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Colombo, December 21,
2005 (PTI)
Ahead of his three-day
India visit, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse
on Wednesday said he will seek greater involvement of
New Delhi in the island's faltering peace bid with the
Liberation of Tamil Tigers Eelam when he holds talks
with the leadership there.
Rajapakse, who leaves
for New Delhi on December 27 in his first trip abroad
since winning the November 17 Presidential elections,
said he expected India to play a "bigger role"
in supporting the island's peace efforts to end three
decades of ethnic bloodshed.
"That is what I want
to discuss with them. They are our closest neighbour
and it is very important for me to have them involved
in the process," he told Colombo-based Indian journalists
when asked about what sort of role he wanted India to
play.
Rajapakse said he expected
India to have an involvement similar to what the quartet
known as co-chairs - US, European Union, Japan and Norway
- has in supporting peace efforts.
The quartet has led international
efforts to raise money in support of the island's peace
efforts.
During his India visit,
the Sri Lankan President will be accompanied by a bipartisan
delegation of legislators from the government as well
as opposition in a sign of broad support he enjoys within
the legislature despite ideological differences.
He is expected to stop
over in Chennai on his way back.
About a Comprehensive
Economic Partnership Agreement and a Defence Cooperation
pact, the President said there would be no finality
on either, but he expected talks to continue.
Rajapakse said he was
keen to study India's system of devolution, as it could
be a model for Sri Lanka to grant extensive devolution
without altering the character of the state.
"I am for a unitary
state with maximum possible devolution." he said,
adding, "I want to study the Indian model and I
am sure we can learn from that."
Also, Rajapakse said he
was keen to discuss oil exploration with Indian companies.
He has sought a report
from the treasury over a controversy over subsidy payments
to the Indian Oil Corporation's unit in Sri Lanka.
Trading in the shares
of IOC's Lanka unit was suspended on Tuesday amid reports
that the company was in trouble, as the Sri Lankan government
owed it some $71 million (about Rs 32,000 crore).
"I have asked for
a report, but what I can tell you is that we will honour
our commitments," the President said, adding, "If
we have to pay, we will pay. That would not be a problem."
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