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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, February 3, 2016
‘Neo-Fascists’ in Sri Lanka blamed for opposing closer ties with India
T. RAMAKRISHNAN
February 1, 2016
Samaraweera says instead of being grateful to India for having given the
majority of Sri Lanka "their great religion, Buddhism," such persons
feared India the most.
Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera has criticised “neo-fascists” in Sri Lanka for opposing closer ties with India.
Paranoid frenzy
“Whenever a bridge over the Palk Straits to connect our two nations is
proposed, they get into a paranoid frenzy that all of India is waiting
drive over that bridge and make Sri Lanka their home. When trade
agreements are discussed, they see swarms of Indian doctors and barbers
coming across to flood the Sri Lankan market,” he said.
Delivering a talk at the Sri Lanka-India Society on Sunday, the Minister
was referring to reactions among a section of parties and groups to
reports in the media on the Indian government’s plan in building a sea
bridge and tunnel connecting Rameswaram, Tamil Nadu,
with Talaimannar, Northern Province of Sri Lanka. His observations were
also made in the context of steps being taken to get Economic and
Technological Cooperation Agreement signed between the two countries.
‘See it as a great opportunity’
Even as India was forging ahead to become an economic superpower, Sri
Lanka must see its neighbour “not as a threat but as a great opportunity
to prosper and develop. Sri Lanka must realise that like Canada, Hong
Kong or Vietnam, we are blessed with a historic opportunity by way of
our location right next to one of the world’s largest and fastest
growing economies -- an economy that is thirty times our size.”
On the benefits gained by Sri Lanka after signing Free Trade Agreement
with India, Mr. Samaraweera said Sri Lanka’s exports to India had
increased by almost 10 times. The ratio of imports to exports
between India and Sri Lanka declined from 10:1 to 6:1 within ten years
of signing the pact. He mentioned that the Colombo Dockyard now had
orders worth over $250 million to build ships for Indian companies.
And a call to India
At the same time, the Foreign Minister called upon India to be “vigilant
to the needs, hopes and aspirations” of ordinary Sri Lankans.
Recurring issues such as the bottom trawling crisis in the North of Sri
Lanka, which not only affected the livelihoods of thousands of poor
families but also resulted in “dangerous environmental damage,” were
resolved and did not give cause to anti-Indian feeling.

