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Tamils don't have
hope and dignity now in Srilanka
U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka Robert Blake said,
"America's experience in Iraq, Afghanistan and
elsewhere has taught us that terrorism cannot be
defeated by law enforcement and military
measures alone."
That is why, said Ambassador Blake, "the U.S.
and the other Donor Group Co-Chair countries
have urged the government of Sri Lanka to adopt
now a political solution to the conflict, within
the framework of a united Sri Lanka that meets
the aspirations of all Sri Lanka's communities."
More than 25 years of conflict between the Sri
Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam, or Tamil Tigers, separatists have
cost the lives of some 70,000 people in Sri
Lanka. More than 200,000 have been made homeless
by recent fighting in the north, and the human
rights situation remains grim.
One way forward is for Sri Lanka to complete the
work of the All Parties Representative
Committee, which has reached agreement on 90
percent of a blueprint for constitutional reform
that most Sri Lankans believe offers great
promise. It remains for the country's 2 main
Sinhalese parties to agree on the document,
which has proved a significant hurdle thus far.
In remarks given at
the University of Madras, Ambassador Blake noted
that one reason for the lack of progress on a
consensus All Parties Representative Committee
document, is that some in Sri Lanka believe that
the government should first defeat the Tamil
Tigers, and then proceed with a political
solution.
"The U.S. view," he said, "is that the
government could further isolate and weaken the
LTTE [Tamil Tigers] if it articulates now its
vision for a political solution. This would
reassure more than 200,000 thousand internally
displaced persons now in the [northern] Vanni
[district] that they can move south, and aspire
to a better future." This would also disprove
the Tamil Tigers' claim that they are the sole
representative of Sri Lanka's Tamils, and help
dissuade Tamils in the diaspora from funding the
Tamil Tigers.
Ambassador Blake also noted that "the U.S.
believes that an improvement in the human rights
situation – that has disproportionately
affected Tamils – would help hasten
reconciliation, and give Tamils a greater sense
that they will enjoy a future of hope and
dignity within a united Sri Lanka."
Source:VOA
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