“The
LTTE
lost the
war, and
now the
pro-LTTE
expatriate
is
trying
to
defeat
the
peace,”
said Sri
Lanka's
Ambassador
to the
US,
Jaliya
Wickramasuriya
speaking
before
the
Homeland
Security
Policy
Institute
of The
George
Washington
University.
He
praised
the
United
States
and
other
nations
that
outlawed
the LTTE
and
warned
that
some
groups
continue
to
promote
LTTE
causes
and
fundraising.
The
Ambassador
described
a number
of key
developments
that led
to the
government’s
successful
conclusion
of the
25-year-long
conflict
with the
LTTE.
Those
initiatives,
he said,
included
a clear
command
to the
military
from
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
to
destroy
the LTTE
while
liberating
civilians
without
harm.
Other
important
developments,
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
said,
included
the
President’s
efforts
to
engage
former
LTTE
leaders
in the
political
process,
and the
work of
Western
government
to
shut-down
pro-LTTE
fund
raising
abroad.
“What is
interesting
about
Sri
Lanka’s
experience
is not
just how
it
fought
and won
a war
against
terrorists,”
he
further
said,
“but how
we must
now keep
terrorism
from
returning.”
While
ending
the
conflict
was an
important
milestone,
he said,
“The
government
knows
that
what is
happening
now is
even
more
important.
We are
rebuilding
our
nation.
We are
repairing
25 years
of
ethnic
hatred
promoted
by the
LTTE. We
are
reconciling
differences
and
rebuilding
lives.”
The
foundation
of that
effort,
the
Ambassador
explained,
is a
political
process
aimed at
electing
local
Tamil
leaders
in
Northern
Sri
Lankan,
as well
as an
ambitious
plan to
rebuild
homes,
buildings,
highways
and rail
lines.
Bolstering
the
economy
in the
north,
he said,
will
guarantee
future
security.
During
the
address,
Frank
Cilluffo,
the
Homeland
Security
Policy
Institute’s
director
and a
former
White
House
advisor
on
terrorism
and
homeland
security
issues,
asked
about
the fate
of the
internally
displaced
persons
in Sri
Lanka.
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
explained
that
more
than
50,000
people
have
left the
welfare
centers
since
June,
and that
another
50,000
are
expected
to
return
to their
homes or
the
homes of
relatives
by Sept.
30. That
will
drop the
number
of
displaced
persons
in the
centers
to below
200,000.
The pace
of
resettlement,
he said,
has been
determined
by the
need to
screen
the
civilians
for the
presence
of LTTE
cadres,
as well
as the
need to
rid the
north of
thousands
of LTTE
landmines.
James
Clad, a
senior
research
fellow
at the
U.S.
government’s
National
Defense
University
who has
studied
the
conflict
in Sri
Lanka,
told
those
gathered
for the
discussion
that,
“the Sri
Lankan
military
acted
with
real
professionalism,”
as the
conflict
concluded,
a view
he said
was
backed
up by
similar
observations
by
sources
he has
within
the
International
Committee
of the
Red
Cross.
Those
attending
the
Ambassador’s
address
included
Asian
scholars,
executives
of U.S.
companies,
representatives
of
foreign
embassies,
administration
and
government
officials
and a
staff
member
of the
Senate
Committee
on
Foreign
Relations.
Lasting
peace,
the
Ambassador
said,
“will
come
with the
political
process.”
He noted
success
of Tamil
candidates
in the
Aug. 8
elections
in
Jaffna
and
Vavuniya.
Future
elections,
he said,
will
strengthen
Tamil
involvement.
“This
political
solution
will
show
Tamil
citizens
that
they
have a
voice in
Sri
Lanka,
an
important
and
powerful
one,”
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
said.
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