|
As President Mahinda Rajapaksa has
achieved something remarkable and impressive
in establishing a process for the resolution
of Human Rights issues, the International
Community would like to help Sri Lanka as
she makes progress along the lines of action
initiated by the President.
This was the view expressed by Britain’s
Lord Malloch Brown when he met President
Rajapaksa at Temple Trees this morning.
President Rajapaksa told the British
Minister of State in the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office of the UK with
responsibility for Africa, Asia and the
United Nations, of the success in defeating
terrorism and establishing democracy in the
East, and of the emphasis on development
there which would send a salutary message to
the people in the North. On the government’s
overall moves for the rehabilitation of
those once engaged in terrorism, he said the
present Chief Minister of the East was once
a child soldier of the LTTE.
He said many people who genuinely want
change in Sri Lanka, did not understand the
ground realities, vis-à-vis internal
politics and related pressures. Problems
were there and solutions had to be
political, which required final endorsement
by the people at elections. There were now
signs that the people were backing the
changes the government was initiating, and
this was best seen in the complete defeat
suffered by the moves for a general strike
last week.
Lord Malloch-Brown said there was room, for
much optimism with the actions taken by the
government to implement the 13th Amendment
to the Constitution, and the changes
initiated in the East. However, it appeared
that more action was needed achieve the full
results and benefits of the government’s
moves.
The President said the liberation of the
East was completed on July 19, 2007and in
less a year democracy had been restored
there. Change will come, but they will need
time was the view of the President.
Commenting on the moves to eradicate
terrorism, President Rajapaksa said it was
necessary to defeat the LTTE, seeing how it
had continued its war of terror through
talks, ceasefires and many other initiatives
for peace. Lord Malloch-Brown, explaining to
the President the British Government’s
policy of acting against terrorism said
there were six pending cases within regard
to illegal support for terrorist
organizations and this would send a strong
message to all concerned.
The necessity of having a strong
institutional arrangement to safeguard Human
Rights was shared by the President and the
British Minister, while the President
presented the case for a better
understanding of the constraints that
prevailed in establishing such machinery
just now, but was the clear intent of the
government.
On the subject of child soldiers, the
British High Commissioner said the
government had taken a very laudable measure
in allowing free access to the camps where
former child soldiers were being kept. The
President said those genuinely interested
were free to carry out their inquiries on
the numbers of child soldiers still present,
but strongly doubted that those who make
allegations about this matter would give the
full details to help such an inquiry, which
the government wa ready to support.
Lord Malloch Brown was accompanied by the
British High Commissioner Peter Hayes, and
the President was accompanied by Secretary
to the President Lalith Weeratunga, Foreign
Secretary Palitha Kohona and Ms. Kshenuka
Seneviratne, of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
|