Colombo: President Chandrika Kumaratunga's suggestion for a broad-based National
Commission to find a durable solution to Sri Lanka's protracted ethnic problem has
not found favour with the government of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
There is no question of the Opposition and other parties playing a decision-making
role, said government spokesman and Constitutional Affairs Minister G L Peiris, when
asked about this idea on November 14.
Kumaratunga had suggested in her address two days ago on the occasion of the eighth
anniversary of her Presidency that a national panel, comprising all parties
represented in Parliament, and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), could be
tasked with work of finding a long-term solution.
Peiris said the government had the main responsibility to find a solution and, in
terms of the 1997 Liam Fox Agreement between the two main political parties, it was
bound to keep the Opposition informed of progress made in peace
initiatives.
However, the agreement, named after a former British Junior Foreign Minister who
mooted the idea, did not envisage any decision-making role for main Opposition
party, he said.
Kumaratunga's idea seemed to clash with the present bilateral negotiation structure
between the government and the LTTE, but Peiris was unwilling to be drawn into a
discussion on the implications of the proposal.
How far it is practicable is to be seen, he said, adding that there was also the
question of relationship between such a committee and the peace process. However,
he insisted that the present process did not in any way exclude other parties from
having their say.
PTI