wOHdmk weu;s nkaÿ,g
cd;sl .Sfha ks¾ud;D meg,s,d miq.sh 01jk Èk meje;ajQ f,dal <ud Èkh fjkqfjka meje;s m%Odk W;aijhlÈ wOHdmk weu;sg f,dl= mg,eú,a,la jqKd'
fld<U uydkdu úÿyf,a meje;s f,dal <ud Èkh fjkqfjka meje;s W;aijfha m%Odk wuq;a;d jQfka wOHdmk weue;s nkaOq, .=Kj¾Okhs' Y%S ,xldfõ cd;sl .Sfha ks¾ud;D wd¾' wd¾' iurfldaka hehs wOHdmk weue;sjrhd mjid ;sfnkjd' isiqka uqyqKg uqyqK n,d .;a;d ñi lsisjla lSfõ mjid ke;'
Tyqf.a l;dj wjidkfha
;E.a.la msßkeóug fõÈldjg meñKs wOHdmk wOHlaIl jrfhla jk ckm%sh ix.S;fõ§ tâjâ chfldä uy;d nkaÿ,f.a lkg lr hula lSfuka miq nkaÿ, weia Wv f.dia fof,dj r;aù uhsla tl fj;g ÿjf.k .shd'
wk;=rej ;udg jrola jQ nj;a cd;sl .Sfha ks¾ud;D jrhd wdkkao iurfldaka hehs mejiqjd'
wd¾'wd¾' iurfldaka hkq nkaOq, .=Kj¾Okf.a ;reK úfha§ ckm%sh kdgHhla jQ le<Ks md,u we;=¿ kdgH /ila ,shd ksIamdokh l< kdgHfõÈfhls' ritain’s Prime Minister David Cameron is set to discuss the slow progress being made in the matter of Khuram Sheikh the British tourist who was murdered in Tangalle where one of those charged is a member of the ruling party. Cameron will be mindful of the various marginal seats – there are as much as twenty – when he makes his speech in Colombo. It is expected to be ‘hard hitting’ and one in which it is expected Cameron will ‘not to mince his words’. If anything is to placate the British, it will be positive developments on the fronts that they are most concerned for: real progress on accountability, the judiciary, and progress on developing a peaceful co-existence with the minorities.
However, the ruthlessness of the Canadian boycott of CHOGM is seen by most international political analysts as a revengeful act of a Premier far removed from the maturity desired in affairs of a diplomatic nature. It is indeed pertinent to question if Premier Harper’s decision to boycott the meeting holds any real concern for human rights outside of desperation to win in the province of Ontario, a Liberal stronghold. The voices of Tamil Tiger funds that speak volumes in political campaigns of certain Western politicians are neither a new phenomenon, nor a silent one. Ontario itself is home to a large Tamil Diaspora community whose appeasement has become tradition over the last few decades for the political survival of a number of prominent members of the Canadian political arena.