Lanka agitated over Antony's statement - The Hindu
"Statement unfair and sweeping"
"Interested parties trying to endanger ties"
By B. Muralidhar Reddy
COLOMBO: The Sri Lankan Government is agitated over the recent
statement of Defence Minister A.K. Antony in Parliament that Sri Lanka
Navy (SLA) has killed 77 Indian fisher folk from 1991 to mid-April,
2007. Colombo has taken up the matter with New Delhi.
A senior official in the Sri Lanka Foreign Office told *The Hindu*
that Mr. Antony had been unfair in making such a sweeping statement
against the SLA.
"We are particularly disturbed at the statement as it ignores recent
observations by several high-level functionaries of the Indian
Government that the Tamil Tigers and other vested interests are behind
some of the recent incidents of killing of fisher folk community."
The official said that a few days ago when the Indian Government
raised the subject on complaints from the Tamil Nadu Government, Colombo
conveyed to New Delhi that its naval forces had been given specific
instructions not to target Indian fisher folk under any circumstances
and the SLA would never intrude into the Indian maritime waters.
Endanger relations
Further, the official maintained, India was told that interested
parties were trying to endanger relations between New Delhi and Colombo
by putting the blame on the killings on the Sri Lanka forces.
The latest controversy is a fallout of a reply Mr. Antony gave on the
floor of Rajya Sabha on Wednesday in response to an unstarred question
on "attack on Indian fishermen by Sri Lanka Navy."
According to the Press Information Bureau press release, Mr. Antony
told the House that the Government is aware that a number of fishermen
from Tamil Nadu are being attacked and killed by Sri Lankan Navy during
the recent years.
There have been incidents of firing on Indian fishing boats in Palk
Bay and Gulf of Mannar area and recently slight increase in such
incidents has been noticed.
To protect the Indian fishermen, surveillance and patrolling are
regularly done by the Indian Navy and the Indian Coast Guard in the
Indian waters of the Palk Bay and the Gulf of Mannar. Air surveillance
is also undertaken.
Surveillance mechanisms
The surveillance mechanisms include coastal patrol, international
maritime boundary patrol, air patrol, shallow water patrol and radar
surveillance.
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