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Wednesday, March 04, 2015

Lanka seeks US, India, UK help to investigate financial fraud!

Lanka seeks US, India, UK help

March 1, 2015 17:59
Ranil

The Government has sought assistance from India, the United States and Britain to investigate large scale financial fraud committed by the former Government.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said that Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera and Justice Minister Wijeydasa Rajapaksa have visited these countries to seek assistance from institutions there for the investigation.

“We have sought assistance from the World Bank, the US Justice Department, the major fraud investigations unit in London and the Indian Central Bank,” he said.

The Prime Minister said that the Government is being accused of failing to arrest top members of the former Government over corruption.

However he says no one can be arrested without enough evidence at hand and so a system has been put in place to first investigate the allegations.

“This is not like investigating a murder. We need time,” he added.

However he said the Government hopes to complete a major part of the investigations by April 23 when the 100 day programme of the Government ends.

Wickremesinghe said that the new Government cannot behave like the former administration and arrest people without having proper evidence.

The Prime Minister said that statements have already been recorded from people as part of the investigations and data is also being collected from several Ministries. (Colombo Gazette)

New Party To Back MR

New Party To Back MR
By Indika Sri Aravinda

A group of Parliamentarians, who fear that they will not receive nominations for the upcoming General Elections by the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) or the UPFA, are planning on forming a separate political party to CONTESTthe elections, political sources revealed.  It has also been revealed that the political leaders of certain parties in the UPFA alliance have held secret meetings in this regard. Accordingly it has been decided to nominate former president Mahinda Rajapaksa as the leader of this group.

It has also been revealed that the leader of the National Freedom Front Wimal Weerawansa and the leader of the Pivithuru Hela Urumaya Udaya Gamanpila will play a leading role in this alliance. It is reliably learnt that nearly 100 parliamentarians from 18 political parties from the UPFA have expressed their willingness to support this group. This group has also decided to refrain from issuing any statement to the media until the elections are announced.

Upon inquiry Kalutara District SLFP parliamentarian Vidura Wickremanayake stated that a whole group of parliamentarians including himself were prepared to take to the streets against the government and as the first step they would be staging a public rally in Horana today (01). He also warned the government that they will not be allowed to dance according to their own tune and that if they try he and his group know how to deal with them.

He said that the government claims that they will not give nominations to corrupt politicians, but pointed out that the government has already provided ministerial positions to several corrupt politicians. When contacted the leader of the Pivithuru Hela Urumaya Udaya Gamanpila said that he is still a member of the UPFA and if he does not receive nominations, he will obtain one from the 51 political parties REGISTERED with the elections department.

Gamanpila further stated that President Maithripala Sirisena had now become a political prisoner of the UNP and his group would take measures to bring in Mahinda Rajapaksa as the Prime Minister.
He also alleged that opposition leader and SLFP member Nimal Siripala de Silva is trying to get the premiership, but he will not be able to achieve his goal.

Chief Minister Wigneswaran on Tamil aspirations:



Chief Minister Wigneswaran on Tamil aspirations:

‘Independence and corresponding power within a united country’

Northern Province Chief Minister Canagasabapathy Visuvalingam Wigneswaran PC shot to political prominence when he was plucked from retirement as a Supreme Court Judge by the Tamil National Alliance to be their leader for the war-battered, but staunchly independent, people of the North.

Today, after just 15 months as first Chief Minister of the Northern Province, he is a hugely popular leader in his own right and cuts a political image sharply distinct from the stereo-typical ‘Tamil nationalism’ that previously characterised the Tamil self-determination movement in its long journey through our post-colonial history.

After the enthusiastic Northern voter participation in the historic January 8 Presidential election, which ran counter to exhortations for a boycott by hardline secessionist elements within and without the country, Chief Minister Wigneswaran has emerged as a dynamic if controversial interlocutor between Tamil aspirations and national consensus.

The trilingual judge turned politician was interviewed by Silumina Editor Lakshman Piyasena.

Question: When you were appointed Chief Minister of the Northern Province there was a general impression in the country that a moderate Tamil intellectual who was different from politicians who arouse communalism had entered politics. But the recent Council resolution adopted under your leadership seems to have turned that impression upside down. That resolution said Tamils in Sri Lanka had been subjected to genocide under the government for a long time. Why did you bring in such a resolution as soon as President Maithripala Sirisena who pledged to foster national harmony and reconciliation came to power? What was the need for such a resolution?

Answer: First of all I must say that this was not a spontaneous resolution. For seven months the Provincial Council had discussions about bringing such a resolution. Every member SUPPORTED IT including even the Sinhala members. It was thereafter adopted unanimously.

The essence of the resolution is that CONTINUOUS injustice had been meted out to Tamils and if we are to build national reconciliation and go forward everyone should have an understanding about what happened in the country and the outside world too should know about it.

We can't move towards reconciliation unless we have a clear understanding about the injustice caused to Tamils. National unity could be achieved easily if the Sinhalese too know about the injustices carried out since Independence.

Q: Shouldn't you have given the new government a time limit to work towards harmony and reconciliation?

A: Two weeks before the adoption of the resolution the Deputy Minister of Defence visited the North and said Army camps would not be withdrawn from the North. This caused immense pain of mind and grief to the Tamil people. Tamils consider these camps as an obstruction to their normal daily routine. This had been a longstanding problem. Just think the pressure the Sinhalese in the South would have suffered if they had to CONTINUE living in such a situation. It is the suspicion caused among the ordinary Tamil public by this talk about camps which motivated Provincial Council members to expedite this resolution.

Q: Cannot another group consider the withdrawal of Army camps stationed according to the situation in a province where there had been terrorist activities for a long period as an irresponsible step?

A: As people's representatives we have a responsibility to listen to the grievances of the people. There is yet a 150,000-strong army stationed in the North. Tamil people who voted for President Sirisena expected to be relieved of that pressure first and foremost.

They wanted to get back the land occupied by the army camps. And obtain the release of their relatives held in these camps for no reason. These are problems disrupting ordinary community life in the North.

Moreover, the public witnessed what happened in the recent past. Karuna Amman who was responsible for the massacre of 600 policemen has been offered a post in the SLFP as a Vice President.

A poor man who offered him a meal is being held captive labelled as a terrorist.

Just think whether these issues will not cause a justifiable hatred and pain among the Tamil society. It is to change this situation that the Tamils voted for President Sirisena and elected a new government to power.

The speech made by the Deputy Defence Minister made the Tamils believe that the new government was acting according to the earlier system. The shattering of their hopes expedited this resolution.

Q: Cannot other Provinces also adopt resolutions of this nature arguing that Sinhala people were massacred by Tiger Terrorists?

A: I agree. Tiger terrorism caused untold hardship not only to Sinhalese but also to Tamils. I am fully aware of it. It makes me desist from taking any communal step that would harm the impression about me by the Sinhalese, as you mentioned earlier.

I wish to emphasise that this resolution had no communal undertones. I have no need to break that fair understanding made about me either. But this resolution raises a foundation needed to foster communal harmony to go forward after ending Tiger terrorism.

Tamils suffered injustice much before the advent of Tiger terrorism.

The 'Sinhala Only' Act of 1956, tearing up of the Tamil Special Provisions Act due to pressure exerted by Buddhist monks and introduction of standardisation for minority admissions to universities in 1971 are cross-roads we cannot forget. Let us all go for a genuine discussion about these things and come to an agreement.

It is then that the foundation needed to go forward in unison safeguarding mutual identities can be built. We have brought a resolution to motivate everyone to pay attention to these basic facts.

Q: There is a long history of communal incitement in out politics that suppress the understanding needed for national unity as pointed out by you. In such a situation cannot resolutions of this nature harm hopes for a united nation?

A: Your question has two sections. One is a united country and the other the raising of communalism in politics.

I will never for a moment deviate from the position that Tamil people's problems should be solved within a united Sri Lanka.

I CONTESTED the Provincial Council elections as the Chief Ministerial candidate too on the standpoint that our problems should be solved within a united Sri Lanka.

As a former Justice of the Supreme Court, I always speak with the understanding that the unity and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka should be protected. I also work with that understanding. There is no hope or aspiration whatsoever for a separate State.

The Sinhalese should understand that even in a united country we have differences endemic to us. We have a separate language and religion. We have a land with climatic differences. Everyone should understand that Tamil people should have an independence and a corresponding power suited for such differences within a united country.

The other factor is arousing communalism in politics. Actually this is happening not only in the North but also the South. I admit that there is a type of politics inciting people on both sides by talking of a bogus patriotism.

What we ought to do is to make a sincere attempt to resolve justifiable grievances and problems without pushing people towards communal politics. The Government should take the initiative towards it. The Provincial Council could also take the initiative for it.

Q: Someone can say that you brought a resolution of this nature to arouse communal feelings among Tamils for popularity's sake?

A: I wish to re-emphasise that this resolution was brought to draw the attention of the Sinhala people and the outside world towards the people of the North.

Q: Whenever the word Northern Provincial Council is mentioned, the South gets a feeling as if it is a path for a separate State. Don't you think that impression is further compounded when you speak of independence for Tamils?

A: The actual problem here is suspicion. Tiger terrorists wanted separatism. Therefore, it is justifiable for Sinhalese to entertain a fear about territorial integrity when looking at the North.

But just because of that is it fair to consider the Tamil people as terrorists. We have not infused the basis of Tiger terrorism to our type of politics we talk of the independence of Tamil civilian life within a united Sri Lanka.

The South must understand this. They should not look at the North with suspicion.

It is then that the people of the North will have confidence in the South. If not, how are we to move forward from here? But I want to emphasise one thing. There is no mutual suspicion among the Tamil and Sihhala ordinary public. It is the opportunistic politicians on both sides who create this suspicion.

Q: Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had claimed that President Sirisena won the election with the help of Eelam votes and that he would have won if he, Mahinda had not granted voting rights to the North. What do the people in the North feel about that statement?

A: I consider it as a very grave statement harming the country's opportunity to mend fences among communities and take a united journey as one nation.

Earlier there were claims that the people of the North were with the Tigers. By doing so a wedge was created between the South and the North.

Today, they are trying to separate the people of the North saying they voted to bring a Sinhala leader to power. Isn't this real madness? When we put forward proposals for the rights of the Tamil people I call upon the Sinhala people concerned about it to think of this attempt to create divisions.

Please think according to your conscience and decide whether the country's unity is harnessed when one calls upon to look at Tamil problems in a fair manner or when this type of mean talk is made to arouse communal patriotism in the South.

Q: I wish to briefly deviate from this discussion. Vasudeva Nanayakkara is your relative. But he is one of the main characters supporting the activities taken by Mahinda Rakapaksa in arousing communalism in the South. Social websites had said while your relative is arousing communalism in the south you are arousing communalism in the north . . .

A: I wish to categorically state it will not arouse Tamil Communalism in any way. Vasu is a longstanding friend. That turned into a relationship when my son married his daughter.

That friendship and relationship is still steadfast but unless for a family need we hardly meet and talk to each other. We never discuss politics. All meetings and discussions are all about this friendship and relationship only.

Q: Grave political and social problems have occurred between various communities and religions in this world on the basis of cultural differences. How did the Sinhalese and Tamils who have many cultural affinities more towards such divisions? Do they need to go for such a division?

A: These two communities have been divided CONTINUOUSLY to satisfy political needs. I think that should not be so any more. That is how I engage in politics.

Both sides should understand past incidents. My stand is that this division should not be carried forward. It is difficult to correct the future unless you are aware of the past incidents.

I am now 75 years old. I spent most of life from childhood among the Sinhala people. What I understood was then there was no such division among the Sinhala populace which cannot be rectified. This is the same with Tamils.

The Sinhalese were avid listeners of Tamil songs. They viewed Tamil films, Northern people viewed Sinhala films and considered Gamini Fonseka and Vijaya Kumaratunga as idols.

There were people crazy for Sinhala films in the north this proves that we had no divisions in cultural context. The present generation is unaware of these matters. They witnessed war throughout life and formed a mentality that Sinhalese were causing an injustice to them.

The new generation in the south too is unaware of these things. They are wondering about any injustice caused to Tamils. Our responsibility today is to bring them together by mending this division.

Q: As much as opportunist politics disrupt communal harmony does not India's political role influence it too - specially the South Indian influence?

A: One country influencing another country is a common feature in world politics and is not a new thing. As a country what we ought to do is not to provide ammunition to it. During this war nearly 200,000 people escaped to India.

Those who went there started relating the ordeals their brethren faced during the War.

This helped to kindle feelings among south Indian people to the effect that Sinhalese did not give any room to the Tamils. Then a human problem occurred which could not be oppressed by anyone. The story does not end there.

The message spread throughout India and the whole world thereafter. It even went to Geneva. When a country's problems go to the outside world there are always countries or political forces trying to intervene and turn it to their advantage.

Just look at the postponement of the UNHCR resolution due in March to September. This is the type of behaviour of international politics.

But the people of the north do not like it. They think that the discussions about the injustice caused to them had been postponed.

This postponement may not do any good to the northern people. But another country may see this as a political advantage to it. This is the way with the world.

What the government must do is to prevent the problem caused to the country by it and do some justice without allowing the problem to go out to the world.

What I say is that the government should take the initiative to create natural harmony and reconciliation.

Translated by D.P. Wickremasingh

மகிந்த பலம் - நுகேகொட

Sunday, March 01, 2015

இன்றைய யாழ்ப்பாணம் - ஒரு பார்வை

(அரசியல் அபத்தங்களுக்கு அப்பால்)- இன்றைய யாழ் மக்களின் ஒரு குறுக்கு வெட்டு அழகுக் காட்சி ஆவணம்

China moots trilateral cooperation with India, Sri Lanka

China moots trilateral cooperation with India, Sri Lanka
Press Trust of India  |  Beijing  February 27, 2015 Last Updated at 17:57 IST

China today proposed trilateral cooperation involving India and Sri Lanka for regional stability as the new government in Colombo sought to re-balance its ties with China, preferring to follow a "non-aligned" policy. 

"China is open-minded about trilateral cooperation between China, India (and) Sri Lanka," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said during a joint press conference with Sri Lankan counterpart Mangala Samaraweera. 

"I want to say both India and Sri Lanka are China's cooperative partners in South Asia," Wang said. 

Samaraweera is the first Sri Lankan official to visit Beijing since president Mahinda Rajapaksa's defeat in polls this January. China made significant investments in Sri Lanka during Rajapaksa's tenure, raising concerns in India. 

Samaraweera's visit to China will be followed by new Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena's next month. 

New Govt. reshaping foreign policy


New Govt. reshaping foreign policy

Hardly has the country finished celebrating its 67th year of Independence from the yoke of four centuries of foreign rule, than her Foreign Minister jets off to Britain and then the United States of America, brief in hand, to plead the country’s case to be treated as a respectable member of the comity of nations.

Sri Lanka’s more recent foreign policy initiatives have been a total disaster. Towards the end of his term, even the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, while proclaiming his achievements on many fronts, conceded that there were shortcomings in the running of his foreign policy. This was an understatement, and he was to blame for it himself as he interfered directly in appointments to the Foreign Service and allowed a nonplussed Minister and a freelance ‘Monitor’ to run the Foreign Office to the ground. On foreign policy per se, they veered away from Non-alignment, made enemies with the West, and angered India with their overtly pro-China stance.

This Government is now on a repair mission and the new Minister (though not new to the post) has a major task at hand. Having made his initial working visits to India and the European Union (EU), he proceeds to London and then to Washington where he will meet his counterpart. His final stop will be the United Nations where he is SLOTTED to meet the Secretary General. His predecessor in the job was afraid of visiting the US capital or New York and engaging the Americans and the UN. Used only to lecturing he could not listen to them, nor did he have the capacity to engage and counsel his interlocutors.

It was he who completely misread diplomatic signals and gave his president the ‘dead rope’ that the US would not sponsor a resolution against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC (United Nations Human Rights Council) in Geneva. This resolution calling for a probe into allegations of war crimes TARGETED the country’s political leaders and its Armed Forces. Foolishly trying to play hardball with the West, we lost vote after vote, pinning our hopes on China and Russia. We also adopted a crazy ‘Look Africa’ policy purely to win votes in Geneva. Today, that resolution is still on the table at the UNHRC calling for a ‘credible investigation’ on the last stages of the military campaign against the LTTE in 2009. A tentative effort no sooner this Government came to office to ‘dump the resolution’ was baulked at, and appears to have made no headway.

The new Government has rightly pledged to ensure the protection of those members of the Armed Forces who fought a blood-thirsty terrorist organisation, overcame it, and brought peace to this country.

This ‘war against terror’ was fought amidst Western pressure, lobbied heavily by the Sri Lankan Diaspora to stop the fighting and give a lifeline to the LTTE leaders. To former President Rajapaksa must go the credit for resisting that pressure and seeing to the end of that reign of terror. His successor, President Maithripala Sirisena, speaking at the Independence Day celebrations on Tuesday, paid a tribute to his predecessor for completing that onerous task. But ill-advised as he was, the former President adopted a wrongheaded policy to CONTINUE rubbing the West on the wrong side after the battlefield victory.

The country faced the consequence of the West’s wrath. In the US the Leahy Amendment of 2010 for the first time restricted aid to Sri Lanka tying it to good behavior on the human rights front. The EU sent 15 demands (which were ignored) prior to stopping GSP+ TRADE concessions to Sri Lanka. By offering a trade-off, the new Government has promised a “credible domestic investigation”. This was what the then Government ought to have initiated straightaway, but dragged its feet instead to bring the situation to where it is now. This promise will now have to be kept. Merely because the US Assistant Secretary of State visited Colombo this week and pledged to work together with the new Government, or the Minister of Foreign Affairs is visiting Washington next week to mend fences, the UNHRC resolution will not melt away so easily. But the moves will, hopefully help ease the tension between the West and Sri Lanka and a reasonable compromise would be to give the new Government time to get its act together, thus getting a postponement from the UNHRC sessions in March going deeper into the resolution.

The resolution can be laid by till September this year when the UNHRC meets again. By which time it is hoped, the heavy hand of the West/US will be taken off, reconciliation between the North and the Government in the South would be in better shape, and the country can move on from the bitter memories of the virtual ‘civil war’ of yesteryear.

In Washington next week, the Minister will have more on his plate to deal with than mending fences and dealing with the UNHRC resolution. Full engagement in the diplomatic, political, economic, trade and INVESTMENT spheres will need to be discussed.

It is an open secret that the former US Ambassador in Colombo reached out to the Opposition, especially the then Leader of the Opposition and thus moved away from an exclusive engagement with the former President in the belief that they (the Opposition) would somehow want to build up the relationship with the US if elected to office. The Rajapaksa Presidency saw this coming, but rather than defuse the moves and engage the US constructively, it jumped headlong into a policy of US bashing, accusing NGOs of being instrumental in ‘regime change’ measures and misreading the growing Indo-US axis. The US was in no doubt, it seems, that their Sri Lanka policy required to rebalance the outreach away from the Rajapaksa Administration.

While in Washington, the Minister might also want to study the expenses incurred in managing the embassy there over the years, and the cavalier way it was run. This mission at one stage did not have a single career diplomat in service. The transactions over the mission building were covered in scandal. US-based public relations firms were recruited to write even press releases, so pathetic was its capability. Lobbying firms were paid for by the Central BANK and from private addresses in Colombo. This newspaper has already catalogued these shady deals as they happened then.

But whatever the Foreign Minister agrees to in Washington, he will need to deliver in Sri Lanka. He cannot be seen to have capitulated in the face of Western pressure and sacrifice the Sri Lankan Armed Forces at the altar of diplomatic expediency. There is also the political cost factor; another election is due. Those who lost the recent elections are baying from the sidelines that a ‘sell-out’ is imminent. It would not be in the interest of the West to give that anti-West lobby the whip hand either. In New York, the Minister is also scheduled meet the US ambassador to the UN, Samantha Powers. It is a good move because her clout with the US President on the Sri Lanka issue is not to be under-estimated.

Sixty seven years ago, on the eve of Independence, the first Prime Minister of Lanka, D.S. Senanayake said in his Call to the Nation ; “Freedom carries with it grave responsibilities. Our acts and omissions henceforth are our own. No longer can we lay the blame for defects and errors in our administration on others”.

That is the price of freedom. With freedom comes responsibilities.

Source: Editorial 

Sunday, February 22, 2015

New Sri Lanka gov't ends US lobbying contracts

New Sri Lanka gov't ends US lobbying contracts
Associated Press By MATTHEW PENNINGTON

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a sign of improving relations with the U.S., Sri Lanka has terminated lobbying contracts worth tens of thousands of dollars a month that the previous government had signed to help it win friends in Washington amid war crimes allegations, the nation's ambassador says.

The investment in lobbyists to foster political and economic ties had gathered steam last summer, in the dying months of the administration of then-President Mahinda Rajapaksa, but with little apparent benefit, as Sri Lanka's international isolation deepened over its refusal to credibly probe civilian deaths during the civil war that ended 2009.

But political change inside Sri Lanka itself has done the trick. There has been a turnaround in the U.S. relationship after new President Maithripala Sirisena won Jan. 8 elections and promised democratic reforms and accountability for human rights violations.

Sirisena was elected in large part because of public dismay over the rising cost of living on the South Asian island, where the monthly per capita GDP is about $540. Rajapaksa was also widely criticized for nepotism and alleged government corruption.

Washington-based lobbying groups are often hired by foreign governments to help win the ear of U.S. officials, lawmakers, media and other opinion-makers. Justice Department online records show Sri Lanka signed eight contracts with such groups from 2014, with monthly fees ranging from $5,000 to $75,000.

"The new government does not see a reason or requirement to have lobbying groups at this juncture," Sri Lankan Ambassador Prasad Kariyawasam told The Associated Press on Friday. "To my knowledge, all those contracts have been terminated since the election of the new government."

Vinoda Basnayake of Nelson Mullins Riley and Scarborough LLP said soon after the election, the embassy informed his company that its $35,000 monthly contract was not being extended. Nelson Mullins was one of several groups hired to serve Sajin De Vass Gunawardena, a lawmaker who had advised Rajapaksa on foreign affairs. Basnayake said its fees for the last quarter had been paid in advance.

But Connie Mack, executive vice-president of Levick Strategic Communications LLC, said its client, Sri Lanka's central bank — whose chief has been replaced by the new government — was three months or $180,000 in arrears on payments for the contract it terminated Jan. 28. Mack said he planned to meet with the Sri Lankan ambassador soon to discuss the issue.

Kariyawasam, a career diplomat who became ambassador last July, told the AP he did not know if any payments to lobbyists were outstanding because he did not sign any of the contracts.

The Obama administration is keen to improve relations with Sri Lanka, which forged closer ties with China under Rajapaksa. The island lies off the coast of southeastern India, on sea lanes linking East Asia and the Middle East.

New Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera visited Washington this month, winning U.S. support for a delay in the publication of a U.N. investigation into the war. The report is politically sensitive in Sri Lanka because it could implicate elements of the nation's military that crushed the resistance of ethnic Tamil rebels.
==============

MODI TO VISIT Sri Lanka

India leader to visit Sri Lanka as pro-China policy ebbs
Associated Press

The new Sri Lankan president, Maithripala Sirisena, returned from a visit to India this week, his first trip overseas, and highlighted the improving ties that had soured because of Sri Lanka's closeness to China under the previous administration.

Sirisena won a surprise victory last month against former ally Mahinda Rajapaksa, who relied heavily on China for infrastructure projects and backing against human rights allegations at the United Nations.

China's increasing influence in Sri Lanka had made India anxious because it considers the Indian Ocean region to be its strategic backyard.

China has provided loans for an airport, sea port, highways and power plants in Sri Lanka, where it became the largest investor. The new government, however, announced it would investigate a $1.5 billion Colombo Port City project, constructed on an artificial island off Colombo, because of suspicions it was not transparent.

The deal was sealed last September when Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Sri Lanka and won Colombo's support for a proposed maritime "Silk Road" linking China with Europe.

The late Rajiv Gandhi was the last Indian leader to visit Sri Lanka in 1987 to sign a peace pact to end an ethnic Tamil separatist rebellion still in its infancy. India sent peacekeepers to Sri Lanka as part of that agreement, angering the Tamil Tiger rebels whose suicide bomber assassinated Gandhi in 1991 at an election rally.

The rebels were crushed by the Sri Lankan military in 2009. China assisted Sri Lanka in the civil war by providing arms and later defended the country at the U.N. Human Rights Council against allegations of abuses in the civil war.

Former Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited Sri Lanka in 2008, but only to participate in a summit of South Asian leaders.
=================

MOVE TO BRING MR ON NATIONAL LIST

MOVE TO BRING MR ON NATIONAL LIST
Senior parliamentarians in SUPPORT of the Rajapaksa have launched a sudden operation to get former President Mahinda Rajapaksa into Parliament through the National List.

They have decided to meet Malani Fonseka and Janaka Priyantha, both United People's Freedom Alliance national list parliamentarians, to discuss this issue. Several senior parliamentarians have come forward for this and reliable sources say that parliamentarians who were appointed through the National List have not yet taken a final decision on this.

Senior parliamentarians in SUPPORT of the Rajapaksas have launched a sudden operation to get former President Mahinda Rajapaksa into Parliament through the National List.

They have decided to meet Malani Fonseka and Janaka Priyantha, both United People's Freedom Alliance national list parliamentarians, to discuss this issue. Several senior parliamentarians have come forward for this and reliable sources say that parliamentarians who were appointed through the National List have not yet taken a final decision on this.

However, the final decision of appointing parliamentarians through the National List rests with the General Secretary of the United People's Freedom Alliance. According to certain sources, Susil Premajayantha, who holds this post, is not in agreement with this operation.

"சயனைட்" நாவல் - ஒரு பார்வை

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