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Secretariat for Coordinating the
Peace Process (SCOPP) in a statement issued yesterday (11) urged
the European Community (EC) to act with a greater sense of
responsibility in its efforts to minimize humanitarian problems
in the North of Sri Lanka. The statement:
“A team from the Secretariat for
Coordinating the Peace Process recently visited the Wanni and
the Omanthai checkpoint in response to worries conveyed by
citizens groups and the business community. Since the movement
of goods was restricted, there was a danger of prices rising to
unacceptable levels, and social and economic activity being
restricted. “Meanwhile some members of the affected business communities have, in their discussions with SCOPP, acknowledged that LTTE operations were disrupting their efforts to supply needed goods. However, when advised to bring this to the notice of the LTTE, they said they were wary of complaining to the LTTE due to fear of reprisals. “In such a context of fear and relentless attacks on economic activity, SCOPP urges the European Community to act with a greater sense of responsibility in its efforts to minimize humanitarian problems. Though we appreciate its concern about such problems, and welcome assistance to resolve them through actions targeted at the needy, it is also important to investigate the root cause of these problems and rectify the situation. The European Union would doubtless have welcomed the decision of the government to lift restrictions on fishing, but it should therefore have condemned activities that could contribute to the re-imposition of such restrictions. “Similarly, SCOPP regrets the failure of the European Union to deal firmly with the determination of the LTTE to reject monitors from Nordic countries except those outside the European Union. SCOPP has recently asked the SLMM to rule that this rejection is in itself a violation of the CFA, and indeed a particularly grave one since, as the SLMM has indicated, it contributes to further difficulties in ensuring observance. Though the Ceasefire may be flawed, it must be supported, and it is regrettable that the EU, despite being a Co-Chair of the peace process, has allowed LTTE protests against the EU’s admirable current stand against terrorism to weaken the monitoring process.”
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