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The European Parliament has called upon the
LTTE to lay down their arms and participate
in the democratic process.
Yesterday, it was due to pass its sixth
resolution on the Sri Lankan situation with
the support of all major political groups
other than the Socialists.
British Conservative member of the European
Parliament MEP Geoffrey Van Orden who chairs
the informal Parliamentary Association
Friends of Sri Lanka and has initiated most
of the Parliament's resolution on Sri Lanka
said "the British Government in particular
as well as the EU and other friendly
Governments must do all they can to assist
the Sri Lankan authorities in humanitarian
relief in the Northern areas that have now
been liberated from the grip of the LTTE."
To prevent further carnage, for the sake of
all the civilians now trapped by the
fighting, and to improve the future
prospects of Sri Lanka, the remaining LTTE
elements should now give up, he added.
Continuing further, Van Orden said: "It is
then vital that the Government moves quickly
to reassure all its Tamil citizens that it
will be vigorous and pro-active in
addressing their economic and political
concerns. This is not only the right thing
to do but will also ensure that any residual
support for armed insurgency and terrorism
evaporates."
The development of the long neglected areas
in the North and the East, which for many
years have been under LTTE control should be
a top priority. This is where the
International community should help.
The Government action to restore full media
freedom, investigate allegations of human
rights abuses, and sign up to the Ottawa
Treaty to ban anti-personnel landmines, will
all help reassure foreign donors and
encourage international action to stifle any
continued LTTE fundraising."
Conservative Foreign Affairs spokesman in
the European Parliament Charles Tannock MEP
said: "The EU must be vigilant against LTTE
militants who attempt to seek asylum in
Europe. Throughout this ferocious 26 year
civil war, the LTTE has pioneered atrocious
terrorist tactics. While we support the
Government's offer of amnesty for the
majority of the LTTE, it is vital that no
one responsible for the most serious war
crimes is allowed to get away with impunity.
Meanwhile, Socialists Group spokesman in
European Parliament Robert Evans who chairs
the Parliament's South Asia delegation said
that Socialists refuse to take part in a
vote on the resolution since it is
imbalanced. "Both sides are to be blamed,
not just the Tamil Tigers." He lamented that
no other group supported their stand. The
Resolution was passed.
All members except the Socialists were in
favour and the Socialists boycotted the
vote.
Following is the full text of the speech
made by Dr. Charles Tennock on behalf of the
supporters of the resolution.
Sri Lanka's bloody civil war seems finally
to be coming to a conclusion. The LTTE,
which has been blacklisted by the EU as a
terrorist organisation, must now surely lay
down its arms and surrender. The EU and
other co-chairs have urged the LTTE to do
so. The LTTE's response will show us whether
it really has the best interests of Tamils
at heart. The LTTE is using its front
organisations in the EU to maximum
propaganda effect and raising money by
extortion internationally.
Some LTTE militants may try to seek asylum
in Europe. Throughout this ferocious 26 year
civil war the LTTE has pioneered atrocious
terrorist tactics such as suicide bombings
that are now used in many other parts of the
world. The Sri Lanka Army has therefore had
to deploy all means at its disposal to
counteract this brutal insurgency but it's
clear that the casualty figures have been
exaggerated and some e.g. the AP story of
300 civilians killed has now been withdrawn
as the supposed author subsequently denied
authorship.
The death of civilians in a war zone is
tragic whenever and wherever it occurs.
Clearly the Sri Lankan Armed Forces cannot
claim an unblemished record, but they have
not sought to exploit civilians and put them
in harm's way like the LTTE has done. If the
war really is soon to be over, it is
essential that Sri Lanka turns its
attentions to post-conflict disarmament,
demobilisation and reintegration. The
marginalisation of Tamils at the expense of
the majority Sinhalese needs to be addressed
in an urgent and permanent manner to ensure
a stable and sustainable multi-ethnic
society with regional devolution. The EU
should also ensure resources are at Sri
Lanka's disposal to support post-conflict
development. Although we should support the
Government's offer of amnesty for the
majority of LTTE, it is vital that no-one
responsible for the most serious war crimes
is allowed to get away with impunity.
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