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India & World
B. Muralidhar Reddy
COLOMBO: Close on the heels of the decision of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh not to meet a parliamentary delegation of the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA), India has invited representatives of three Tamil parties from the north-east to New Delhi for an "interaction" on the current situation in Sri Lanka. According to diplomatic and political sources here, Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) leader V. Anandasangree, his counterparts in the People's Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam, Sidharthan and T. Sritharan of the Eelam People's Revolutionary Front (EPRLF-Padmanabha), are leaving for New Delhi on Monday. "Some time ago we had expressed our desire to visit India to exchange views on the prevailing situation as well as the possible role New Delhi could play in resolution of the ethnic conflict. We have just received a message asking us to reach New Delhi. At the moment we have no idea about the details of our itinerary and the authorities we could expect to meet in the course of our possibly three-day stay," one of the three leaders travelling to India told The Hindu.
Long-term effort
The invitation to the Tamil parties is believed to be part of New Delhi's exercise for a better understanding of the situation and to explore the possible role it can play to resolve the ethnic problem.
Interactive approach
Diplomatic sources told The Hindu that efforts were on to include political parties in the south like the Janatha Vimukhthi Peramuna (JVP). "The idea is continued interactive approach with various political players in Sri Lanka for an understanding of the ground situation as well as a possible Indian role", a senior diplomat said. The visit of leaders of the three Tamil parties to New Delhi, particularly after the refusal of the Prime Minister to meet the parliamentary delegation of TNA, is bound to be watched with interest in diplomatic and political circles here. It could be interpreted as a reaffirmation of the Indian position that it does not consider LTTE as the "sole representative" of the north-east. Further it could be a reflection of the Indian approach towards the "marginalised" Tamil political voices in the face of the guns of the Tamil Tigers. One of the leaders visiting New Delhi told this paper that in their interaction with authorities in India, they intended not only to apprise them of the current humanitarian crisis, particularly in the north-east, but also how it has been aggravated by the acts of the LTTE. "No doubt people are suffering the most. But the LTTE is also exploiting the situation to the hilt," the leader said.
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