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PRESIDENT RAJAPAKSA TELLS HINDU EDITOR THAT HE WOULD RATHER GIVE A POLITICAL SOLUTION TO TAMIL PEOPLE RATHER THAN TO TERRORISTSBy Walter JayawardhanaIn a n interview by the Editor in Chief of the Hindu newspaper , N. Ram Sri lankas President Mahinda Rajapaksa said he would rather help draw up a political solution to the Tamil people than to the Tamil Tigers.
What is the use of giving a solution to terrorists? They are not giving up terrorism, he told Editor Ram in the interview carried as the lead story of the newspapers print edition as well as its web edition . I am firmly committed to a just and enduring political solution
to the Tamil question in Sri Lanka and am clear that there are
no military solutions to political questions, President Mahinda
Rajapaksa told the editor in a telephonic conversation from Colombo
on Thursday morning. \ The following is the text of his interview: Going into some detail on the complexities of the situation,
and certain problems that had cropped up in coordinating the relief
work with United Nations agencies and international NGOs, Mr. Rajapaksa
reiterated the assurance he recently gave to the All Party Conference
that all hardships faced temporarily by our brothers and sisters
in the North will be brought to an end in a short time. Mr. Rajapaksa pointed out that he had entrusted the All Party
Representative Conference (APRC) with the task of evolving a consensus
among political parties and democratic stakeholders in order to find
an acceptable solution to the ethnic conflict. Such a solution could
go beyond the 13th Amendment provided the parties could ensure a two-thirds
majority in Parliament for the required changes to the Constitution.
The 13th Amendment, the Sri Lankan President reminded political
India, was what India introduced to our Constitution. It
was not implemented earlier on account of opposition in the South
but in the Eastern Province we have shown we are interested in
implementing it. Elections were successfully held after all parts
of the Province had been cleared of the LTTEs military presence
without any civilian casualties; he had appointed Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan
alias Pillayan as Chief Minister despite his being in a minority; and
the new Chief Minister (a former LTTE child soldier) was doing
very well. More than 1000 Tamil police officers had been recruited
for the Eastern Province and some of them had been trained in India. President Rajapaksa expressed cautious optimism that once the LTTE-held areas in the North were cleared by the Sri Lankan security forces and the APRC came up with its final set of recommendations, I will sell that to the South and implement it. If it meant changes to the Constitution, he would need cooperation from the Opposition so that a two-thirds majority could be ensured.
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