Argumentations
GeoPolitics
New World Order
Afghanistan
Climate Change
Water Scarcity
Terrorism
War on Terror
Torture
Globalization
Nuclear Weapons
Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
North Korera
Genoci
Iraq
Eurabia
War Crimes
Friday, March 19, 2010
Argumentations
|
Statements
|
Stories
|
Tags
|
Timelines
|
Worldmap
Help
|
Sign In
|
Sign Up!
What is Argumentations.com?
Sign In
to:
Take a Position
Develop Your Argument
Import a Story
Give Feedback
Argum
USA
Greece
Zimbabwe
Posted by:
zanshin
,
2009-04-13 03:36
Story
Sri Lanka ends Norwegian facilitation role
2009-04-13 (Monday),
People's Daily Online
Sri Lanka here Monday announced it was ending the Norwegian facilitation role in the island's ethnic separatist conflict.
The government announcement came after it had summoned the Norwegian Ambassador in Colombo to lodge a protest over Tamil Tiger supporters in Oslo attacking the Sri Lankan embassy in the Norwegian capital.
"......the government of Sri Lanka perceives that it is no longer feasible for Norway to act as facilitator in the engagement with Sri Lanka in the current context", a Colombo foreign ministry statement said.
Palitha Kohona, Sri Lanka's foreign ministry secretary had earlier summoned Torre Hattrem the Norwegian Ambassador to the foreign ministry in Colombo.
Sri Lankan embassy in Oslo was stormed into by supporters of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels on Sunday. They damaged the property but no one was injured.
The Sri Lankan government contends that Sunday's attack on the embassy came after a protest held in approval of the Norwegian government. The attack was subsequent to the demonstration.
"The government of Sri Lanka deplores the failure of the Norwegian government in fulfilling its obligations under international law consequent to its sheer neglect in the provision of adequate security to the Sri Lankan mission in Oslo", the statement added.
A large community of Sri Lankan Tamil minority is living in Norway. The Scandinavian nation brokered peace between the Tamil Tigers and the government of Sri Lanka since 2002. The process came to its official end in January 2008 when the government pulled out of the February 2002 ceasefire agreement.
The Tamil Tigers in April 2003 had scuttled the process by staging a temporary pull out from the process.
The Norwegian government was invited to facilitate direct talks between the government and the LTTE in the year 2000 by the then Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga.
Source: Xinhua
Copyright by People's Daily Online
Comments
No comments yet.
Please
login
to post your comment.
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.
Stories, Arguments and Comments are owned by the Poster.
The Rest copyright © 2007 Argumentations.com. All rights reserved. Argumentations.com provides material for research or educational purposes only. We do not warrant the correctness of its contents. The risk from using it lies entirely with the user. While using this site, you agree to have read and accepted our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Argumentations.com is far from perfect so if you have any critiques, questions, comments or problems about this site please tell us. Click
here
to send your feedback. And if you like Argumentations.com please link to this site. It will really help a lot.
Tags
Norway
,
Sri Lanka
,
Related statements
No results
View other suggested stories
Date added
2006-12-15
Timeline: Sri Lanka
2007-06-25
Rights abuses in focus at Sri Lanka donor Oslo meet
2006-05-01
Accusations of New Attack Threaten Sri Lankan Cease-Fire
2007-05-02
Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2007-11-10
The Nobel Lecture given by The Nobel Peace Prize Laureate 2000, Kim Dae-jung
2007-12-05
Heroes or villains?
2007-06-08
A war strange as fiction
2008-01-04
S Lanka truce end worries Norway
2008-01-04
Sri Lanka 'needs UN monitors'
2008-01-07
Sri Lanka says 3-day death toll hits 73
2008-01-08
Sri Lanka minister killed by roadside bomb blast
2008-01-29
Ban wants U.N. sanctions for using child soldiers
2008-07-31
Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre delivers speech at Harvard University
Updating...
Please wait.