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
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Following President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s recent assurance to Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi that he was willing to implement the 13th
Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution with the exception of police
powers, the UNP yesterday urged the government to match words with
action without wasting more time on yet another Parliamentary Select
Committee (PSC) process.
UNP Lakshman Kiriella MP told The Island: "We have lost count of the
number of All Party Conferences and PSCs established to discuss the
ethnic issue which led to a three-decade-long war. It has been debated
for decades and the answers have been staring us in the face. It’s the
time for implementation and not further endless talks which would lead
us nowhere."
He said that the 13th Amendment had been enshrined in the Sri Lankan
Constitution and should be implemented. But, if the ruling UPFA did
not want to devolve power in terms of 13A, it should present an
amendment. The MP noted that instead of doing the obvious, the President
and some of its ministers were going around blaming and labelling their
critics as traitors.
President Rajapaksa was trying to drag the UNP into yet another time
wasting PSC without telling the country in writing what his solution to
the ethnic issue was. It was the government that had to lay its cards
on the table first. Then only could the Opposition respond, MP Kirielle
said.
Dealing with the rift that had developed within the UPFA was the
Presidents problem, but he should not play politics with national
issues, Kiriella said, adding that a leader should have a proper
political vision for the country and its people without placing
personal interests above all else.
Kirielle warned that the new Indian government led by the BJP’s Narendra
Modi was fully committed to devolution and President Rajapaksa would
find it far more difficult to deal with it than the previous Manmohan
Singh administration.
Although the UNHRC had established a panel to conduct a war crimes probe
into the conduct of government forces and the LTTE during the last
stages of the civil war that ended on May 18, 2009, the proceedings
which were due to get underway shortly could still be delayed, if not
halted, provided the powers that be came down from their high pedestal
and implemented at least the key recommendations of its very own Lessons
Learnt and Reconciliation Commission Report, the MP observed.
