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I want to congratulate National Peace Council for holding this timely symposium
and for posing the question: after two decades of war and 5 years of the CFA,
what next? I also want to commend NPC for inviting such a range of important
religious, political, civil society and other leaders to share their thoughts
because all of you collectively represent a powerful constituency for peace. It
is also an honor for me to speak after my friend Norwegian Ambassador Brattskar,
who together with his country has done so much to promote peace in Sri Lanka.
Ladies and gentlemen, much ink has been spilled about the recent changes in
President Rajapakse’s cabinet and the situation in the North and East, but one
central fact remains. Sri Lanka now has an important opportunity finally to achieve peace and that
opportunity must be seized. President Rajapakse has a strong majority in
Parliament. His party, the SLFP, is in the final stages of crafting a
power-sharing proposal that will then be shared with the All Party
Representative Committee, under the capable leadership of Professor Vitharana.
The APRC then will bear a solemn responsibility to develop a proposal of its own
that meets the aspirations of the Tamil, Muslim and Sinhalese communities. If
the proposal is a credible one, there is strong reason to believe that it will
attract the support of sufficient UNP members of Parliament to give the
President the votes he needs to amend Sri Lanka’s constitution.
The United States calls on the SLFP and the APRC to proceed as quickly as
possible with their important work. If a credible power-sharing proposal emerges
from the APRC, Sri Lanka has in President Rajapakse a strong leader who
can use his very considerable political skills and
the trust that his
supporters repose in him to help fashion the southern consensus that has
eluded previous governments.
Comment by tamilnation.org
A strong leader
fashioning the "southern" consensus 'that has eluded
previous governments'...
Such a consensus can then form the basis for renewed peace talks
and an end to the conflict.
Comment by tamilnation.org
Southern "consensus building" over several decades -
...One of the essential elements that must
be kept in mind in understanding the Sri Lankan ethnic conflict is that,
since 1958 at least, every time Tamil politicians negotiated some sort of
power-sharing deal with a Sinhalese government - regardless of which party
was in power - the opposition Sinhalese party always claimed that the party
in power had negotiated away too much. In almost every case - sometimes
within days - the party in power backed down on the agreement..." - (Professor
Marshall Singer, at US Congress Committee on International Relations
Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific Hearing on Sri Lanka November 14,1995)
"...Beginning in the mid-1950s Sri Lanka's politicians from the majority
Sinhalese community resorted to
ethnic outbidding as a means to
attain power and in doing so
systematically marginalised the
country's minority Tamils...parties in power seek to promote
dubious conflict resolution only to be checkmated by the respective opposition
which typically claims that the proposed solutions are bound to eventually
dismember the island"
Neil Devotta
in From ethnic outbidding to ethnic conflict:
the institutional bases for Sri Lanka's separatist war, 2005
A national peace will not only bring
an end to the fighting that has left more than 30,000 dead, and hundreds of
thousands displaced from their homes, it will help improve the
human rights situation, propel the Sri
Lankan economy to new heights, and create a virtual cycle of prosperity and peace.
Comment by tamilnation.org
The vision of 'properity and peace' reasonates
with the words in the
U.S. State
Department's Annual Human Rights Report to Congress released on February
1985 barely
18 months after Genocide '83
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"Sri Lanka is an open,
working, multiparty democracy. Citizens elect
their president, members of parliament, and local government officials by universal adult
suffrage. All laws including acts extending the state of emergency, must be approved by
the Parliament... The Constitution guarantees the independence of the judiciary, and
lawyers and judges are held in high esteem."
"...The progressive destruction of the political process in Sri Lanka has
led to both domestic and international tolerance of an enormous amount
of violence by the government (regardless of party affiliation) against
its citizens. Increasingly, it seems that the government of Sri Lanka
is accountable to no one - not its citizens, and not its foreign
counterparts who rubber-stamped the recent parliamentary elections. In
Sri Lanka's current political climate, power seems to be determined by
the number of thugs a given politician has at his/her disposal..."
Sri
Lanka's Elections 2000: Fear and Intimidation Rule the Day - An Observer's
Report - Laura Gross
Ladies and gentlemen, Sri Lanka must not let this chance pass. The United
States, together with its Co-Chair partners and friends such as India, stand
ready to do everything we can to encourage and help Sri Lanka seize this
historic opportunity.
Comment by tamilnation.org
But apparently not 'friends such as China'. After all, it would
be somewhat naive to imagine that Ambassador Blake had somehow forgotten the
geo political interests of the country that he has the
honour to serve - so well. See also -
Sri Lanka President
Mahinda Rajapakse leaves for China, 25 February 2007 "Among
the Memoranda of Understanding (MoU) to be signed during the President's visit
are the Hambantota Port development project, Oil exploration in the Western
coast, student exchange, cultural co-operation, agriculture, corporate and
economic co-operation, eye donation and co-operation in urban development and
water supply. "
"China fear" to "China fever"
- Pallavi Aiyar, 27 February 2006
China's Strategy of Containing India
- Dr. Mohan Malik, 6 February 2006
India's Project Seabird
and the Indian Ocean's Balance of Power, 20 July 20005
China's Submarine Base in Maldives,
8 May 2005
China undertakes construction of Hambantota Port,
11 April 2005 Thank you.
National Peace
Council Donors
Academy for Educational Development (AED)
British High Commission
Danish Development Co-operation Office (DADECO)
Development Alternative Inc (DAI)
Embassy of Japan
European Union (EU)
Facilitating Local Initiatives for Conflict Transformation (FLICT), a
project implemented through the German Agency for Technical Co-operation
(GTZ)
National Democratic Institute Norwegian Agency for Development Co-operation
(NORAD)
Swedish International Development Agency (Sida)
Asia Foundation
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