Friday 22 July 2011

Clinton's TN visit/ SL HC meets Jajalalithaa

Clinton’s TN visit
* A sigh of relief from Lanka
SL HC meets Jayalalithaa
* War crimes allegations not taken up


Clinton’s TN visit: A sigh of relief from Lanka

Daily Mirror Friday, 22 July 2011 00:46
By Dianne Silva

The Chennai visit by the United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her meeting with Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa Jeyaram were not as fiery as feared by the Sri Lankan government, a top External Affairs Ministry official said yesterday.

He said the ministry had been alert to any negative fallout from Ms. Clinton’s meeting with Ms. Jayalalithaa and had expected a stronger statement than what was made by Ms. Clinton.

“It is not as bad as we expected,” the official added.

He said the news that a meeting had been arranged between Ms. Clinton and Ms. Jayalalithaa had been earlier denied by the Indian External Affairs Ministry.
The official said from what had transpired between the two it appeared that the US was pushing India to take on a greater leadership role in the region and the lukewarm remarks on Sri Lanka also indicated US being aware of the close links between India and Sri Lanka.

The official said no official comment could be made on Ms. Clinton’s visit to Tamil Nadu as the Sri Lankan
government did not wish to comment on India-US relations as it was auxiliary to the direct ties between Sri Lanka, India and US.

He said a final assessment on the absence of a powerful outcome from the meeting was testament to US’s lack of dominance in the region.

Ms. Clinton who voiced concern on Wednesday over the plight of the internally displaced people in Sri Lanka told Ms. Jayalalithaa that the US was looking at innovative and creative ideas on the Sri Lankan Tamil issue.
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SL HC meets Jayalalithaa

* Meeting cordial; resettlement, re-democratisation discussed
* War crimes allegations not taken up
* JJ invited to visit Northern Province
* Issue of attacks on TN fishermen raised

The Island, July 21, 2011, 8:39 pm
By S. Venkat Narayan
Our Special Correspondent

NEW DELHI, July 21: Sri Lankan High Commissioner to India Prasad Kariyawasam today met Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalithaa in Chennai—-the first such meeting between a Sri Lankan envoy and the state chief minister in more than half a century.

The Island understands from authoritative sources in Chennai that the meeting was cordial and friendly. Ms
Jayalalithaa was extremely courteous to Kariyawasam and his two colleagues from the Deputy High Commission in Chennai, listened carefully and asked questions with deep interest and concern.

The meeting took place in the chief minister’s office in Fort St George, and lasted 45 minutes. Kariyawasam
presented a bouquet to her, and conveyed greetings and congratulations from President Mahinda Rajapaksa for her recent impressive electoral victory and return to office as the chief minister for the third time.

The high commissioner is understood to have briefed Ms Jayalalithaa on the ongoing rehabilitation and resettlement of internally displaced Sri Lankan Tamils in the Northern Province.

He also told her about the reconciliation efforts being made by the Rajapaksa government, such as the work of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), the structured dialogue between the government and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), and the nearly half a dozen meetings the president has had with the TNA parliamentarians so far. He presented her with documents detailing both the processes.

The envoy informed her that the Sri Lankan government was providing help to the more than 11,000 former Tamil Tigers who had been captured when the war ended. More than 8,000 of them had already returned to mainstream, and the rest would do so in the near future, he told her.

Kariyawasam extended her an invitation to her on behalf of the Sri Lankan Government to visit the Northern Province to see for herself the resettlement process. He also invited a delegation of members of parliament (MPs) from the state to observe the efforts being made to resettle the Tamil IDPs in the Jaffna peninsula.

Sources said Ms Jayalalithaa had raised the issue of the arrest and harassment of Tamil Nadu fishermen in the Palk Bay. She highlighted the need to re-democratise the Northern Province by holding elections there as soon as possible. She felt that the process of reconciliation too should be expedited early, and the island’s Tamils should be given what was their due so that they could get on with their lives without any further loss of time.

Significantly, she did not say anything about the so-called "war crimes" that the United Nations and the global
media say were committed by the Sri Lankan security forces in the months before the war ended with the killing of Velupillai Prabhakaran on 18 May 2009.

Kariyawasam was accompanied by Chennai-based Deputy High Commissioner Vadivel Krishnamoorthy and Minister Counsellor Ajwad. Ms Jayalalithaa was accompanied by the state’s Chief Secretary Debendranath Sarangi and five other senior officials.

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