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Home >> World
UPDATED: 11:03, January 01, 2007
Sri Lanka president open to talks with rebels
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Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse said Sunday his government was committed to keep the process of negotiations with the Tamil Tiger rebels open in order to solve the ethnic separatist conflict.

"With all the development work the government has implemented the peace negotiation process and it also will be continued," Rajapakse told a gathering of state employees here Sunday.

The process of direct negotiations with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) started in 2002 is currently stalled with the escalation of violence undermining the Norwegian backed peace facilitation process.

Rajapakse who was elected to office in November 2005 has held two rounds of face to face talks with the LTTE but both rounds ended with no achievement for further progress.

The clashes have taken precedence over the process of direct talks with both sides being blamed by the international community for violence that has claimed over 3,500 lives since December 2005.

Meanwhile, the Head of an all political party representatives panel appointed by Rajapakse to seek consensus for a final political package to the Tamil issue, Professor Tissa Vitharana said his panel would strive to achieve common ground on a possible final package of devolution.

"I will be preparing a document with the agreement of everyone and it will form the basis of discussion at the next All Party Conference," Vitharana who is also the Minister of Science and Technology told reporters here Sunday.

The all political party panel was called by the Sri Lankan president in January this year to recommend a final political package to end the over two- decade-old ethnic separatist conflict.

The LTTE rebel have been fighting the government troops since the mid-1980s in their quest to set up a separate homeland for the minority Tamils in the north and east.

Source: Xinhua


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