There
has been some confusion with regard to the reasons
for the failure to resume talks with the LTTE
last year. The Government wishes to clarify
this issue with regard to efforts to draw up
an agenda for the resumption of peace talks
prior to the devastation wrought by the tsunami
in December. The Government has always expressed
its willingness to begin talks immediately.
It has emphasized the importance of direct negotiations
as a means of building confidence, maintaining
the ceasefire and improving the climate for
a durable solution to the ethnic conflict. Unfortunately,
the LTTE did not share this view and insisted
on opening negotiations on the basis of a single
agenda item and based solely on the specific
LTTE proposals of the Interim Self Governing
Authority. The Government has never agreed to
this.
During efforts to evolve an
agenda for peace talks, the Government has agreed
to the concept of setting up an Interim Authority
within the context of negotiating a permanent
settlement to the ethnic conflict, on the basis
that an Interim Authority will be useful in
a transitional period from a situation of conflict
to one of democracy. Agreeing to negotiate an
Interim Authority in such a context is very
different from opening negotiation solely on
the basis of the LTTE demand of the Interim
Self Governing Authority, which prevents the
re-opening of direct negotiations.
This view has been articulated
in previous statements excerpted below.
Her Excellency the President’s
speech at the inaugural meeting of the National
Advisory Council for Peace and Reconciliation
(NACPR) on 4th October 2004 where she said:
“The Government’s
position has been that we accept the concept
of setting up an Interim Administration in the
interim period whilst a permanent solution is
negotiated and implemented. But we require commitment
from the LTTE that the Interim Administration
as well as the final solution would be based
on the Oslo Declaration.”
The GOSL Press Release of 1st
December 2004 in response to the LTTE leader’s
statement of November 2004:
‘A call … from
the LTTE now for the resumption of negotiations
without conditions, while setting conditions
itself by insisting unilaterally on a single
agenda item is scarcely conducive to good faith
negotiations. The Government of Sri Lanka has
conveyed publicly, and through the kind facilitation
of the Royal Norwegian Government, its readiness
to discuss the establishment of an Interim Authority
to meet the urgent humanitarian and development
needs of the people of the North and East as
a priority, while exploring a permanent settlement
along the lines of the document signed and accepted
by the Government and the LTTE in Oslo on December
5, 2002.’
S. D. Piyadasa
Director of Government Information
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