Krishna heads to Lanka, hopes for solution to Tamils’ problems (Lead)
January 15th, 2012 - 10:37 pm ICT by IANS ( 3 comments )Bangalore/New Delhi, Jan 15 (IANS) External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna Sunday hoped for a lasting political solution to the outstanding issues between the minority Tamil-speaking Sri Lankans and the government.
“It is in the interest of the island nation to work out a lasting solution to the ethnic Tamils’ issues,” Krishna told IANS here ahead of his four-day visit to Sri Lanka Monday.
Noting that the Sri Lankan government should talk to a cross-section of the Tamil-speaking minorities and their leadership for an amicable settlement of all pending issues, he said the Indian approach to this contentious issue had been for a genuine national reconciliation and thereby a lasting political settlement in the island nation.
“We have taken the Tamil sentiments into account and factored them in our policies. Our view is that all outstanding issues should be resolved through dialogue and to the satisfaction of both the parties,” he said.
During his second visit, Krishna will hold wide-ranging talks with his Sri Lankan counterpart G.L. Peiris on the Tamils’ issue, repatriation of genuine fishermen held in each other territory and expedite negotiations for a pact to jointly develop fisheries.
Krishna first visited Sri Lanka as external affairs minister in November 2010.
“I think an early and amicable solution will help improve people-to-people contact between Tamils in India and northern Sri Lanka. If trade and movement of people between the two countries, especially from Tamil Nadu thrives, it will be a win-win situation,” Krishna pointed out.
Krishna will also call on President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Prime Minister D. M Jayaratne during the visit and discuss bilateral issues between the two countries.
Krishna will meet representatives of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and elicit their views on the progress in their talks with Colombo over the proposed devolution of powers to the regions.
TNA has been pushing for land and police powers in the provinces.
Although Rajapaksa has made it clear that the government would not devolve these powers to the regions in line with the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, his government had indicated its willingness to discuss the issue.
Krishna will also review progress in an India-assisted project for building 50,000 houses in war-ravaged north for internally-displaced people and hand over the first set of houses in Jaffna, built for ethnic Tamils.
He will go to Galle to inaugurate the Southern Railway Project, which has been renovated with India’s concessional line of credit.
“Though we had been contributing to the socio-economic development of the Tamil region all along, it had taken a back seat during the internal strife. Now that normalcy is restored, we believe that all projects, which have been delayed or held up, will move forward hereafter,” Krishna added.
Reiterating that India’s political relations with Sri Lanka certainly had economic criteria, the minister said he would continue to lay emphasis on economic interaction with the island nation.
According to an external affairs ministry spokesperson, India and Sri Lanka will sign four agreements in housing, railways, agriculture and telecommunications during Krishna’s visit.
Besides Colombo and Jaffna, Krishna will visit Jaffna and Kilinochi and the Indian Peace-Keeping Force Memorial near Colombo.
- Krishna to visit Sri Lanka Jan 16 - Jan 07, 2012
- Krishna heads to Sri Lanka, devolution tops agenda - Jan 15, 2012
- Rajapaksa assures Krishna of empowering ethnic Tamils (Second Lead) - Jan 17, 2012
- Krishna meets Sri Lankan Tamil, Muslim leaders - Jan 16, 2012
- Rajapaksa has given firm commitment to empower Tamils: Krishna - Jan 20, 2012
- Krishna to push for political settlement of Tamil issue (Lead) - Jan 16, 2012
- Krishna in Colombo on four-day visit - Jan 16, 2012
- Krishna holds talks with Sri Lankan president, PM - Jan 17, 2012
- Rajapaksa assures Krishna of power-devolution to Tamils - Jan 17, 2012
- Indian consulate opens in Jaffna - Nov 27, 2010
- Sri Lankan Tamils want self-determination: Diaspora group - Jan 16, 2012
- Manmohan, Rajapaksa discuss Tamil refugees, devolution (Second Lead) - Oct 15, 2010
- India opens consulate in Jaffna, launches Northern Railway line (Lead) - Nov 27, 2010
- Reconciliation ministry mooted in Sri Lanka (Lead) - Jan 11, 2012
- India asks Sri Lanka to launch dialogue for political settlement - Nov 26, 2010
Tags: amicable settlement, bilateral issues, contentious issue, devolution of powers, external affairs minister, island nation, krishna, mahinda rajapaksa, national alliance, national reconciliation, northern sri lanka, peiris, political settlement, political solution, president mahinda rajapaksa, repatriation, sri lankan counterpart, sri lankan government, sri lankans, tna
January 16th, 2012 at 5:21 am
13A is a part of the Sri Lankan constitution borne out of an international agreement. Credibility of India and Sri Lanka will suffer if this law of the latter is not recommended. Limited devolution in 13A will enable the Tamil speaking minorities to develop their language within north-east province independently without hurting the ethnic majority in any way. This will also give way for Tamils to live without the control of the army.
January 16th, 2012 at 5:44 am
For starters the counterpart Foreign Minister Prof. Pieris is out of the country in far away Senegal and Burkina Fasso in Africa. If the GOSL is serious about the forthcoming talks then it stands to reason at least the counterpart should be also there!
As for the 50,00 houses it seems to be always in the realm of a promise over the past two years! Is it a serious project?
India ought to get more serious and business like in its dealings in SL and not be taken for aa ride. The Palk Strait fishing issue is another glaring example!
Minister Krishna’s visit comes at a critical time for Sri Lanka just prior to the forthcoming UNHRC Meeting in Geneva scheduled for March 2012. in order to get over accountability for serious crimes, possibly war crimes, Sri Lanka will for the time being, as a purely tactical ploy, agree to Krishna’s good intentioned wish of whatever between the SL state and the Tamil’s demand for devolution etc but only in words or perhaps even in writing to do this and that but only until March 2012 and no further. Surely India will recall what became of the Indo-SL agreement of 1987 and its subequent abrogation by the SL Sinhala majoritarian Parliament in toto. Today it is a dead letter. Much sweat blood and tears had arisen both for Sri Lankan Tamils and for Indians arsing from the IPKF and that 1987 agreement which has become a zero today.
Does India want to be taken for a ride again? Or how will it be different this time and who will guarantee that it can be different?
The TNA the major Tamil party has been critical of the LLRC Report like many others on the important issue of accountabilty for serious criems committed during the end of the internecine war in SL. It is well kwnown too that India too was part of that war by providing logistical ground support to the marauding SL military. In other words how will India respond to the accountability issue or will there be a joint cover-up plan?
January 17th, 2012 at 5:04 am
Indian FM Krishna must make the Sri Lankan leaders realise that any economic development or building infrastructure could be destroyed in any future ethnic crisis if the national problem remain unresolved. Military control alone cannot bottle and coke bitterness, emotional scars and feeling of injustices committed against the minorities in land grabbing, Sinhalamisation and militarisation of Tamil speaking areas. Tens of thousands of civilians were killed in the war by the Sri Lankan military and still their loved ones have not paid respect to the dead nor could they know the where about of the missing. How many were killed? Are they not humans to find out who are who were killed? Only an impartial investigation by the representatives of all the parties involved can answer these questions and bring about a lasting reconciliation and peace.