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Ambassador
Jaliya
Wickramasuriya
recently
expanded
his
outreach
campaign
with the
Sri
Lankan
community
in the
United
States
with
visits
to both
Las
Vegas
and Los
Angeles.
Ambassador
has been
meeting
with
Tamil,
Sinhalese,
Muslim
and
other
Sri
Lankan
ethnics
groups
throughout
the U.S.
to
discuss
reconciliation
following
the
conclusion
of the
ethnic
conflict.
Recent
trips by
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
included
visits
to
Boston
and
Chicago.
During
the
California
portion
of his
trip,
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
met with
the
local
Sri
Lankan
community
at the
Sri
Lankan
Consulate
in Los
Angeles
and
briefed
them on
development
initiatives
by the
Government
of Sri
Lanka in
the
Northern
and
Eastern
provinces.
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
noted
that Sri
Lanka is
in a new
era of
reconciliation
after
years of
conflict.
Under
the
leadership
of
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa,
he said,
the
government
has the
support
of most
of the
political
parties
in Sri
Lanka.
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
mentioned
that he
has
personally
visited
the IDP
welfare
centers
after
the
conflict
ended
and
found
that
news
stories
about
poor
conditions
in the
centers
had been
exaggerated.
Ambassador
said he
was
confident
that
within
the next
few
months
the Sri
Lankan
Government
would
conclude
the
resettlement
process
responsibly.
He
further
mentioned
that
there
are
adequate
doctors
and
other
healthcare
providers
in the
welfare
centers,
where
the
government
has
ensured
that
education
and
other
essential
needs
are
being
met. The
Government
has
already
taken
initiatives
to
rehabilitate
the
former
LTTE
child
soldiers
and LTTE
cadres
and is
providing
each
with an
education
and
livelihood.
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
emphasized
that the
Government
within
the next
few
years
will
provide
economic
freedom
to the
people
in the
North
and East
with the
establishment
of free
trade
zones,
vocational
training
centers
and
other
economic
benefits.
Ambassador
requested
that the
Sri
Lankans
living
in US
extend
their
full
cooperation
to help
Sri
Lanka
attract
new
business
and
investment
from the
US.
He also
requested
that Sri
Lankan
community
members
who have
let
their
citizenship
lapse
now
become
dual
citizens
by
investing
in fixed
deposit
savings
accounts
and
treasury
bonds
and
bills.
Those
who are
willing
to
invest
$25,000
in NRFC
accounts
in Sri
Lanka,
he said,
will be
eligible
to have
their
dual
citizenship
fee
waived.
During
his Las
Vegas
visit,
Ambassador
met with
a large
cross
section
of the
expatriate
Sri
Lankan
community.
He
discussed
steps
taken by
the Sri
Lankan
Government
to
resettle
the
civilians
displaced
by the
conflict
and the
misconceptions
and
falsehoods
of some
news
reports
regarding
those
displaced
by the
conflict.
When the
conflict
ended in
May,
there
were
about
287,000
internally
displaced
persons,
or IDPs.
Since
then,
about
50,000
have
returned
to their
homes
after
the
removal
of LTTE
landmines.
As
de-mining
continues,
another
50,000
are
expected
to be
resettled
by the
end of
this
month.
That
means
that a
third of
the
displaced
will
have
been
resettled
in just
four
months,
putting
the
total
number
of IDPs
below
200,000.
The
resettlement
of the
most
IDPs is
expected
to be
completed
by
January
2010.
While in
Las
Vegas,
Ambassador
also
participated
in a
panel
discussion
included
Professor
Karunaratne
Hangawatte
of the
School
of
Criminal
Justice
at the
University
of
Nevada
Las
Vegas
(UNLV).
The
30-minute
discussion
focused
on steps
taken to
resettle
IDPs,
pro-LTTE
propaganda
designed
to
tarnish
the
image of
Sri
Lanka
and
efforts
to
engage
the Sri
Lankan
Tamil
Diaspora
in
reconciliation.
Both
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
and
Professor
Hangawatte
reminded
the
large
gathering
that Sri
Lanka
has a
Herculean
task in
combating
the
overseas
LTTE
propaganda
machine,
which
over two
decades
became
adept at
spreading
falsehoods.
In that
regard,
Ambassador
outlined
his
efforts
to meet
with
officials
of the
U.S.
Department
of
State,
U.S.
representatives
and
senators
and
other
policymakers
to
explain
the Sri
Lankan
government’s
positions
on a
variety
of
issues.
Ambassador
Wickramasuriya
noted
that he
has also
begun an
open
dialogue
with
members
of the
Tamil
Diaspora
in the
U.S.
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