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The Report of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with South Asia following their visit to Sri Lanka from 22-26 February 2011 for the 6th EP/Sri Lanka Inter-Parliamentary Meeting was tabled in Brussels last week. The report presented by the Chair of the Delegation Jean Lambert, details the delegation’s interactions in Sri Lanka with the Speaker, senior ministers, members of parliament, senior officials, EU country diplomats and INGOs, as well as field visits to Jaffna and Vavuniya where they also inspected EU funded projects, the Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.
The ‘conclusions’ contained in the report, which comments on the aspects of development cooperation, devolution and reconciliation, practical steps suggested and Inter-Parliamentary cooperation, state that “the EP South Asia Delegation would like to underline that it strongly believes there is room for constructive and principled engagement between the EU and Sri Lanka – despite the disagreements of the past and the fact that, in some areas, differences in perceptions still subsist”. It also “calls on the Diaspora to play a positive role in supporting this approach by working constructively with the elected Tamil leadership in Sri Lanka”.
In comments before the South Asia Delegation following the visit, South Asia Delegation Chair Lambert noted that “In a nutshell the feeling of the EP Delegation was that this visit was productive and the EP Delegation heard about detailed plans of the Government to rebuild the North and felt that there certainly have been very positive moves”. She made a special reference to the Interim Recommendations of the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) and said “these were generally judged as positive ones: the Delegation would therefore call for their swift implementation, and expects that the final report of the LLRC will be public”. She also highlighted that the EP Delegation was especially encouraged by the creation in the Sri Lanka Parliament of a formal counterpart body in the form of an ‘EU Parliamentary Friendship Association’. “The EP Delegation believes this form of engagement is the way forward” she added.
Taking the floor, the Quaestor of the European Parliament, Geringer de Oedenberg warmly thanked all those who have been involved in planning the programme of the visit which was “superbly organised” and provided Members with an “excellent overview” of the political situation and the challenges faced in Sri Lanka.
In observations on the report at the 15 June 2011 session of the South Asia Delegation, Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Belgium, Luxembourg and the EU Ravinatha Aryasinha observed that the six day visit by the high powered delegation of the European Parliament was important for several reasons. By receiving the delegation and facilitating their travel to areas of their choice, GOSL had acted with considerable transparency – something not fully appreciated in some quarters.
Welcoming the constructive attitude visible in the Delegation’s report, he urged MEPs belonging to all major parties in Parliament who undertook the visit and saw with their own eyes the difficult but important work that is on-going in Sri Lanka at present to ensure reconciliation and development, to share their experience with other fellow MEPs, so as not to allow fringe elements in Parliament to distort the image of Sri Lanka.
He hoped that the spirit of “mutual respect and mutual cooperation” which appears to have been the hall mark of both the meetings held in Sri Lanka, as well as the report of the delegation, should become a template for future Sri Lanka-EU relations.