Armitage pledges
$54 million at Sri Lanka donors' conference
Colombo, June 10, 2003. Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage June 9 called on Sri Lankan President
Kumaratunga and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) to take the needed steps toward peace
in Sri Lanka. Armitage was speaking at the Sri Lanka
Donors' Conference in Tokyo.
Specifically, Armitage
called on the LTTE to prove to the people of Sri Lanka
that they are committed to a negotiated settlement
by coming back to the negotiating table. For its part,
Armitage said, the government of Sri Lanka would have
to take "difficult steps" in order to make
progress. These steps, according to Armitage, include
economic reforms that are crucial to reviving all
regions of the country.
The United States
is pledging an additional $54 million in assistance
to Sri Lanka, Armitage said. The United States supports
projects in all areas of Sri Lanka, including clearing
landmines and constructing new schools, he said.
Armitage expressed
his thanks to the governments of Japan and Norway,
and to the European Union, for providing the opportunity
to "make an important investment in the future"
by working together for peace in Sri Lanka.
Noting that the momentum
of the Sri Lanka peace process is slowing, Armitage
said the international community needs to provide
an infusion of moral and material support to move
the parties and the process forward.
But, he said, "no
matter how much we pledge at this conference, it is
ultimately the Prime Minister, the President of Sri
Lanka, members of the LTTE, and most importantly of
all the people of Sri Lanka, who will have to deliver
on the promise of peace."
Following is the transcript
of Deputy Secretary Armitage's remarks in Tokyo on
June 9:
DEPUTY SECRETARY ARMITAGE:
Thank you. Prime Minister Wickremasinghe, Foreign
Minster Kawaguchi, Ambassadors, Delegates, Ladies
and Gentlemen, good morning. May I first begin by
thanking the government of Japan, and more specifically
Special Envoy Akashi, for hosting this conference
and for acting together with our Norwegian and European
Union colleagues as co-chairs.
As Prime Minster Koizumi
alluded to a few moments ago, we are all aware that
the monsoons started early this year in Sri Lanka,
and the country saw its worst flooding in 50 years.
Hundreds of people lost their lives. Hundreds of thousands
lost their homes and everything they had. The government
of Sri Lanka was quick to respond to the human tragedy.
The LTTE also collected assistance for those affected
by the floods. Many nations and many international
organizations came to the aid of the Sri Lankan people
with life-saving donations of food and of money. Today
the flood waters are subsiding, but a certain conviction
has lingered behind: The LTTE, the government of Sri
Lanka, all the people of that nation and the international
community - we cannot afford to come together like
this only when disaster strikes.
We must also respond
to opportunity. It is far cheaper in terms of money,
and in terms of human life, to invest in peace and
to invest in prosperity, than to wait for disease,
war and disaster to extract their terrible tolls.
This is what Prime
Minister Koizumi's commendable and innovative new
foreign assistance program - the Consolidation of
Peace Initiative - is all about. And this is the philosophy
underlying the international activities of Norway,
which has backed up its commitment to world peace
and development with hard work and with cold cash
in some two dozen countries. The United States also
is following the cutting-edge trend with programs
such as the
Millennium Challenge Account and the HIV/AIDS initiative,
which President Bush just signed into law.
So I congratulate
you for joining with us today and for coming together
to make an important investment in the future. Sri
Lanka is a small country. It may seem remote to many
of our day-to-day concerns, but success in this instance
will bring national, regional and international benefits,
and will forestall the various costs that we can all
bear from such a conflict. It will also demonstrate
that the world community is capable of acting peacefully
to preempt human suffering. So I am delighted to be
here today to represent my country and our commitment.
Just a few years ago,
the United States was considering discontinuing our
development assistance program to Sri Lanka, given
the on-going conflict. But today we're supporting
dozens of projects in all areas of the country, including
the north and including the east, everything from
clearing landmines to constructing new schools. And
in the course of this conference, the United States
will pledge an additional $54 million to this effort,
not just for the reasons I have mentioned, but also
because my country believes - certainly I believe
- in the prospects for peace in Sri Lanka, and in
the vision of my friend, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe.
To date, this peace
process has seen much progress. Indeed, so much that
only the truly thorny issues are left. Consider, for
example, that 300,000 refugees have already expressed
their confidence in the process by returning home
to war-torn areas, exceeding expectations, and in
the process nearly overwhelming relief efforts. But
there are 800,000 more waiting in the wings. I think
that is a good indicator of the special challenges
of success in this instance.
So it is hardly surprising
that the rate of progress in peace negotiations has
slowed. I know that this is a difficult time for Sri
Lanka. Certainly the LTTE has expressed their frustration
that so little international assistance has arrived
in the northern and the eastern areas of the country.
And I can understand that frustration.
The delivery of aid
to these areas has to improve if people are to have
faith in the process. I believe the government understands
that and can and will do better. But it will be difficult
for them to do that alone, and indeed that is exactly
the kind of issue that should be discussed and can
only be resolved around a negotiating table. I believe
it is time for the parties to delineate and agree
to a shared vision, not only of where they want to
end up, with a federal structure based on internal
self-determination, but also of interim steps that
will carry them in that direction and will lead the
country to that destination. So I'm making today a
personal appeal to the LTTE: prove to your people,
to all the people of Sri Lanka, and to those donor
nations that want to help you, that you are committed
to a negotiated settlement. Prove it by coming back
to the table.
Now I am aware that
there is a certain irony in my urging the LTTE back
to the table, given that I did not allow them a seat
at my table back at the pre-conference in April. But
the fix for that situation is solely in the hands
of the LTTE, the organization best known for pioneering
the practice of turning its sons and daughters into
human bombs. It's going to have to work hard to build
trust and to convince the world that it is capable
of playing a legitimate role in the political life
of Sri Lanka.
And while we've seen some promising signs over the
past 18 months, we've also seen some troubling signs
that old habits continue. The United States would
be prepared to spell out the steps we believe the
LTTE needs to take to achieve legitimacy, at least
in our eyes; but we simply cannot even consider doing
so if they refuse to participate in the peace process.
The government of
Sri Lanka also will have to take some difficult steps
to make progress at this point. Most of these steps,
including the economic reforms that are so crucial
to reviving all regions of the country, are going
to be contentious. There is a risk with any multi-party
democracy that such differences of opinion may be
exaggerated or misinterpreted by outsiders, and so
the challenge for the President and indeed for the
Prime Minister is to demonstrate to the LTTE, and
to the international donors for that matter, that
even though there may be disagreements between the
parties in power, there is unity of resolve and common
purpose. To that end, President Kumaratunga's role
is especially important. Indeed, a peaceful settlement
to the conflict may well depend on the President's
blessing. We all know she is committed to peace, and
as I have said in the past, she has a spiritually
significant role to play in the truth and reconciliation
that must take place, and I hope that she will choose
to play that role.
As noted, the peace
process has reached a point where the momentum is
slowing. This is precisely the point where a push
from the international community, an infusion of moral
and material support, can move the parties and the
process forward. We all know there won't be another
opportunity quite like this one. Indeed, this is a
historic event that can take Sri Lanka to the horizon
line of a better future, but only if that is where
the people of Sri Lanka want to go, because no matter
how much we pledge at this conference, it is ultimately
the Prime Minister, the President of Sri Lanka, members
of the LTTE and most importantly of all the people
of Sri Lanka, who will have to deliver on the promise
of peace.
Special Envoy Akashi,
I thank you again, and the government of Japan, for
hosting this conference, and for giving us all the
opportunity to show our collective will to face the
problems and the promise of our times together.
Thank you.
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