Press and Information
Officer of SLMM, Mr. Teitur Torkelsson, is wrongly quoted
in the Late City Edition of the Sri Lankan Newspaper Daily
Mirror, Friday 22nd November 2002, as saying that during
the Trincomalee District Committee meeting of the SDN, (Sub-Committee
on De-Escalation and Normalisation) QUOTE: ”…the
LTTE had agreed to release the vehicles and weapons that
they took into custody, when they took the seven soldiers
hostage." This is an incorrect quote, hereby officially
denied by SLMM.
The situation in the above mentioned matter remains unchanged.
One truck and one weapon belonging to the Sri Lanka Army
are still with the LTTE since the Seven Soldiers incident
in September. LTTE has not yet agreed to release these things
and that is why one of the subjects of the Trincomalee district
Committee meeting was “Vehicle and weapon taken by
LTTE.” No recommendation regarding this matter was
made at the District Committee meeting in Trincomalee on
Thursday. However, the Parties decided to discuss this case
later at a separate meeting between local commanders in
the area.
SLMM chairs and facilitates the District Committee meetings
of the SDN on behalf of the facilitator. According to SLMM
policies, SLMM only makes public statements on the subjects,
participants and the atmosphere of the District Committee
meetings. SLMM does not elaborate further on what takes
place in these meetings. In addition, SLMM does not make
public statements on actual recommendations made, as they
are not final decisions, but only recommendations for the
SDN.
The Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, SLMM, monitors the implementation
of the Ceasefire Agreement, reached by the Government of
the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam, on 22nd february 2002. SLMM has six
district offices and local monitoring committees in the
North and East of Sri Lanka, two naval monitoring teams
based in Jaffna and Trincomalee and Liaison officers to
both the LTTE and the Sri Lankan Government. In addition
to the six District Offices, SLMM has four Points of Contact
in Akkaraipattu, Kayts, Mutur and Valaichchenai, open on
a regular basis. SLMM is an International Nordic mission,
consisting of monitors from the countries of Norway, Finland,
Sweden, Denmark and Iceland and has headquarters in Colombo,
the capital of Sri Lanka.
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