January
2, 2008 Sri Lanka Decides to
Pull Out of Ceasefire with LTTE By P.K. Balachandran
Colombo
The Sri Lankan government Wednesday decided to withdraw from the
Norway-brokered 2002 ceasefire agreement it had signed with the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) citing failure to bring
peace to the country.
"The cabinet tonight (Wednesday) took a policy decision to annul and
abrogate the agreement as it was a mere scrap of paper and had
failed to bring peace to the country," government spokesman Keheliya
Rambukwella told IANS.
The cabinet paper for the abrogation of the pact was presented by
Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayake and was accepted
unanimously, Rambukwella added.
"The withdrawal is being made as per the provisions of the agreement
itself and peace facilitators Norway will be informed," the
spokesman said.
The agreement says that the withdrawing party will have to give 14
days notice before giving effect to the withdrawal.
The withdrawal followed a call by the Secretary of Defence Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa a few days ago to annul the agreement saying it was a
"joke".
The defence secretary, who is President Mahinda Rajapaksa's brother,
had also called for the re-imposition of the ban on the LTTE as it
had proved to be a "terrorist" organization.
Justifying the unilateral withdrawal, Rambukwella said that the LTTE
had proved that it was not interested in peace and peaceful
negotiations to end the Tamil question.
"The LTTE not only withdrew from the talks unilaterally (in 2003)
but also refused to abide by the Oslo Declaration to work towards a
federal system as a solution to the problem."
Efforts by successive Sri Lankan governments to find a peaceful
solution through talks had failed because of the intransigence of
the LTTE, he said.
"President Rajapaksa had extended a hand of friendship but he was
beaten," Rambukwella said, recalling the spate of attacks which the
LTTE launched on the Sri Lankan armed forces in early 2006, while
the troopers exercised great restraint.
The withdrawal from the agreement took place in the context of two
violent incidents in Colombo. On New Years day Tuesday, a Tamil
parliamentarian was shot dead in a Colombo Hindu temple and four
persons including a soldier were killed Wednesday in a claymore mine
blast in the centre of the capital city.
Boloji.com is owned and managed by Boloji Media Inc Privacy Policy |
Disclaimer
No part of this Internet site may
be reproduced without prior written permission of the copyright holder.