ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE CALLS FOR
RESETTLEMENT, ELECTIONS AFTER "IMPORTANT" VICTORY OVER
LTTE
Ambassador Jaliya Wickramasuriya with Ambassador
Robert Blake, Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia and
Central Asia
Ambassador Robert Blake, new Assistant Secretary
of State for South Asia and Central Asia told at the hearing of
the Congressional Subcommittee on South Asia, today that Sri Lanka
won an “important victory in the North” when it defeated
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
Assistant Secretary Blake, testifying before
the House of Representatives Subcommittee on the Middle East and
South Asia, called on Sri Lanka to quickly resettle the 300,000
internally displaced persons in the North and to hold provincial
elections. “The action the Sri Lankan government takes now,”
Assistant Secretary Blake said, “in the aftermath of the
war, with respect to both humanitarian relief and political inclusion
for minorities, will be important to securing an end to terrorism
and a lasting peace.”
During the hearing, Subcommittee Chairman Gary
Ackerman (D-New York) said that, “I think the United States
should offer its assistance to relieving the suffering of the
displaced as much as we can and, while fully respecting the sovereignty
of Sri Lanka, should encourage true national reconciliation.”
Jaliya Wickramasuriya, Sri Lanka’s Ambassador
to the U.S., met with Blake at the U.S. State Department a day
before the hearing to congratulate Blake on his confirmation to
his new post by the U.S. Senate. The Ambassador and Blake spoke
about the Humanitarian issues in Sri Lanka, particularly resettlement
of internally displaced people (IDPs) and plans for redevelopment
and elections in the North.
Secretary Blake urged not only the speedy resettlement
of the IDPs, but also a political process that gives the Northern
Province a voice in the national government. He noted that the
13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution would do that, but
that the amendment has to be fully implemented.
Blake also said that other measures to promote
national unity are under consideration. Specifically, he mentioned
a proposal to form an Upper House of Parliament made up of provincial
representatives, and the conclusion of the All Party Conference.
Those measures, he said, “would help to achieve political
reconciliation.”
Ambassador Wickramasuriya said that Blake’s
confirmation as Assistant Secretary of state for Central and South
Asia is a positive development for Sri Lanka, which Blake knows
well. Blake served as U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives
from 2006 until just last month, when he took up his new post
in Washington.
“Ambassador Blake has seen the situation
in Sri Lanka change dramatically during his service there,”
Ambassador Wickramasuriya said. “He knows what Sri Lankan
citizens have lived through, and the challenges that we face in
the years to come. He is a fair-minded person who understands
what it will take to ensure lasting peace and reconciliation.”
During his meeting with Ambassador Wickramasuriya,
Secretary Blake noted that several thousand elderly and disabled
IDPs have been allowed to leave government welfare centers, that
aid group access to the centers was improving, that restrictions
on coastal fishing in the north had been lifted and that two non-governmental
organization forums in Colombo and Vavuniya have been established
to explore civilian protection and humanitarian issues.
Embassy of Sri Lanka
Washington DC
USA
25 June 2009
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