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Friday, February 20, 2015

"MR Should Speak To President If He Wants To Be Next PM"

"MR Should Speak To President If He Wants To Be Next PM"

Friday, 20 February 2015 10:07

Cabinet Minister of Health and Indigenous Medicine Rajitha Senarathne said if Mahinda Rajapaksa wants to be the next Prime Minister, he should  discuss the matter with President Maithripala Sirisena.

Addressing a press conference in Colombo, Minister Senarathne said that Rajapaksa is still engaging in ACTIVE politics as a Senior Advisory to the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP).

“If he wants the post of Prime Minister he can discuss the matter with the President and compete in the general Election as the Prime Ministerial Candidate of the SLFP” the minister added.

Senarathne also asserted that  the objective of the 100 day programme is to end ‘family oriented’ politics, corruptions and to bring ‘good governance’ to the country.

"Therefore Rajapaksa does not have any barrier to compete as the Prime Ministerial Candidate", Senaratne said.

 “The message sent by Mahinda Rajapaksa to the Nugegoda rally did not mention anything about  him  competing as the Prime Ministerial candidate.” he said.

(Methmalie Dissanayake)

Rajitha: India did not insist on 13 A plus implementation

Rajitha: India did not insist on 13 A plus implementation
February 19, 2015, 9:36 pm  by Zacki Jabbar

India has not insisted that the 13th Amendment Plus pledge which former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had given it, be implemented, the government said yesterday.

Asked during the weekly Cabinet Press Briefing in Colombo, if Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had during last weeks official talks with President Maithripala Sirisena in New Delhi, insisted that the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan

Constitution be improved to 13A Plus as promised by Rajapaksa, Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne, who was part of the presidential delegation answered in the negative.

"No there was no such demand. The former President had got plus and minus mixed up. That was the way he did his calculation, which eventually led to defeat," Senaratne observed.

Minister said that India had been assured of the Sirisena government’s commitment to resolving the ethnic issue in a manner that was acceptable to all communities.

The Tamil National Alliance would be engaged in a constructive and positive manner, the minister noted, adding that the government in principle was committed to devolution within a unitary state.

With change in Sri Lanka, US eyes deeper ties


With change in Sri Lanka, US eyes deeper ties
Associated Press By MATTHEW PENNINGTON
February 2, 2015 1:11 AM


WASHINGTON (AP) — The surprise defeat of Sri Lanka's authoritarian leader and the new government's early steps to end repression have stirred U.S. hopes that the South Asian island nation can revive ties with Washington and distance itself to some degree from China.

Sirisena won Jan. 8 elections. Sri Lanka's new foreign minister is expected to visit Washington this month.

Under former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, relations with China intensified, with heavy Chinese investment in the strategically located island along busy sea lanes between the Persian Gulf and East Asia. Once-robust ties with the U.S.

deteriorated sharply, even as President Barack Obama pushed to engage nations across Asia and consolidate America as a Pacific power.

Obama wants a deeper partnership with Sri Lanka, and U.S. officials say the early signs are promising.

Within a week or so of taking office, former Rajapaksa ally Sirisena rolled back restrictions on the press and civil society. He also vows to reduce powers of the presidency that been inflated by Rajapaksa when his popularity ballooned during the ending of Sri Lanka's bloody civil war.

U.S.-Sri Lanka relations were strained over Rajapaksa's reluctance to investigate thousands of reported civilian deaths in the final chapter of the quarter-century conflict in 2009, when government forces crushed Tamil rebels who had been fighting for an ethnic homeland.

Sirisena has been cautious about promising action on accountability, but he did offer an early gesture to minority Tamils, who supported him at the polls, when he quickly replaced an unpopular ex-military governor appointed by Rajapaksa in the former battle zone in the north of the country.

The new government also says it is reviewing one of a series of major Chinese-financed infrastructure projects: a $1.5 billion land reclamation for a "port city" in the capital, Colombo. That's a blow to Beijing's progress in winning an ally in the Indian Ocean.

But officials in Colombo are also being careful not to alienate Beijing. Rajitha Senaratne, a Cabinet spokesman, said Sri Lanka does not "need to tilt towards any side."

"China has been a historical friend of ours, India is also the same," he told The Associated Press. "Our exports go to the E.U. and U.S." The new government assured India it will not align itself to any world power.

Two recent port calls by Chinese submarines at a Chinese-built terminal in Colombo , one before a visit in September by China's leader Xi Jinping, fueled speculation that Beijing's wants a "string of pearls," or port access along sea lanes

linking the energy-rich Persian Gulf and economic centers in eastern China. The submarine visits spooked India, which lies just 30 miles from Sri Lanka and shares U.S. uncertainty about Beijing's intentions as China's military power grows.

Washington has its own strategic reasons to be interested in Sri Lanka.

A 2007 agreement, sealed before relations with Rajapaksa soured, permits the U.S. and Sri Lanka to exchange nonlethal supplies and refueling during humanitarian operations and joint military exercises.

The U.S. has a significant economic stake in the nation of 20 million people. U.S. financial institutions are major investors in Sri Lankan bonds, and the U.S. is the second-largest market for Sri Lankan exports.

"The United States should keep up the pressure on human rights and reconciliation with ethnic minorities," said Bharath Gopalaswamy of the Atlantic Council think tank. "But that should not be the only thing the relationship is built on. It has to be broader engagement."

Sri Lanka also wants a better relationship with Washington. Rajapaksa's government spent liberally on U.S.-based lobbyists but with little apparent impact.

Acrimony with the U.S. and others over human rights deepened when a U.N. body last year approved an investigation into reports of civil war atrocities. The results are due in March.

Sirisena will be walking a fine line at home and abroad in how he responds. He's managing an unwieldy coalition of majority Sinhalese and minority Tamils, and the government could face parliamentary elections within months.

Ready for early parliament polls

Ready for early parliament polls

February 19, 2015 22:13

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe says the Government is ready to go for early Parliamentary elections, if the need arises.

Speaking at an event in Colombo today, the Prime Minister noted that the Government is looking at 100 days since taking office, to complete its 100 day PROGRAM.

He said that in order to achieve that goal the Government needs the SUPPORT of all the political parties represented in Parliament.

The Prime Minister said that if there is a threat to the Government obtaining a 2/3 majority in Parliament to implement the 100 day PROGRAM, including key constitutional changes, then Parliament will be dissolved and early elections will be held.

Wickremesinghe says the Government is keen to ensure the 100 day program goes through, during which the Presidential powers are also expected to be reduced.

The 100 day program of the Government ends on April 23 after which Parliament is to be dissolved and elections held.

The core group in the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) has already said that it will look to defeat Wickremesinghe at the polls and not form a National unity Government as proposed by Wickremesinghe.

(Colombo Gazette)

Government to investigate Funds of the LTTE



February 1, 2015 18:10

The LTTE activities over the past few years including its funding and alleged links it had with the former Government. 

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, speaking in Mawanella today, said that the Government wants to know what happened to the FUNDS of the LTTE.

“This is part of our probe on corruption. The former Government always accused us of having links with the LTTE but it was they who had links with the Tigers,” the Prime Minister said.

He said that investigations will include 
Obtaining information on the 

1) LTTE ships, 
2) Gold 
3) and MONEY yet to be found even after the war.

The Prime Minister said that the public in the North have said they have evidence to SHARE over the LTTE and so that evidence will also be obtained.

“This is a large scale investigation,” the Prime Minister added.

The Prime Minister also CLAIMED that there was an attempt to use the LTTE to prevent the Tamils in the north from voting at the last Presidential elections.

Wickremesinghe also said that when the European court ruled in support of the LTTE the former Government did not take steps to assist the European Union to reverse the court ruling.

“We have said we will assist the EU to ensure the ban on the LTTE in the EU remains,” he said.

The Prime Minister also questioned the former Government’s failure to handover Kumaran Pathmanathan, better known as KP, to India.
KP is wanted in India over the assassination of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.
 (Colombo Gazette)

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