Amid Tamil Nadu unrest, Manmohan to meet Rajapaksa
Amid Tamil Nadu unrest, Manmohan to meet Rajapaksa
Follow us:WhatsappFacebookTwitterTelegram.cls-1{fill:#4d4d4d;}.cls-2{fill:#fff;}Google NewsPrime Minister Manmohan Singhwill meet Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa here Thursday, and is expected to press for a viable political solution in the island nation.Rajapaksaarrives on a three-day visit Wednesday night. He has been invited by the Madhya Pradesh government for the foundation-laying event of the University of Buddhist and Indic Studies in Sanchi.Manmohan Singh will meet Rajapaksa and host a dinner Thursday in New Delhi - a meeting that will see India air its concerns over issues related to the rehabilitation of war-displaced Tamils in Sri Lanka.India is also expected to press for a long-term inclusive solution to the ethnic issue in Sri Lanka, said informed sources.Rajapaksa will also call on President Pranab Mukherjee.Rajapaksa's trip takes place days after a 26-year-old auto driver from Salem attempted self-immolation protesting the visit.MDMK leader Vaiko and his supporters have left for Sanchi to hold a black flag demonstration against Rajapaksa.Manyin Tamil Nadu's politics are against any visit by Rajapaksa over the killings of a large number of civilians in the war that led to the LTTE's defeat in May 2009. Colombo denied innocenets were killed.A group of Sri Lankan tourists were targeted in Tamil Nadu this month.SriLanka's envoy Prasad Kariyawasam has blamed the incidents on "fringe pro-LTTE groups" in the state and underlined that relations between the two countries continue to be "warm and robust"."The protests areled by fringe groups who are pro-LTTE and are still wedded to LTTE's ideology and who are upset at the defeat of the LTTE," the envoy told IANS ahead of the visit.The envoy pointed to improved bilateral trade ties. "India-SriLanka trade is growing and currently stands at $5 billion. The two sides are hoping to double it by 2015. India is the biggest investor in Sri Lanka," he said.first published:January 01, 1970, 05:30 ISTlast updated:January 01, 1970, 05:30 IST
window._taboola = window._taboola || [];_taboola.push({mode: 'thumbnails-mid-article',container: 'taboola-mid-article-thumbnails',placement: 'Mid Article Thumbnails',target_type: 'mix'});
let eventFire = false;
window.addEventListener('scroll', () => {
if (window.taboolaInt && !eventFire) {
setTimeout(() => {
ga('send', 'event', 'Mid Article Thumbnails', 'PV');
ga('set', 'dimension22', "Taboola Yes");
}, 4000);
eventFire = true;
}
});
 
window._taboola = window._taboola || [];_taboola.push({mode: 'thumbnails-a', container: 'taboola-below-article-thumbnails', placement: 'Below Article Thumbnails', target_type: 'mix' });Latest News

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

will meet Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa here Thursday, and is expected to press for a viable political solution in the island nation.Rajapaksa

arrives on a three-day visit Wednesday night. He has been invited by the Madhya Pradesh government for the foundation-laying event of the University of Buddhist and Indic Studies in Sanchi.Manmohan Singh will meet Rajapaksa and host a dinner Thursday in New Delhi - a meeting that will see India air its concerns over issues related to the rehabilitation of war-displaced Tamils in Sri Lanka.India is also expected to press for a long-term inclusive solution to the ethnic issue in Sri Lanka, said informed sources.Rajapaksa will also call on President Pranab Mukherjee.Rajapaksa's trip takes place days after a 26-year-old auto driver from Salem attempted self-immolation protesting the visit.MDMK leader Vaiko and his supporters have left for Sanchi to hold a black flag demonstration against Rajapaksa.Many

in Tamil Nadu's politics are against any visit by Rajapaksa over the killings of a large number of civilians in the war that led to the LTTE's defeat in May 2009. Colombo denied innocenets were killed.A group of Sri Lankan tourists were targeted in Tamil Nadu this month.Sri

Lanka's envoy Prasad Kariyawasam has blamed the incidents on "fringe pro-LTTE groups" in the state and underlined that relations between the two countries continue to be "warm and robust"."The protests are

led by fringe groups who are pro-LTTE and are still wedded to LTTE's ideology and who are upset at the defeat of the LTTE," the envoy told IANS ahead of the visit.The envoy pointed to improved bilateral trade ties. "India-Sri

Lanka trade is growing and currently stands at $5 billion. The two sides are hoping to double it by 2015. India is the biggest investor in Sri Lanka," he said.

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://234470.3pybb.group/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!