President expresses
concern over tilt in foreign policy
Moragoda says he wants to quit
President Chandrika Kumaratunga has expressed concern
over a possible tilt of Sri Lanka's policy towards the US. President
Kumaratunga at a meeting with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
raised the issue with reference to recent remarks made by Minister
Milinda Moragoda showing indications that Sri Lanka's policy was
tilting towards the US.
President Kumaratunga
was drawing reference to the remarks by Mr. Moragoda at a seminar
in Hawaii that the US should play its 'hegemonic' role as the world's
undisputed leader and followed by a statement in Colombo where he
said, "when the US Ambassador asks him to do some thing, he
does not reason why, he just does it."
The President
also raised the issue about reports that Japanese special envoy
Yashushi Akashi had been appointed as an advisor on international
affairs to the Sri Lankan government.
But Mr. Wickremesinghe
denied the reports saying that Mr. Akashi was mainly helping to
draft certain papers to be presented at the June aid meeting in
Tokyo and with matters connected with economic affairs in the north
and east.
He said Mr.
Akashi's experience in conflict resolution was being made use of
in this respect. Mr. Moragoda who was present at the meeting made
an emotional explanation saying that in a democratic country one
could hold his own position and in view of that he was not sure
whether he should explain matters.
The Minister
said he would have to reconsider his position regarding public life
in this context. However the main discussions between the President
and the Prime Minister centered on the incident in Delft where three
LTTE cadres blew themselves up and a boat after they were detected
carrying arms.
The Prime Minister
had raised concern about the Navy getting instructions from the
Defence Ministry and the President. But the President had explained
that she had stepped in as there was a delay in providing any instructions
while consultations with the Scandinavian monitors and with the
LTTE and government delegations in Berlin were in progress.
The President
queried whether the right of the Navy to board LTTE vessels had
been surrendered. But the Prime Minister denied it. Mr. Wickremesinghe
had pointed out that the international community has expressed concern
about the three LTTE cadres committing suicide.
Before Friday's
meeting, President Kumaratunga reacting to media reports had written
to the Prime Minister inquiring about Mr. Akashi's appointment.
Mr. Wickremesinghe had responded saying that the President should
have checked the facts before writing and maintained the dignity
of her office.
The President
in a strongly-worded letter to the Prime Minister voiced her opposition
to the speculated appointment of Mr Akashi. The President in her
letter said: "I understand from media reports that you have
appointed the special envoy of the Government of Japan, Mr Akashi,
as the International Affaires Advisor of the government of Sri Lanka,
I am Shocked at this information."
The President
had raised various issues related to this appointment from the sovereign
status of Sri Lanka to the proud record of the state in its foreign
policy. She had pointed out that he was a special envoy to another
state, with large business interest in the country.
She concluded
by saying, " I hope that my second government has not begun
an irreversible trend of gradual erosion of the sovereignty and
independence of the state and government of Sri Lanka". But,
the Prime minister responding said no such appointment had been
made.
The issue was
raised when Mr. Akashi called on opposition leader Mahinda Rajapakse
on Friday.Mr. Rajapakse told The Sunday Times that he also asked
Akashi whether the Japanese government was giving the LTTE financial
aid and Mr Akashi had denied this as well.
Meanwhile Mr.
Akashi told a news conference yesterday that talks between the government
and the LTTE were entering a difficult phase and that after the
initial euphoria, the time had come to address more difficult issues.
"They have
to move now from generalities to specifics and questions which affect
vital interest of both parties," he said. The Japanese envoy
also voiced concern that an outbreak of a war in Iraq could take
away the international community's attention from the government's
efforts to resolve the ethnic problem.
" Let's
only pray that these outside events will not divert attention of
the world from the situation in Sri Lanka," he said. The next
round of peace talks will be held in Japan and a major donor conference
for Sri Lanka will also be held in Japan in June this year.
Mr. Akashi said
he hoped that the Delft incident, where three LTTE cadres committed
suicide by blowing themselves up following attempts by the ceasefire
monitors to check the boat they were traveling in, was an isolated
one rather than indicating a change of the basic trend towards peace.
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