposal for an interim administration. The second
reason could be to impress upon the international community that she is
genuinely committed to resolving the Tamil national question. The third
reason could be to prolong the peace negotiations indefinitely by opting to
talk on a most intractable and complex issue. We can come up with several
other reasons. Whatever the real reason, we can clearly and confidently say
one thing; it is apparent from the inconsistent and contradictory statements
made by President Kumaratunga that her government is not going to offer the
Tamil people either an interim administration or a permanent solution...
We cannot continue to be entrapped in a political vacuum without an interim
solution or a permanent settlement, without a stable peace and without peace
of mind. ..There are borderlines to patience and expectations. We have now
reached the borderline. At this critical moment we wish to make an urgent
appeal to the Sri Lanka government. We urge the government to resume the
peace negotiations without conditions, based on our proposal for an Interim
Self-Governing Authority. If the Government of Sri Lanka rejects our urgent
appeal and adopts delaying tactics, perpetuating the suffering of our
people, we have no alternative other than to advance the freedom struggle of
our nation. We call upon the concerned international governments to
understand our predicament and prevail upon the Sri Lanka government to
resume peace talks based on our fair and reasonable stand.'"
more
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30 November 2004 |
Southern consensus, a prerequisite to resume talks- Thinakural
"Is the Sri Lanka Government, which tells the world that
LTTE is unwilling to talk about permanent solution, prepared to talk to the
Tigers with clarity of purpose and in one voice? If not, is the government
at least prepared to acknowledge that its call for talk on permanent
solution is not genuine?" questioned the editorial of the popular Tamil
daily Thinakural referring to the annual speech of the LTTE leader. The
editorial said that LTTE's position on ISGA is "rooted in the reality that
the Tamils will not receive any permanent solution from the southern polity
which stands divided and confused."
"Mr. Pirapaharan says that talks regarding permanent peace would be
meaningful only if there is consensus coupled with, clear and straight
vision in the southern Political parties on the question of the fundamental
aspirations of the Tamils" the edit noted.
|
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President cannot prolong No war, No peace situation - Jaffna Daily
"...the President, the head of the Government, who has
been "dilly dallying on the peace talks and the peace process may brush
aside the LTTE leader's call with her usual indifference without
understanding the real import of it". However, the President cannot "drag
her feet any longer and prolong this situation of 'no war' and 'no permanent
peace", the paper warned. "If the cease fire agreement and the memorandum of
Understanding brought into existence by the government headed by Ranil
Wickramasinga is to survive then the President must take urgent constructive
steps. This is a must. It is this message that is sternly and clearly
conveyed by the Heroes' Day speech. If the President permits it to be
dragged in the direction the Sinhala Chauvinists pull then nothing could
prevent this county being engulfed in another bloody war." the paper said.
"This is today�s reality." it declared."If the president thinks that she can
have the Tamils locked in a political vaccum and proceed with her power
'chess game' for her selfish ends then she lives in a dream world of her
own" declared the edit."
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30 November 2004 |
'State your stand', Tamil MP tells President, JVP, UNP
"Members of the ruling party and media in the South are
treating the LTTE leader's speech lightly. He says little but has achieved
much. He does what he says. Hence accept his call and resume the peace
talks. State your stand on the Tamil question unequivocally. If you do, then
we can decide the path we have to take", said Mr.Selvarajah Gajendran, Tamil
National Alliance MP for Jaffna speaking on the Sri Lankan government budget
in Parliament Tuesday 30 November 2004. Speaking further the MP said: "The
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, United National Party and President Kumaratunga
have not stated their stand on the Tamil people's right to self
determination, the Tamil homeland and Tamils' status as a distinct
nationality. Respond to the LTTE leader's call if you have courage and
political honesty", Mr. Gajendran said.
|
1 December 2004 |
Media Release by Sri Lanka Ministry of Information.
The
Government is engaged in a careful study of the statement of the leader of
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam made on November 27th.
The absence of direct negotiations since April 2003 is of no benefit to
anyone and is unsustainable. Following its election to office in April this
year, the UPFA Government has, therefore, made serious, sincere and
consistent efforts to reopen talks with the LTTE. These efforts are well
known to the people of Sri Lanka and to the international community.
A call, couched in threatening language, from the LTTE now for a resumption
of negotiations without conditions, while setting conditions itself by
insisting unilaterally on a single agenda item is scarcely conducive to good
faith negotiations.
The Government of Sri Lanka has conveyed publicly, and through the kind
facilitation of the Royal Norwegian Government, its readiness to discuss the
establishment of an interim authority to meet the urgent humanitarian and
development needs of the people of the North and East as a priority, while
exploring a permanent settlement along the lines of the document signed and
accepted by the Government and the LTTE in Oslo on December 5, 2002. It also
remains firmly committed to the strict maintenance of the Ceasefire
Agreement and condemns all violations and actions jeopardizing the
prevailing ceasefire and which caused fear and thereby tensions among the
civil population, leading to the undue rupture of the sensitive balance of
ethnic groups presently maintained by the Government with the objective of
safeguarding the ceasefire and taking the peace process forward.
The Government of Sri Lanka is in communication with the Royal Norwegian
Government on future steps to be taken in the peace process.
|
2 December 2004 |
"Impending disaster is SL President's own making"- Jaffna daily |
3 December 2004 |
Govt. wants full dialogue with LTTE says Foreign Minister Kadirgamar
"The President and the government intend to discuss the
peace process completely as a whole and not necessarily basing it on the
ISGA proposals, Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar told parliament (on 3
December 2004). Minister Kadirgamar said both parties should take stock of
the present situation and resume talks soon despite confusions,
controversies and doubts surrounding the peace process. "The factual
situation is that the President wants to talk about the whole process, not
only on the ISGA. There is a gap, and we must negotiate about it, and I must
add that our Government is committed towards the resumption of peace talks,"
he said. Mr. Kadirgamar was interrupted several times by TNA Leader R.
Sambandan who wanted clarifications especially regarding the government's
stand on the ISGA. "Nobody wants the ceasefire agreement to break up. But
the LTTE and especially the TNA which represents the LTTE here should
understand that this is not a one-sided affair. You need both hands to
clap," Mr. Kadirgamar said. Meanwhile, responding to a query by Opposition
Chief Whip Mahinda Samarasinghe on the Government stand on Norway, the
minister said the government would continue with its policy to work with
Norway as facilitators. "The JVP has from time to time voiced its
disapproval about Norway, even the Government has. But I have not come
across a detailed motion calling for the removal of Norway by the
Government. On the other hand the JHU has moved a motion in parliament
asking us to remove Norway. We will continue to work with them as
facilitators," he said.
|
3 December 2004 |
Sri Lanka must start talks based on ISGA say Jaffna NGOs |
4 December 2004 |
Counter proposals not conducive to peace says Vanni MP |
4 December 2004 |
Peace Process? What Peace Process? - Massive rise in Sri Lankan firepower amid
peace
Sri Lanka�s armed forces substantially expanded their offensive
capability after the ceasefire agreement with the Liberation Tigers was signed
in February 2002, a book published by a senior United States military analyst
says. The Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) has doubled its manpower and acquired
twenty new aircraft, while the Army (SLA) has tripled its tanks and doubled its
artillery firepower. In a book titled "Sri Lanka�s military: The Search For A
Mission" published this year, Brian Blodgett, a career United States Army
intelligence officer and an adjunct professor with the American Military,
examines the historical evolution of Colombo�s armed forces and says -
- "While peace negotiations were occurring, the SLA
increased its armour, APCs (armoured personnel carriers) and artillery,"
- "The army nearly doubled its artillery, from 97 in 2001
to 187 in 2002," "The army increased its APCs by approximately 70
percent, from 158 to 204."
- Furthermore, in 2001, shortly before signing the present
ceasefire agreement with the LTTE in February, the Sri Lanka Army (SLA)
purchased 40 new battle tanks in addition to the 25 (of which at least 18
were then operational) that it possessed.
- "The air force remained at 10,000 airmen until 2002 when
it nearly doubled its size to 19,300 airmen - The air force continues
to have high recruitment since the majority of airmen never face combat."
- "In 2002, the SLA�s [official] strength increased
dramatically � from 95,000] to approximately 118,000 soldiers," However, "it
was impossible to determine the [SLA�s] exact strength due to the large
number of desertions," "Recruitment to the SLA is extremely difficult
[and retention] is poor,"
- Sri Lanka�s Navy, which began a major expansion shortly
before the ceasefire, continued after negotiations began."In 2001, the SLN
increased its manpower by 80 percent to 18,000 sailors. By 2003, the navy
had approximately 20,600 sailors," Unlike the Army, the Navy "did not
have any problems recruiting or retaining sailors" in this period, he
adds.The naval expansion came because in 2000, the Sri Lanka government
�decided the Navy needed to be the first line of defence against the LTTE.�
The government believes "if the navy could stop the flow of weapons and
ammunition to the LTTE, the army could defeat them"
- "after losing Elephant Pass to the LTTE [in 2000] and
having its subsequent [Agnie Khiela] offensive [in 2001] stopped after only
72 hours, the SLA decided that it needed additional firepower to defeat the
LTTE,"
- "The SLAF bought 10 Mi-35s [export versions of the Mi-24
helicopter gunship] and 10 transports," The SLAF has thereby "increased its
attack helicopters to 24."
- Perhaps in response to SLA officers� arguments that "jets
are unnecessary because they are too fast and come from too far," the
SLAF may be shifting its doctrine in favour of rotary wing instead of
fixed wing close support. But "due to a dearth of pilots and limited
training establishments [in Sri Lanka], most of the trainees are undergoing
advanced flight training in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh."
- As a consequence of the purchase of new equipment, "the
SLA appears to be prepared to carry on the war against the LTTE. But
despite the military�s expansions, Sri Lanka is underprepared to engage the
LTTE. The current ceasefire has "forced troops back to their barracks where
they are losing their edge. Deserting is rampant throughout infantry units
[which form] the largest percentage of SLA troops"
- �The emergence of a more heavily armed LTTE at the start
of this decade caught the SLA by surprise (once again) and it is likely that
the LTTE is continuing with its training and equipping,� "[The present
military] remains incapable of protecting the island from internal threat
and is unprepared and ill-equipped for an external threat,"
- "The emergence of a more heavily armed LTTE with
dedicated soldiers fighting for a clear objective proved that the military
forces had met their match. "[The army�s] forces are incapable of defeating
the LTTE with either conventional or unconventional tactics,"
- By contrast, in reference to the crushing of the Janatha
Vimukthi Perumana insurgency." the military of the 1980s proved it could
fight an unconventional war, and by wantonly killing anyone it perceived a
threat, it could win a war,"
|
6 December 2004 |
"We are being pushed again in to the war era" says Federation of Public
Organizations of Vavuniya District in letter to President Kumaratunga |
6 December 2004 |
Sri Lanka rejects LTTE's
Offer for Talks & vows to strengthen its armed forces
"..Sri Lanka on Monday vowed to do whatever it takes to
strengthen its security forces and meet any threat after rejecting LTTE
conditions to revive peace negotiations... "We will strengthen armed forces
in terms of men, material, ideas and weapons," Wickremanayake said during a
debate on the defence budget which goes up by eight per cent in the 2005
budget. "We are ready to meet any threat to this sovereign nation."
Parliament today approved the defence ministry spending of 56.29 billion
rupees ($541 million), up from 52.08 billion rupees this year. "
|
14 December 2004 |
World Bank
Supports Sri Lanka's Peace Through Housing Reconstruction and Development
|
14 December 2004 |
Address
the JVP problem - Tokyo co-chairs urge President
"The representatives of three of the four co-chairs of the
Tokyo Donors Conference (Japan, EU and US) called on Her Excellency
President Kumaratunga on December 14. The co-chair representatives
reaffirmed their support for the President's efforts to resume peace talks.
They expressed deep concern about the ongoing JVP-led actions against the
peace process in Sri Lanka and the Government of Norway's efforts as
facilitator of that process."
more
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15 December 2004 |
GoSL entirely responsible for resuming talks - LTTE
"The responsibility of resurrecting the stalled peace
process is entirely with the government in ensuring that its coalition
partners reflect the thinking of the president, if she is in fact really
sincere, and her military refrains from coercive and provocative actions",
Mr. S. P. Thamilchelvan, Head of the Political Wing of the LTTE told the
Norwegian facilitators Wednesday (15 December 2004) in Kilinochchi.
"Norwegian delegation was unable to give assurance that Sri Lanka Government
will take any constructive steps to take the peace process forward"
Thamilchelvan told the Press after the meeting.
more
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