A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, February 18, 2014
WikiLeaks: Should Sri Lanka Be Treated As A Villain Or As A Country Wiped Out A Terrorist Group? – EU Questioned Just After The War
|February 18, 2014
“With
IDP camps in Sri Lanka coming under civilian control, the issues now
facing the international community were ensuring access, improving
conditions in the camps and encouraging repatriation, said Frebort. A
meeting of the co-chairs would be useful, he said, noting that U.S. had
indicated that July 7 would be a good date for a co-chairs meeting.
Moran (European Commission’s James Moran) noted that framework
conditions for reconstruction efforts need to be drawn up locally by the
donors. There were questions over sustainability and the conceptual
work could not be undertaken until onorshad a clearer idea of the
political situation. Should Sri Lanka now be treated as a villain or as a
country that had wiped out a terrorist group? Majewski opined that the
international community should ‘cut them some slack’ and consider what
the GOSL had achieved. Molin said the international community needed to
consider how best to convince Rajapaksa to now be magnanimous and make
the most of the opportunity. We need to be careful about isolating the
Colombo regime and inadvertently creating ‘another Burma.’” the US
Embassy Brussels informed Washington.
A classified diplomatic cable which details a meeting on United States –
European Union on South and Central Asia, just after the Sri Lanka’s
war. The Colombo Telegraph found the related ‘Confidential” US diplomatic cable dated June 22, 2009 from the WikiLeaks database.
The Embassy wrote; “South and Central Asia Bureau Deputy Assistant
Secretary Michael Owen noted that this was a critical question: whether
to focus on accountability over human rights abuses committed during the
successful military campaign or to look forward to focus on
humanitarian assistance, resettlement of IDPs, and political
reconciliation. This was a fine balance. Our leverage was limited, he
noted, as the U.S. was not a major donor in Sri Lanka. It was therefore
important to consider what we need to accomplish in Sri Lanka over the
next few years and determine how best to pursue those goals. The U.S.
did not want to see a financial collapse in Sri Lanka, but it a decision
on the pending IMF loan to Sri Lanka had not been taken. The GOSL would
need space to start reconstruction and reconciliation activities. It
was important to marginalize residual LTTE loyalists, such as the Tamil
Relief Organization (TRO) and to win over the Tamil diaspora. Moran
agreed that the GOSL must now ‘win the peace’ and the international
community should therefore give the GOSL the ‘benefit of the doubt — but
there are limits.’”

