|
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
said
that the
Asian
group –
India,
China,
Japan
and
others
–helped
the
development
activities
of Sri
Lnka and
“they
were
very
generous
in
offering
us
development
assistance”.
In an
interview
with The
Hindu,
he said
that
although
India
was
little
worried
about
Sri
Lanka’s
close
relations
with
China,
he has
been
very
clear in
his
policy
regarding
the
friendship
with
India.
“India
is our
close
neighbour.
I always
say,
‘India
is my
relation.
Others
are my
friends,'
he said.
The
President,
speaking
to the
Editor N
Ram of
The
Hindu
said
that the
country
needs
development:
infrastructure
in the
North-East
and in
the
South.”
In the
North
and
East,
the
conflict
is over,
we're
one
country.
Now I
want to
develop
the
country.
For
development,
these
are the
countries
that
helped
me and I
am ready
to
accept
other
countries
to come
and help
me
develop
the
country.
We can
look
after
the
humanitarian…
We give
free
food,
free
health
care,
subsidised
fertilizer,
transport
assistance.
We can
afford
that.
But I
want
development
assistance.
I
want
roads,
development
of the
power
sector,
hotels.
And
investment.
I want
to get
Indian
companies,
the
Tatas
and
others,
to
invest
in Sri
Lanka.”
President
Rajapaksa
said he
was not
surprised
by his
resounding
victory
at the
January
26
Presidential
Election.
“
Because
in the
Provincial
Councils,
if you
count
the
majority,
it was
2.5
million.
I knew
that if
you took
1
million
out of
that, I
would
have won
with 1.5
million.
And I
knew
what the
pulse of
the
people
in
villages
was. I
knew
from the
start
that my
majority
would be
there.”
“Rural
Sri
Lanka
supported
me in a
big way.
I feel
that was
because
of the
development
in the
villages.
We had
the
village
road
development
programme,
the
programme
for the
development
of the
whole
village,
the
fertilizer
subsidy,
the
‘Grow
More
Food'
campaign.
Incomes
for
rural
households
rose
sharply.
From
1948 to
2005,
the per
capita
income
came up
to $
1000.
During
the
period
of my
presidency,
when the
war was
going
on, it
has gone
up to
$2200.
With
development,
the
lifestyle
of the
people
had
changed.
They
[the
Fonseka
camp]
couldn't
understand
that,"
he said.
Answering
a
question
on who
should
get the
credit
for
defeating
the
terrorists,
he said,
“people,
by the
way they
voted,
showed
they
gave the
credit
to me.
Who
built
the Taj
Mahal?
Who is
remembered
by
people
as the
builder
of the
Taj
Mahal?
Not the
mason or
the
chief
engineer,
right?”
President
Rajapaksa,
pointing
out that
the 13th
Amendment
was
brought
in a
hurry,
without
studying
the
whole
problem
said the
solution
should
be a
practical
one.
“There
is a
need to
understand
the
geography
of the
country,
the
historical
background
of the
whole
problem.
Without
studying
that,
you
can't
bring a
solution
that is
suitable
for your
country.
It must
be a
practical
solution.”
He added
that the
13th
Amendment
is in
the
Constitution
and, “I
don't
have to
say I'm
implementing
it
because
it is
implemented
in the
other
areas.”
Following
is the
full
interview;
‘India
is my
relation,
the
others
are
friends’
Mahinda
Rajapaksa,
a
powerful
and
popular
head of
government
and
state,
has the
way
cleared
for him
for the
next six
years
and
more. In
a recent
conversation
with N.
Ram
lasting
three-and-a-half
hours at
Temple
Trees in
Colombo,
he
covered,
and
answered
questions
on, a
range of
subjects.
Excerpts
from his
on-the-record
comments
and
responses:
Huge
victory
in
presidential
election
I was
not
surprised
[by the
margin
of
victory,
nearly
18
percentage
points].
Because
in the
Provincial
Councils,
if you
count
the
majority,
it was
2.5
million.
I knew
that if
you took
1
million
out of
that, I
would
have won
with 1.5
million.
And I
knew
what the
pulse of
the
people
in
villages
was.
Even in
Colombo
district,
outside
the
municipal
area,
they
gave me
a good
majority.
I knew
from the
start
that my
majority
would be
there.
And I
am not
surprised
about
the
North-East
results.
I was
encouraged
by that.
I had
the
election,
I knew
that
people
must
vote,
they
must be
given a
chance
to elect
their
own
President.
Twenty-six
per
cent, I
am
satisfied
with it.
In every
village,
I got
some
votes,
didn't
I?
Factors
behind
the
decisive
win
One
thing is
that
people
wanted
experience
– a
politician
to lead
their
country.
I have
been in
politics
for 40
years.
Suddenly
a
military
man
coming
in, I
don't
think
people
trusted
him.
They
were
frightened
by the
way that
he
talked,
shouting
at
people,
blackguarding
people.
He [Sarath
Fonseka]
showed
his
inexperience
on
economic
affairs,
On mis-targeting
Actually,
he never
said
anything
about me
other
than a
few
words in
the
final
days.
Other
than ‘I
will
take him
and
remand
him.' ‘I
will
kick him
out' –
that was
Somavansa
[Amarasinghe,
the JVP
leader]
and he
endorsed
it. ‘At
7
o'clock
I will
walk in
there,
take him
into
custody,
put him
into
Bogambara
[maximum
security
prison
in Kandy]
in a 2x2
cell.'
He
thought
this was
the
Army! He
was ill
advised.
The
whole
campaign
was
against
a family
and it
was all
mud-throwing.
Without
politics,
they
were
trying
to
personalise
the
campaign.
Rural
Sri
Lanka
supported
me in a
big way.
I feel
that was
because
of the
development
in the
villages.
We had
the
village
road
development
programme,
the
programme
for the
development
of the
whole
village,
the
fertilizer
subsidy,
the
‘Grow
More
Food'
campaign.
Incomes
for
rural
households
rose
sharply.
From
1948 to
2005,
the per
capita
income
came up
to $
1000.
During
the
period
of my
presidency,
when the
war was
going
on, it
has gone
up to
$2200.
With
development,
the
lifestyle
of the
people
had
changed.
They
[the
Fonseka
camp]
couldn't
understand
that.
If I
had been
in the
Opposition,
I would
have
addressed
not
anything
else but
the cost
of
living.
Forget
about
everything
else,
just
address
that.
When
eventually
they
tried to
address
it, it
was too
late. We
had the
answers.
People
in the
villages
didn't
like the
way they
conducted
the
campaign:
that
they
would
try to
take me
into
custody,
kick me
out,
kill me.
People
don't
like
that.
Villagers
don't
want
that to
happen.
They
[the
Fonseka
camp]
miscalculated,
failed
to see
the
affection,
the love
people
in the
villages
have for
me.
In
addition,
suburban
people
voted
heavily
for me.
Other
than
people
in
Colombo,
and some
people
in Kandy
and
other
cities,
they
voted
for me.
They
wanted a
peaceful
life.
They
believed
in
democracy.
I think
our
people
are, in
that
way,
very
educated,
very
conscious
about
democracy.
They
didn't
want a
military
man
coming
in.
Who
got the
credit
for
eliminating
the LTTE?
People,
by the
way they
voted,
showed
they
gave the
credit
to me.
Who
built
the Taj
Mahal?
Who is
remembered
by
people
as the
builder
of the
Taj
Mahal?
Not the
mason or
the
chief
engineer,
right?
On
parliamentary
election
prospects
I think
we will
win the
parliamentary
elections
very
comfortably.
The
people
will
vote
with us.
Now they
know the
government
is
stable
for
seven
years.
A
two-thirds
majority?
I think
we will
be able
to get
that, or
at least
close to
that.
Finally,
Ranil
Wickremasinghe's
crowd is
there to
come
back and
join me,
right
[laughter]?
Cohabitation?
Ranil as
Prime
Minister?
Oh, no
problem
but he
won't do
that [do
well in
the
parliamentary
election]!
So the
situation
won't
arise.
You know
that
during
the
campaign,
Ranil
campaigned
for me
when he
went to
the
Tamil
areas.
He said,
‘Poda,
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
poda,
Gotabaya
poda,
Basil
poda
[laughter].'
People
were
shocked.
I was
talking
in
Tamil;
he
wanted
to show
that he
also
knew
Tamil.
And the
first
word he
said was
‘Poda,
Mahinda
poda
[laughter].'
He
meant,
‘Don't
vote for
him,
reject
him.'
Role of
opposition
The
opposition
must be
able to
contribute.
They
must
criticise
–
constructive
criticism
but not
mud-throwing
all the
time.
Not
opposing
everything
the
government
brings.
This
is the
unfortunate
thing in
Sri
Lanka.
They
oppose
everything,
whatever
the
government
does.
It's
petty
politics.
The
criticism
is
always
personalised.
The
opposition
must
contribute
to
whatever
solution
we are
going to
bring to
this
North-East
issue.
Because
what we
want is
permanent
peace.
13th
Amendment
plus
The 13th
Amendment
was
brought
in a
hurry,
without
studying
the
whole
problem.
There is
a need
to
understand
the
geography
of the
country,
the
historical
background
of the
whole
problem.
Without
studying
that,
you
can't
bring a
solution
that is
suitable
for your
country.
It must
be a
practical
solution.
The
13th
Amendment
is
implementable
at the
moment
other
than the
police
powers.
It is in
the
Constitution.
I don't
have to
say I'm
implementing
it
because
it is
implemented
in the
other
areas.
The
land,
everything
is
implementable.
We had
the
[presidential]
election
[in the
Northern
Province]
and we
are
going to
have the
Provincial
Council
election
after
this
[parliamentary
elections
of April
8]. I
thought
I had to
resettle
the
people
[first].
Now
there
are
fewer
than
50,000
in the
IDP
camps;
and many
of them
don't
want to
go.
The
development-peace
link
The west
doesn't
understand
this. It
doesn't
know
what's
going in
here.
They're
making
statements.
They ask
about
humanitarian
assistance.
I say I
don't
want
humanitarian
assistance!
We will
look
after
our
people,
provide
them
food. I
can get
down
food
from
India
any
time. I
said we
want
development
assistance
[for the
North].
Without
peace,
there is
no
development;
without
development,
there is
no
peace.
Tamils
in the
national
police
Do you
know we
have
taken
about
500
Tamils
from the
Eastern
Province
and they
are
already
in
service?
Now we
are
taking
them
from the
Northern
Province.
In
Jaffna,
7500
Tamils
came for
450
places.
They
have
been
selected.
[The
President's
Secretary,
Lalith
Weeratunga
add:
‘The
people
selected
have
been
security-screened
and will
be
recruited
[in the
national
police
force]
immediately
after
the
election.
This is
an
achievement,
by any
government.']
There
was a
campaign
by the
LTTE and
the
Muslim
parties,
Rauff
Hakeem
and some
others,
not to
join the
police
forces
and the
Army. We
had
Tamil
Army
officers
and even
now we
have
Muslim
[Army
officers].
There
was a
campaign
against
joining.
But now,
after
this
[final
victory
over the
LTTE],
they
have
joined.
You
should
see
their
muscles!
They
have
been
trained
well
[laughs].
You
don't
have to
train
them
again.
The only
thing is
they
must
learn
some
police
work.
That's
all,
it's
easy! We
have
good
training
institutes.
We can
train
adequate
numbers.
They
will be
in these
[Tamil]
areas
mostly
and we
want to
get them
down to
the
South
also.
You've
got to
mix
them.
Tamil-Muslim
majorityin
Colombo
In
Colombo,
the
majority
is Tamil
and
Muslim.
Twenty
years
ago, the
Sinhalese
were
about 90
per
cent;
today,
they're
less
than 30
[per
cent].
The
majority
are
Muslims
and
Tamils
and
there is
no
problem.
The
Mayor of
Colombo
is a
Muslim [Uvais
Mohamed
Imitiyas].
Dialogue
on
devolution
Soon
after
these
parliamentary
elections,
I will
call all
the
leaders
of the
political
parties
and
start
talking
to them.
You
know, I
tried to
get them
down,
the TNA
[Tamil
National
Alliance],
the
Tamil
parties,
the
Muslim
parties.
But they
were not
interested.
They
were not
interested
in
solving
this
problem
as long
as [Velupillai]
Prabakaran
was
there.
Now they
must
understand
that
there is
no
option
for them
but to
talk.
I'm the
President
of the
country,
I'm the
leader
of the
country,
they
must
come and
negotiate
with me,
have a
dialogue
with me.
If they
think
they
can't
cope
with me,
new
leaders
will
come up
and I
will
have to
deal
with
them.
On
western
antipathy
to him
They
don't
like me.
They
don't
like my
independent
views.
My
preference
is for
my
country.
Why
should I
be loyal
to any
other
country?
I'm not
a green
card
holder,
am I?
Close
ties
with
Asian
countries
They
[India,
China,
Japan]
were the
countries
that
helped
me to
develop
this
country.
As
neighbours
of the
Asian
group,
they
were
very
generous
in
offering
us
development
assistance.
This
country
needs
development:
infrastructure
in the
North-East
and in
the
South.
In the
North
and
East,
the
conflict
is over,
we're
one
country.
Now I
want to
develop
the
country.
For
development,
these
are the
countries
that
helped
me and I
am ready
to
accept
other
countries
to come
and help
me
develop
the
country.
We can
look
after
the
humanitarian…
We give
free
food,
free
health
care,
subsidised
fertilizer,
transport
assistance.
We can
afford
that.
But I
want
development
assistance.
I want
roads,
development
of the
power
sector,
hotels.
And
investment.
I
have set
new
targets
for
tourism.
I called
the
Tourism
Board
and said
I was
not
satisfied
with the
present
[rate of
development].
I want
to call
the
private
sector.
They're
going to
the
Maldives
and
various
other
countries
to
invest
their
money. I
am going
to tell
them to
invest
here. I
want to
get
Indian
companies,
the
Tatas
and
others,
to
invest
in Sri
Lanka.
On
excellent
ties
with
India
That's
right.
Because
I'm very
clear.
When I
say
something,
I stick
to it.
When I
say
‘yes,'
yes.
When I
say
‘no,'
no. With
India, I
think I
have
been
very
clear in
my
policy.
Consistent,
never
changed.
They
were a
little
worried
about my
connection
with
China.
For
development,
China,
Japan
and all
these
[Asian]
countries
will
come and
invest.
That
is a
different
question.
India is
our
close
neighbour.
I always
say,
‘India
is my
relation.
Others
are my
friends.'
On
Sarath
Fonseka's
arrest
When I
heard
about
all this
earlier,
when the
intelligence
agencies
were
reporting
to me on
all
this,
the Army
would
have
taken
him over
[under
military
law].
They
wanted
to do
that.
But if
at that
time I
had
allowed
that,
they
would
have
said
that I
was
frightened
of this
man
contesting.
I
accepted
his
resignation
as CDS
[Chief
of
Defence
Staff].
I could
have
declined
to do
that
[under
the
special
Act] and
we could
have
charged
him for
what he
had
done,
what the
intelligence
agencies
were
reporting
on. But
I didn't
want to
do that
because
the
people
would
have
said I
blocked
him from
contesting.
I
knew he
was the
best
candidate
I could
get! It
was very
clear in
the
election.
He
couldn't
get what
Ranil
Wickremasinghe
got.
Even
with the
JVP,
which
supported
me once
and with
all this
alliance,
he never
got that
vote.
They had
the
biggest
alliance
against
a
contesting
President.
Ultimately,
what
happened?
Then
[after
the
election]
the Army
came and
said,
‘Sir,
we have
to take
action
for what
he had
done.'
So I
said,
‘All
right,
it's up
to you.
See if
you have
the
evidence
to
arrest
him. If
you have
evidence,
certainly
do it.
But
please
consult
the
Attorney-General.'
Gotabaya
[Rajapaksa]
was very
cautious.
He said
‘no,'
otherwise
they
would
have
taken
him [Fonseka]
immediately
[after
the
election
results
were
announced].
Only
after
going
through
all the
evidence
was the
Army
given
the
green
light to
do what
they
wanted.
This is
an
enquiry
[under
military
law] to
see if
there is
a prima
facie
case
against
Fonseka.
I don't
want to
get
involved
in the
judicial
process.
One
thing is
that I
am a
lawyer
myself,
so I
always
respect
the law.
I never
say
anything
against
the
courts,
against
the
judges.
[Except
once
when the
last
Chief
Justice
was
trying
to
decide
the
price of
petrol.
I
said
that was
the
executive's,
not the
judiciary's,
job.] My
view is,
‘let the
legal
process
go on.'
I don't
want to
get
involved
in it.
Discipline
is an
Army
matter.
If I get
involved,
Army
discipline
will go
for a
six. I
don't
want to
do that.
It is
very
important
that
democracy
is
restored.
Army
law is
very
different
from the
general
law. Now
he has
been
taken by
the
Army. He
is under
the Army
Commander.
He is
being
given a
luxury
flat,
the Navy
Commander's
chalet.
If he
had won,
I would
have
been in
Bogambara,
in a 2x2
cell! He
is
allowed
access
to his
lawyer,
his wife
is
allowed
to see
him.
She
called
my wife,
who was
at a
banquet
in
Moscow;
she was
told,
‘ask for
it and
you will
be
allowed
to see
him' and
she did.
Doctors,
everything
possible
is
allowed.
We don't
want to
harass
him.
In
Buddhism,
they
say,
‘for
what you
have
done,
there
will be
repercussions
in this
particular
birth.'
Good or
bad, you
don't
have to
wait
till the
next
birth.
I always
believe
in God –
Buddha,
Dharma,
Sangha,
and God.
There is
somebody
who
looks
after
us. They
say that
when
Vishnu
looks
after
you, no
one can
do you
any
harm.
That's
why I
went to
Tirupati
[and
prayed]:
‘Look
after
this
country.'
If
Fonseka
had won
Had
there
been a
different
election
result,
there
would
have
been a
bloodbath.
There
would
have
been
dead
bodies
everywhere.
Burning
houses
and all
that.
Just
before
the
election,
even
government
servants
were
getting
threatening
letters
saying
‘on the
26th [of
January]
we will
come for
you.
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