Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Future talks
#1
Future talks may be very tough: Ranil

Colombo, Aug. 30. (UNI): Predicting that there could be more deadlocks and temporary breakdowns in the stalled peace process, Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has said that future talks with the Tamil Tiger rebels would be 'very tough.

"We have a very tough task before us, the future talks are going to be very tough. There may be more deadlocks or temporary break-downs," the State-run Daily News quoted Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe as saying yesterday.

Referring to the peace talks, Wickremesinghe said that the parties involved would try to make the sixth round of talks 'successful'.

Prime Minister Wickremesinghe's comment on the future talks comes at a time when a top-LTTE delegation led by S P Thamilselvan was holding consultations with its legal and constitutional experts in Paris with regard to its proposals to the government's fresh offer of an interim administrative set up in the North-East region.

Commenting on the forthcoming LTTE's proposals on the North-East, Wickremesinghe said that the country was witnessing a new chapter with "the LTTE for the first time in history asking the assistance of Tamil experts living in the country, instead of depending on London-based guidance for the future talks."

http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/holnus/01301130.htm
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#2
* LTTE says Paris meeting was positive and innovative
Sunday, August 31, 2003, 8:02 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Substantial work has been completed on the proposal, which is being currently taken to Vanni for further review and approval from the leadership of the LTTE.
Aug 31, Colombo: The LTTE delegations that participated in last weeks meeting in Paris to discuss the UNF government's proposals for an Interim Administration in the Northeast have said the meeting was "positive and innovative".

The TamilNet website quoted V. Rudrakumaran, constitutional affairs advisor to the LTTE, as saying, Substantial work has been completed on the proposal, which is being currently taken to Vanni for further review and approval from the leadership of the LTTE.

The website also said the draft proposal will be handed over to the Norwegian government, who will submit the LTTE's response to the Sri Lanka government. This process is expected to take approximately four weeks, it said.

According to the TamilNet, Considerable attention was paid to inputs from delegates involved with the now defunct Sub-Committee on Immediate Humanitarian Rehabilitation Needs (SIHRN) to ensure that the draft proposals contain provisions that will remove the bureaucratic hurdles that plagued the effective functioning of SIHRN.

LTTE political head S.P. Thamilselvan, LTTE Eastern Commander Karuna and head of the LTTE Peace Secretariat Pulithevan are expected to visit Switzerland on September 3.

Thanks ColomboPage
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#3
தாத்தா இடம் கொடுத்த மடம் பிடிப்பியள் போல.....முன்னர் ஒரு செய்தியை ஆங்கிலத்தில போட விட்டதற்காக தொடர்ந்து ஆங்கிலத்திலதான் விட வேண்டும் என்ற விதியே....! இணைப்பைப் போடுங்கோ நாங்கள் போய்ப்பாப்பம்.....! களத்தில கொஞ்சம் தமிழ் மிளிரட்டும் விடுங்கோ....! உங்கட ஆங்கிலப் புலமைகள் எங்களுக்கு விளங்கும்..... அதைக்காட்டித்தானே கிடைத்த ஐம்பதுக்கு ஐம்பதையே கோட்டைவிட்டனியள்....! இப்ப தூக்குச் சட்டி காவுறியள்....!
:twisted: <!--emo&Tongue--><img src='http://www.yarl.com/forum/style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif' border='0' valign='absmiddle' alt='tongue.gif'><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:lol:--><img src='http://www.yarl.com/forum/style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif' border='0' valign='absmiddle' alt='laugh.gif'><!--endemo-->
<img src='http://kuruvikal.yarl.net/archives/PETBIRD1.gif' border='0' alt='user posted image'>
Reply
#4
kuruvikal Wrote:தாத்தா இடம் கொடுத்த மடம் பிடிப்பியள் போல.....முன்னர் ஒரு செய்தியை ஆங்கிலத்தில போட விட்டதற்காக தொடர்ந்து ஆங்கிலத்திலதான் விட வேண்டும் என்ற விதியே....! இணைப்பைப் போடுங்கோ நாங்கள் போய்ப்பாப்பம்.....! களத்தில கொஞ்சம் தமிழ் மிளிரட்டும் விடுங்கோ....! உங்கட ஆங்கிலப் புலமைகள் எங்களுக்கு விளங்கும்..... அதைக்காட்டித்தானே கிடைத்த ஐம்பதுக்கு ஐம்பதையே கோட்டைவிட்டனியள்....! இப்ப தூக்குச் சட்டி காவுறியள்....!

http://www.colombopage.com/archive/August3...t3180223UN.html
http://www.colombopage.com
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#5
மதி..
.ஈராக் சண்டையை மட்டும்தான் மொழிபெயர்ப்பியளோ?
இதையும் தமிழில் தந்து மூலத்தின் இணைப்பையும் போடலாம்தானே.....
ஏனிந்த ஓரவஞ்சனை?????????

-
Reply
#6
Manithaasan Wrote:மதி..
ஈராக் சண்டையை மட்டும்தான் மொழிபெயர்ப்பியளோ?
இதையும் தமிழில் தந்து மூலத்தின் இணைப்பையும் போடலாம்தானே..
ஏனிந்த ஓரவஞ்சனை???
நன்றி மணிதாசன்.. பலபத்திரிகை செய்திகளை படிப்பதனால் தமிழில் எழுதும்போது எதிரும் புதிருமான செய்திகளை தரவேண்டிவரும்.. அதனால் பல பிரச்சனைகள் வரக்கூடும். ஓரளவுக்கு நடுநிலையான உண்மைச் செய்திகள் மாத்திரம் தெரிவுசெய்து லிங்க் கொடுக்கிறேன்.. மறுபக்கத்துக் கருத்தையும் எழுத விடுவார்களானால்.. எழுதலாம். ஈராக் பிரச்சனைக்கே துர்ற்றியவர்கள்.. சிங்கள பத்திரிகைகளில்வரும் செய்திகளை ஒரு பொழுதும் ஏற்கமாட்டார்கள்.. அதற்கான மனப்பக்குவம் இங்கு இல்லை. ஆதலால் என்னாலான ஒரு தணிக்கை முறையை கடைப்பிடிக்கிறேன் அவ்வளவுதான்..

தமிழ்ப் பத்திரிகைகள் இராணுவத்தை மூண்றாம் தரப்பை குற்றம்கூறுவதுபோல சிங்கள் பத்திரிகைகள் குற்றச்சாட்டுகளை விடுதலைப்புலிகளுக்கெதிராக முன்வைப்பதும்.. அந்தக் குற்றச்சாட்டுகளுக்கு பதில்தான் தமிழ் பத்திகைகளில் வருகின்றன உரைகளில் வருகின்றன.. மேடைகளில் முழக்கமிருகின்றன நமது வானொலிகளில் எதிரெலிக்கின்றன என்றால் நம்புவீர்களா.. பக்கசார்பற்று இருபக்கத்து செய்திகளையும் படித்துப்பாருங்கள் பலதும் புரியும்..
<!--emo&Smile--><img src='http://www.yarl.com/forum/style_emoticons/default/smile.gif' border='0' valign='absmiddle' alt='smile.gif'><!--endemo--> <!--emo&Tongue--><img src='http://www.yarl.com/forum/style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif' border='0' valign='absmiddle' alt='tongue.gif'><!--endemo--> <!--emo&Big Grin--><img src='http://www.yarl.com/forum/style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif' border='0' valign='absmiddle' alt='biggrin.gif'><!--endemo-->
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#7
ஊடகங்கள் அதிகமாக தாயக போரை ஊடக்தினூடாக மளுங்கடிக்கும் செயலில்தான் ஈடுபடுகின்றன.
Reply
#8
<b><span style='font-size:21pt;line-height:100%'>The ''Cobra'' rears his head in Sri Lanka peace bid </b></span>

COLOMBO, Sept. 2 A hardened guerrilla nicknamed the ''Cobra'' has edged out an ailing London-based intellectual as the negotiating face of the Tamil Tiger rebels in their talks to end Sri Lanka's two-decade ethnic war.
The change, whether by design or due to the poor health of Anton Balasingham, puts S.P. Thamilselvan into a more prominent role as the Tigers and government get set for renewed talks expected to be much tougher than the initial round.
''Balasingham was the moderate of the lot,'' said Lakshman Kadirgamar, a former foreign minister who led the peace process under the previous government.
''Those who have emerged now are the hardliners,'' he said of Thamilselvan, head of the political wing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Thamilselvan earned his nickname because of the way he bobs his head and the way he smiles ''just like a Cobra before it strikes,'' said one diplomat who has met him.
He returns to Sri Lanka on Thursday from Europe, where he ran a meeting in Paris of LTTE officials and expatriate Tamil experts studying a government proposal for a power-sharing body for the minority Tamil-dominated north and east.
The meeting was unusual because it did not involve Balasingham, an academic dubbed the ''theoretician'' of the party whose home in London made him more aware of the international criticism of LTTE practices such as recruiting child soldiers.
Some saw Balasingham's absence as proof of rumours he has been sidelined because of political differences with LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. Others said it was due to health problems connected to his diabetes and kidney transplant.

FROM CHILD WARRIOR TO NEGOTIATOR
Thamilselvan's life has been inseparable from the LTTE and the reclusive Prabhakaran since, as a teenager, he went for military training in India, which in the 1980s backed nascent Tamil groups against the Sri Lankan government.
He was a bodyguard for Prabhakaran and worked his way up the military ladder before switching to the political side.
Now 36, Thamilselvan needs a cane to walk since suffering a leg wound fighting in the Jaffna peninsula where he was once the Tigers' commander.
In addition to his limited international experience, Thamilselvan's warrior life in the jungles of northern Sri Lanka is thought to have kept him in tune with Prabhakaran.
''He does not have a mind of his own, he reflects Prabhakaran's thinking, he is Prabhakaran's man,'' said one political observer in Colombo.
A secret government profile seen by Reuters describes Thamilselvan, whose wife is a soldier in the LTTE Women's Wing, as ''a strong character and good at handling both military operations and political activity.''
It is not known why he he does not use his real name: Selvakumar Paramoorthy Kanagarathnam.
His hometown is Chavakachcheri in Jaffna, which was almost totally destroyed when government and LTTE troops fought over it with rocket launchers in late 2000 in one of the last big battles of the war.
The two sides signed a ceasefire in February 2002 and started direct talks which the rebels suspended last April, although a Tiger response to the power-sharing plan is expected to lead to renewed talks in the next several months.
Diplomats said the absence as chief LTTE negotiator of Balasingham, fluent in English, Tamil and Sinhala, would also change the talks as Thamilselvan is comfortable only in Tamil.
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#9
<b><span style='font-size:21pt;line-height:100%'>The ''Cobra'' rears his head in Sri Lanka peace bid </b></span>

COLOMBO, Sept. 2 A hardened guerrilla nicknamed the ''Cobra'' has edged out an ailing London-based intellectual as the negotiating face of the Tamil Tiger rebels in their talks to end Sri Lanka's two-decade ethnic war.
The change, whether by design or due to the poor health of Anton Balasingham, puts S.P. Thamilselvan into a more prominent role as the Tigers and government get set for renewed talks expected to be much tougher than the initial round.
''Balasingham was the moderate of the lot,'' said Lakshman Kadirgamar, a former foreign minister who led the peace process under the previous government.
''Those who have emerged now are the hardliners,'' he said of Thamilselvan, head of the political wing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Thamilselvan earned his nickname because of the way he bobs his head and the way he smiles ''just like a Cobra before it strikes,'' said one diplomat who has met him.
He returns to Sri Lanka on Thursday from Europe, where he ran a meeting in Paris of LTTE officials and expatriate Tamil experts studying a government proposal for a power-sharing body for the minority Tamil-dominated north and east.
The meeting was unusual because it did not involve Balasingham, an academic dubbed the ''theoretician'' of the party whose home in London made him more aware of the international criticism of LTTE practices such as recruiting child soldiers.
Some saw Balasingham's absence as proof of rumours he has been sidelined because of political differences with LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. Others said it was due to health problems connected to his diabetes and kidney transplant.

FROM CHILD WARRIOR TO NEGOTIATOR
Thamilselvan's life has been inseparable from the LTTE and the reclusive Prabhakaran since, as a teenager, he went for military training in India, which in the 1980s backed nascent Tamil groups against the Sri Lankan government.
He was a bodyguard for Prabhakaran and worked his way up the military ladder before switching to the political side.
Now 36, Thamilselvan needs a cane to walk since suffering a leg wound fighting in the Jaffna peninsula where he was once the Tigers' commander.
In addition to his limited international experience, Thamilselvan's warrior life in the jungles of northern Sri Lanka is thought to have kept him in tune with Prabhakaran.
''He does not have a mind of his own, he reflects Prabhakaran's thinking, he is Prabhakaran's man,'' said one political observer in Colombo.
A secret government profile seen by Reuters describes Thamilselvan, whose wife is a soldier in the LTTE Women's Wing, as ''a strong character and good at handling both military operations and political activity.''
It is not known why he he does not use his real name: Selvakumar Paramoorthy Kanagarathnam.
His hometown is Chavakachcheri in Jaffna, which was almost totally destroyed when government and LTTE troops fought over it with rocket launchers in late 2000 in one of the last big battles of the war.
The two sides signed a ceasefire in February 2002 and started direct talks which the rebels suspended last April, although a Tiger response to the power-sharing plan is expected to lead to renewed talks in the next several months.
Diplomats said the absence as chief LTTE negotiator of Balasingham, fluent in English, Tamil and Sinhala, would also change the talks as Thamilselvan is comfortable only in Tamil.
http://famulus.msnbc.com/FamulusIntl/reute...04.asp?reg=ASIA
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#10
LTTE Paris delegation returns to Wanni.
British Deputy Leader of the Opposition meets Tamilselvan in Colombo.
The LTTE delegation led by Mr.S.P Tamilselvan, Head of the Political wing that went to Paris for deliberations and drafting of the Tamil proposals for interim administration in the North East, returned today to the Wanni.


After the meeting with British Team

On landing at Katunayake, Mr. Tamilselvan attended a meeting with The Rt. Hon. Michael Ancram Q.C., M.P., Deputy Leader of the Opposition and Shadow Foreign Secretary along with Lord Ashcroft, KCMG. Batticaloa and Amparai LTTE Commander Col. Karuna and Mr. Pulidevan, Director of the LTTE Peace Secretariat also attended this meeting.


The British Deputy Leader of the Opposition expressed concern over matters relating to resettlement, rehabilitation, and reconstruction and bringing about normalcy in the North East. He also stated that the British government is readily willing to contribute towards the urgent and immediate humanitarian needs of the war-torn North East.

Mr. Tamilselvan thanked the British team for their interest and initiative, on behalf of the Tamil National Leader and the Tamil people at large. He further solicited their support in creating a conducive political environment, both in Sri Lanka and in the International arena for the success of the peace initiative and the establishment of an Interim Administrative structure for the North East. The British Deputy Leader of the Opposition expressed an overwhelming desire to meet the National Leader Mr. V.Prabaharan. This Meeting gains significance in the backdrop of the changing political scenario in Britain.

On conclusion of the deliberations in Paris, Mr.S.P Tamilselvan participated in a meeting convened by the Switzerland foreign office in its secretariat. Swiss officials familiarized themselves with the current status of the Peace process and shared their experience and opinions on conflict resolution. Col. Karuna and Mr.Puledavan were associated with Mr. Tamilselvan in this meeting.

Discussions relating to the interim administration were held in Paris with the participation of legal and constitutional experts complemented by specialists on economic affairs from the Tamil Diaspora. The Draft proposal formulated by this panel will be handed over to the National Leader Mr.V Prabaharan for review. On completion of this process, the draft proposal will be given to the Norwegian facilitators for transmission to the GOSL.

Tamil rebels warn fate of cease-fire depends on government giving them administrative powers
Associated Press, Thu September 4, 2003 05:49 EDT . DILIP GANGULY - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lanka - 's Tamil Tiger rebels Thursday said the fate of a shaky 18-month-old cease-fire with the government hinged on how much power they get to administer Tamil-majority areas in the war-torn northeast. In an unsigned statement posted on their Web site and published in their newspaper, the rebels said: ``The future of the CFA (cease-fire agreement) and its survival will depend on the GOSL's (government of Sri Lanka - ) reply'' to their demands for wide-ranging political autonomy.
Two decades of bloody civil war came to a halt on Feb. 22, 2002, when the Norwegian-brokered cease-fire came into effect. A series of promising peace talks followed, but abruptly broke down in April when the rebels walked away.

At issue is the shape, authority and control of a proposed interim administration for the north and east, where most of the fighting took place with the loss of about 65,000 lives.

Thursday's statement said a current government offer on an administration ``did not meet the aspirations and authority the Tamils are seeking.''

It accused Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe of having a ``chauvinistic attitude'' and alleged that Sri Lanka - 's military has been carrying out atrocities against Tamil civilians despite the truce.

``In this present condition and the armed forces racially motivated behavior, it would be impossible for the LTT (Liberation Tigers of Tamileelam) to ... carry out its business,'' the rebels said.

``If the GOSL (government) does not take initiative and allow the Tamil people to resettle in their own homes without the army occupations, then the future interim administration may flounder.''

Accusing the government of not keeping its words, the rebels said: ``This inaction is making the Tamil people not to believe the Sinhalese government.''

The Tamil Tigers also complained the government was not doing enough to restore normalcy in the northeast, where most of Sri Lanka - 's 3.2 million Tamils live and hundreds of thousands have been displaced.

The rebels want to control the proposed administration with wide-ranging political and other powers that would far exceed those put forward in a recent offer by the government.

At present the Tigers operate as a de facto government in the areas they control and run a police force, judiciary and taxation system.

In their statement, the rebels said they had drafted a formal response to the government's offer and would send it to Colombo before the end of September.

The rebels have already rejected two government proposals, but held meetings in Paris last week and discussed the government's latest offer.

Foreign mediators and governments hope this is a signal that peace talks will resume soon.

On the Web Rebel Web site: www.lttepeacesecretariat.com
Tamil rebels warn fate of cease-fire depends on government giving them administrative powers
Associated Press, Thu September 4, 2003 05:49 EDT . DILIP GANGULY - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lanka - 's Tamil Tiger rebels Thursday said the fate of a shaky 18-month-old cease-fire with the government hinged on how much power they get to administer Tamil-majority areas in the war-torn northeast. In an unsigned statement posted on their Web site and published in their newspaper, the rebels said: ``The future of the CFA (cease-fire agreement) and its survival will depend on the GOSL's (government of Sri Lanka - ) reply'' to their demands for wide-ranging political autonomy.
Two decades of bloody civil war came to a halt on Feb. 22, 2002, when the Norwegian-brokered cease-fire came into effect. A series of promising peace talks followed, but abruptly broke down in April when the rebels walked away.

At issue is the shape, authority and control of a proposed interim administration for the north and east, where most of the fighting took place with the loss of about 65,000 lives.

Thursday's statement said a current government offer on an administration ``did not meet the aspirations and authority the Tamils are seeking.''

It accused Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe of having a ``chauvinistic attitude'' and alleged that Sri Lanka - 's military has been carrying out atrocities against Tamil civilians despite the truce.

``In this present condition and the armed forces racially motivated behavior, it would be impossible for the LTT (Liberation Tigers of Tamileelam) to ... carry out its business,'' the rebels said.

``If the GOSL (government) does not take initiative and allow the Tamil people to resettle in their own homes without the army occupations, then the future interim administration may flounder.''

Accusing the government of not keeping its words, the rebels said: ``This inaction is making the Tamil people not to believe the Sinhalese government.''

The Tamil Tigers also complained the government was not doing enough to restore normalcy in the northeast, where most of Sri Lanka - 's 3.2 million Tamils live and hundreds of thousands have been displaced.

The rebels want to control the proposed administration with wide-ranging political and other powers that would far exceed those put forward in a recent offer by the government.

At present the Tigers operate as a de facto government in the areas they control and run a police force, judiciary and taxation system.

In their statement, the rebels said they had drafted a formal response to the government's offer and would send it to Colombo before the end of September.

The rebels have already rejected two government proposals, but held meetings in Paris last week and discussed the government's latest offer.

Foreign mediators and governments hope this is a signal that peace talks will resume soon.

www.lttepeacesecretariat.com
http://www.theacademic.org/#10626874200
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#11
<span style='font-size:21pt;line-height:100%'>* Helgesen and Solheim to arrive to push stalled peace talks </span>
[ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka]

Sept 05, Colombo: In a bid to restart the stalled peace talks between the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE, Norwegian Deputy Foreign Minister Vidar Helgesen and special peace envoy Erik Solheim will arrive here on September 17.

During their three-day visit, the Norwegian delegation will hold discussions with government and LTTE leaders.

Meanwhile, the government hopes that the counterproposal from the LTTE on the proposed Interim Administration for the North and East would be submitted through the Norwegian delegation by the LTTE leadership.
http://www.colombopage.com/#September563539UN

<span style='font-size:21pt;line-height:100%'>Akashi to arrive in Colombo </span>
[ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka]

Sept 05, Colombo: Japanese special peace envoy for the Sri Lankan peace process, Yasushi Akashi, will arrive here on September 11 to attend a conference on the proper utilization of funds pledged at the Tokyo donor meeting.

Cabinet spokesperson Minister G.L. Peiris said yesterday at the Cabinet briefing that the conference will start on September 12 in Colombo and will allow discussion on the allocation of funds for development work without delays. Representatives from the donor countries and the LTTE have been invited to attend.

The Cabinet spokesperson also said that during the Japanese envoy’s visit here, he will hold discussions with government and LTTE leaders.

He will also pay special attention to recent unrest in the eastern region at a meeting with Muslim leaders.

http://www.yarl.com/forum/posting.php?mode=reply&t=261
Truth 'll prevail
Reply
#12
<span style='font-size:21pt;line-height:100%'>British Tory leader refuses to lobby for LTTE de-proscription </span>
[ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka]

Sept 05, Colombo: Britain's shadow foreign secretary Michael Ancram has refused to entertain the LTTE's request for de-proscription in British parliament and said the Tigers must first withdraw from all terrorist activities.

Party treasurer Lord Ashcroft and Britain's High Commissioner in Sri Lanka Stephen Evens accompanied Ancram, a senior member of the opposition Conservatives, yesterday for talks with LTTE political wing leader S.P. Thamil Selvan.

It is learnt that the Tiger political leader made a request for the Tory leader's support to de-ban the LTTE in Britain at this discussion.

First the LTTE would lay down their arms and stop all anti-democratic activities in Sri Lanka, Mr. Ancram reportedly told the LTTE delegation. The British government banned the LTTE in line with tough anti-terrorism laws introduced in February 2001.

However, the British leader pledged his fullest support for rehabilitation and reconstruction activities in Sri Lanka's North and East.

http://www.yarl.com/forum/posting.php?mode=reply&t=261
Truth 'll prevail
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)