![]() |
![]() |
|
Sunday, 25 September 2005 |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Security | ![]() |
News Business Features |
Facilitator role: Norway no change by Ranga Jayasuriya and Jayantha Sri Nissanka The government has written to the Norwegian Labour Party Leader Jens Stoltenberg whose Center-Left bloc emerged winners at the Norwegian Parliamentary Elections, requesting the continuance of the role of his government in the peace process. Stoltenberg who would replace the out-going Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik, has responded that the Norwegian engagement in the peace process would remain unchanged. An economist, Stoltenberg's Centre-Left bloc won 88 seats against 81 seats of Bondevik's Conservative coalition. Earlier, Erik Solheim, the peace envoy, who is also a member of the winning coalition told the press that Norwegians would continue to facilitate the peace process. Norwegian Embassy spokeswoman Kjersti Tromsdal echoed the same remarks when asked whether there would be any changes of the Norwegian's role in the peace process. "No changes on our part, role will be the same," she said. Diplomatic sources, however said it would take time till mid-October for the Norwegians to finalise a government, which is expected to be a three party coalition of the Labour Party, Socialist Left and Centrist Party. Till then Sri Lanka has to wait for the announcement of any reshuffle of the Norwegian peace delegation. "The last message we got from the Norwegians is that they would announce their peace team in mid-October, once their Cabinet is named," a senior peace secretariat official told the Sunday Observer. Meanwhile, former Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission Chief, Gen. Trond Furuhovde will arrive in the island in the second week of next month to consult the Government and the LTTE on the ceasefire review. "He will consult the Government and the LTTE separately about the proper implementation of the ceasefire agreement," Tromsdal said. Gen. Furuhovde's visit comes in the wake of the failure of the Government and the LTTE to agree on a venue for ceasefire talks. The peace secretariat official said that the Government has identified pluses and minuses of the ceasefire agreement and would give its input for the consideration of Gen. Furuhovde. Earlier, Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission chief Hagrup Haukland told the
Sunday Observer that the SLMM would also forward its recommendations on the
review of the ceasefire agreement to the Government and the LTTE. |
| News | Business | Features
| Editorial | Security
| Produced by Lake House |