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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, April 23, 2001 |
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International
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LTTE may extend truce
By Nirupama Subramanian
COLOMBO, APRIL 22. The LTTE has reiterated to Oslo that it will
not participate in peace talks unless the Government fulfils the
``pre-requisites'' placed before it, but has indicated it may
extend its unilateral ceasefire to provide space for the peace
process.
Sri Lankan newspapers said over the weekend that this was
conveyed to the Norwegian special envoy, Mr. Erik Solheim, during
his meeting with the LTTE representative, Mr. Anton Balasingham,
on April 19 in London.
Putting a dampener on the optimism generated after the statement
earlier this month by the Foreign Minister, Mr. Lakshman
Kadirgamar, that the Government would announce the date and venue
for talks by the end of April, the state-run Sunday Observer said
today that the LTTE demands had ``slowed down'' the peace
process.
The LTTE has four main ``requests'': the Government must
reciprocate its ceasefire, remove restrictions on items such as
fuel, fertilizers and cement being taken into LTTE-held areas,
de-proscribe the group, and describe the agreement being
finalised by the two sides on confidence-building measures before
the talks as a ``memorandum of understanding'', and not as an
``agreement on humanitarian measures''.
The LTTE has also said Norway's role must not end with
facilitating talks between the two sides, and must continue in
the process thereafter. Mr. Solheim is expected in Sri Lanka next
week for discussions with the Government.
The LTTE has reportedly dismissed the lifting of restrictions by
the Government on 24 items as insufficient. The demand for
lifting the ban was not ``new'', but had been placed before the
Norwegians at the start of the process, the reports quoted Mr.
Balasingham as telling Mr. Solheim. Sri Lanka's nomenclature for
a set of confidence building measures to be undertaken by both
sides prior to talks as an ``agreement on humanitarian measures''
has also apparently riled the LTTE, which, fearing a dilution,
wants to call it by the more formal ``memorandum of
understanding''.
But in a sign that the peace process is still on track, Mr.
Balasingham has indicated to Norway that the LTTE might extend
the ceasefire by another month, re-emphasising its other demand
that talks cannot take place unless the hostilities cease
completely.
`Scribes can visit LTTE-held areas'
COLOMBO, APRIL 22. The Government will not restrict journalists
from entering areas held by Tamil rebels in northern Sri Lanka
but won't account for any injury or loss of life, a senior
government official said today.
``Journalists can go, we have not debarred them, but they must be
fully aware of and accept the risk to their lives,'' Mr. Ariya
Rubasinghe, Director of Government Information, said.
The Government could not provide protection for journalists
undertaking such assignments or secure consent to enter territory
held by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. ``They must settle
it themselves with the terrorists because we have no say over
matters on their side,'' he said.
At present, journalists must obtain written permission from the
Defence Ministry to visit areas under the LTTE. Permission is
seldom granted except for military-conducted tours. - AP
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