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Decision to release 2 Indian fishermen in Lankan custody on Nov 1

The two fishermen hail from Kottaipattanam and Pudukottai in Tamil Nadu and were apprehended by the Sri Lankan Navy on October 18….reports Asian Lite News

The decision to release two Indian fishermen from the custody of the Sri Lankan Navy for allegedly crossing the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL), will be taken on November 1.

The Sri Lankan Navy said on Saturday that legal proceedings were underway at Kayts Magistrate Court.

The two fishermen hail from Kottaipattanam and Pudukottai in Tamil Nadu and were apprehended by the Sri Lankan Navy on October 18.

According to the Sri Lankan Navy, Indian fishing boats crossing the IMBL were chased away but the boat in which the three Indian fishermen — Suganthan, Xavier, and Rajkiran were fishing did not heed to the Navy and crossed into the Sri Lankan waters. The boat hit the Naval vessel and Raj Kiran was drowned but the other two, Suganthan and Xavier were taken into custody by the Sri Lankan Navy to Jaffna in Northern Lanka.

However, the Indian fishermen from Tamil Nadu who were fishing in other boats close to ‘Suresh’, the boat in which the three Indian fishermen were in, said that the Sri Lankan Navy had deliberately collided with the boat used by the Indian fishermen and that Rajkiran was killed by the Sri Lankan Navy.

Prabhakaran, a fisherman from Kottaipattanam, Tamil Nadu who was close to the boat in which three fishermen were in, said that Raj Kiran was killed by the Sri Lankan Navy.

Meanwhile, the body of Rajkiran was handed over by the Sri Lankan naval officials to the Indian side at the IMBL. The body was brought into Kottaipattanan on Saturday where hundreds of people including Rajkiran’s mother, wife, and other relatives were present when the body was brought to Kottaipattanam. The body was later cremated the same day.

Tamil Nadu law minister S. Raghupathy visited the residence of Rajkiran and handed over a cheque for Rs 10 lakh sanctioned by the Chief Minister M.K. Stalin as solatium to the family of the deceased fisherman.

The minister also promised to provide a job to Rajkiran’s wife, Brinda, who is a qualified lab technician. Pudkottai district collector Kavitha Ramu also paid her last respects to Rajkiran.

Fishermen in Kottaipattanam, Pudukottai called off the agitation they were conducting since the news of Rajkiran’s tragic death and the arrest of Suganthan and Xavier was received in the mainland.

Murugesan, leader of the fishermen association of Kottaipattanam while speaking to IANS said, “We are calling off the agitation for the time being after talking to the officials who visited us. We were expecting all three of them coming back together, however, Rajkiran’s body was what we received but we trust the word of the officials and are expecting the other two to reach back home safely in a few days’ time.”

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Shringla’s visit imparts fresh thrust to India- Lanka ties

It also highlighted the importance of cultural and people-to-people ties in bilateral affairs, which is a core aspect of India’s ‘Neighbourhood First Policy’…reports Asian Lite News.

Any high-level exchange between India and Sri Lanka is not only a reflection of the multi-faceted nature of bilateral ties but also highlights the wide scope and depth of the relationship between the two.

Prima facie, as close sea neighbours with deep historical, cultural, economic, political and security ties, the maiden visit of Harsh Vardhan Shringla as India’s Foreign Secretary to the island-nation from October 2 to 5, 2021, on the invitation of his Sri Lankan counterpart Adm. Jayanath Colombage (retd), could be singularly seen as a regular engagement between the two nations.

However, owing to a number of factors with domestic, bilateral and regional implications, this visit carried with it a salient significance unlike many other such high-level engagements.

The Foreign Secretary’s engagement was comprehensive and it set the right tone for furthering bilateral ties between the two nations in the post-pandemic world. Of course, the urgency for the visit was caused by the food and forex crises dogging Sri Lanka, and the tone was set by the meeting between Foreign Minister G L Peiris and Indian counterpart, Dr S Jaishankar, on the side-lines of the UNGA last fortnight.

However, Foreign Secretary Shringla’s engagements in Colombo were not limited to the officialdom, they included meetings with the island nation’s political leadership–both in the capital and in Tamil-majority Jaffna town in the Northern Province.

By commencing his three-day official trip to the country by offering worship to Buddha’s Tooth Relic at the famed Dalada Maligawa temple in Kandy, he sent out a positive message to the nation’s Buddhist majority.

It also highlighted the importance of cultural and people-to-people ties in bilateral affairs, which is a core aspect of India’s ‘Neighbourhood First Policy’.

By following it up with a stop-over at the eastern port-city of Trincomalee, where he inspected the two ‘oil tanks farms’ in possession and part-operation of public sector Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), he added a strong message on New Delhi’s continuing interest in retaining the same, lest it should fall into ‘wrong hands’, China in this case.

People-to-people engagement

The Foreign Secretary started with his high-level meetings by calling on Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, war-time President of the island-neighbour, whom he had known from his own days as Joint Secretary in India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), handling Sri Lanka.

He concluded the visit by calling on President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Between these two meetings, which were in the nature of courtesy calls, Shringla had substantive discussions with Foreign Minister G L Peiris and counterpart Colombage, apart from Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa, third of the four Rajapaksa brothers in the government.

During these meetings, the Foreign Secretary highlighted India’s keenness to deepen bilateral people-to-people engagement by establishing further avenues of connectivity like the Jaffna-Chennai air service, Karaikal-Kankesanthurai and Dhanushkodi-Talaimanar ferry services, and a ‘Buddhist Corridor’ between the new international airport in India’s Kushinagar and Sri Lanka, as proposed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi earlier.

Within Sri Lanka, Secretary Shringla highlighted people-centric capacity- building programmes that India had undertaken, like the Indian Housing Project, Model Housing Village in Vavuniya district, the Dambulla Cold Storage plant, and tri-lingual school in Polonnaruwa, among others. Though largely unnoticed he did mention that these projects were mostly executed by Sri Lankan partners using locally-sourced materials, as much as possible — thus highlighting India’s unique approach to economic partnership, unlike other nations, say, China, in Sri Lanka’s case.

Political and economic ties

The FS’ inspection of the Trincomalee oil farms in a way addressed inherent and imposed limitations in India assisting Sri Lanka, now in the post-pandemic phase. The Trincomalee leg of the visit highlighted the scope and need for improving economic ties – this one involving the nation’s ‘energy security’, which is another cornerstone of bilateral ties. Occasional protests by Sri Lanka’s oil industry trade unions and periodic jibes by the political class, especially from the ruling coalition, have not helped matters.

The oil farms inspection thus highlighted as to what was basically and substantially wrong in the Sri Lankan approach to bilateral development and commercial relationships, as such an approach, consequent delays and cancellations, have also dogged other India-proposed/-funded projects at different stages. The forgotten indefinite postponement of the CEPA trade pact in 2008 and the more recent cancellation of the trilateral ECT agreement, also involving Japan, are only two such high-profile instances.

On the political front, apart from discussing issues of mutual interest, the FS in his interaction with the Foreign Minister G.L. Peiris expressed India’s position on Sri Lanka’s ethnic issue. He reiterated the Indian position for the full implementation of the 13th Amendment that provides for devolution of powers to the provinces as a means for achieving ethnic reconciliation. To this end, Shringla also stressed the need for holding Provincial Council elections early, as they were inordinately and inexplicably delayed by the previous government.

Given Sri Lanka’s food and forex crises, greater observer interest was focussed on the visitor’s discussions with Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa in particular. While specific requirements and possibilities were believed to have been discussed, a detailed follow-up will have to await Shringla’s discussion with other arms and departments of his government, following his return to Delhi on Tuesday, 5 October. Official statements in this regard are expected in due course.

Security ties

Though not directly a part of the visit, the two nations commenced the previously-planned, 12-day eighth edition of the ‘Mitra Shakti’ (Power of Friendship’) army exercises when the Indian FS was on Sri Lankan soil. A 120-strong Indian Army contingent is conducting joint counter-insurgency and counter-terrorism exercises in the island’s Combat Training School, at eastern Ampara. A battalion- strong contingent of the Sri Lankan Army is participating. Though an annual exercise between the two armies, with each taking turn to host the other, this year’s ‘Mitra Shakti’ signifies the nature of bilateral security ties and symbolises the depth of strategic convergence on issues of security, terrorism and insurgency.

In the past, military-to-military engagements were aimed at promoting closer relationship between the two forces and enhancing interoperability, apart from sharing best practices. This edition of ‘Mitra Shakti’ incorporates the dynamics of UN peace-keeping operations, thus taking their military-level cooperation beyond bilateral level, to be pursued with an eye on addressing multilateral and global commitments, if such a need arose.

(The author is a security and foreign policy analyst; views expressed are his own/ India News Network)

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‘A Passage North’ in the final six of Booker shortlist

“A Passage North” begins with a message from out of the blue: a telephone call informing the protagonist, Krishan, that his grandmother’s caretaker, Rani, has died under unexpected circumstances – found at the bottom of a well in her village in the north, her neck broken by the fall…reports Asian Lite News.

Sri Lankan author Anuk Arudpragasam’s novel “A Passage North” (Penguin India) that transports the reader from Colombo to the war-torn Northern Province and lays bare the imprints of an islands past and the unattainable distances between who we are and what we seek, has moved to the shortlist for The Booker Prize 2021.

It’s a searing novel of longing, loss and the legacy of war, from the author of “The Story of a Brief Marriage”.

“A Passage North” begins with a message from out of the blue: a telephone call informing the protagonist, Krishan, that his grandmother’s caretaker, Rani, has died under unexpected circumstances – found at the bottom of a well in her village in the north, her neck broken by the fall.

The news arrives on the heels of an email from Anjum, an impassioned yet aloof activist Krishnan fell in love with years before while living in Delhi, stirring old memories and desires from a world he left behind.

As Krishan makes the long journey by train from Colombo into the devastated Northern Province for Rani’s funeral, so begins an astonishing passage into the innermost reaches of a country.

At once a powerful meditation on absence and longing, as well as an unsparing account of the legacy of Sri Lanka’s 30-year civil war, this procession to a pyre “at the end of the earth” lays bare the imprints of an island’s past and the unattainable distances between who we are and what we seek.

Written with precision and grace, the masterful novel is an attempt to come to terms with life in the wake of devastation, and a poignant memorial for those lost and those still alive.

Anuk Arudpragasam was born in Colombo and moved to the United States at the age of 18, where he attended Stanford and Columbia Universities. His first novel, “The Story of a Brief Marriage”, was translated into six languages, won the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature and was shortlisted for the Dylan Thomas Prize. He currently divides his time between Sri Lanka and India.

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Mitra Shakti to begin on Oct 4

The exercise will involve tactical level operations at sub unit level in an international Counter Insurgency and Counter Terrorism environment…reports Asian Lite News.

The 8th Edition of the India-Sri Lanka bilateral joint Exercise Mitra Shakti will be conducted at Combat Training School, Ampara in Sri Lanka from 4 to 15 October.

An all-arms contingent of 120 personnel of the Indian Army will participate in the exercise along with a battalion of the Sri Lankan Army, said a statement from the Ministry of Defence.

The aim of the exercise is to promote close relations between the Armies of both countries and enhance inter-operability and sharing of best practices in counter insurgency and counter terrorism operations.

The exercise will involve tactical level operations at sub unit level in an international Counter Insurgency and Counter Terrorism environment.

It will go a long way in further strengthening the relationship between both the South Asian Nations and will act as a catalyst in bringing synergy and cooperation at grass root level between both Armies, the defence ministry said.

The 7th Edition of Exercise Mitra Shakti was conducted at Foreign Training Node (FTN), Pune, Maharashtra (India) in 2019. (INN)

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Shringla’s Lanka Visit to Reinforce India’s ‘Neighbourhood First’ Policy

The visit is expected to reinforce bilateral ties and boost cooperation to tackle Covid-related disruptions, writes Mihir Bhonsale

Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla has embarked on his maiden state visit to Sri Lanka from October 2-5. His visit will emphasize on the two nations ‘intertwined destinies’ and the primacy given to neighbourhood is reflected in New Delhi’s ‘Neighbourhood First policy’.

India’s ‘Neighbourhood First’

Speaking at a seminar in March, Foreign Secretary Shringla had said India’s destiny was inextricably linked with its neighbourhood. He had argued that the neighbourhood remains New Delhi’s primary diplomatic arena and was first and foremost amongst its foreign policy priorities.

Thus, the Foreign Secretary’s four-day visit to Sri Lanka must be seen from the perspective of New Delhi’s ‘Neighbourhood first’.

His visit is likely to review India-Sri Lanka bilateral ties, review progress of ongoing bilateral projects and ongoing cooperation to tackle Covid related disruptions.

High-level contacts between the two countries have been maintained and indeed strengthened during the past year and the virtual bilateral summit between the prime ministers of both sides PM Modi and Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa was a high watermark for the bilateral relationship in 2020.

During the bilateral summit, both leaders had discussed business cooperation and the progress of the projects in Sri Lanka financed by India.

They had also acknowledged the increasing convergence on regional and international issues of mutual engagement, including within the frameworks of SAARC, BIMSTEC, IORA, and the United Nations system.

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had visited Sri Lanka in January.

Jaishankar had remarked that India-Sri Lanka partnership has been further strengthened by the Covid-19 pandemic.

External Affairs Minister Jaishankar had said that in line with ‘Neighbourhood First,’ India has supported the island country’s efforts to tackle the deadly virus through ‘medical assistance’.

In the months following Jaishankar’s visit to the island-nation, India gifted 500,000 Covishield vaccines to Sri Lanka under New Delhi’s ‘Vaccine Maitri’ Initiative.

Continuing to stand by its partner in times of need, India sent medical oxygen supplies to Sri Lanka to help it combat the Covid-19 pandemic.

In May, keeping with the tradition of being a first responder in the region, India had carrying out joint firefighting and pollution control efforts along with Sri Lankan authorities, to stabilise the situation on the MV Xpress Pearl.

India had also extended a US$100 million Line of Credit (LoC) to Sri Lanka for projects in the solar energy sector. The LOC will help finance various projects in the solar energy sector in Sri Lanka.

Reflecting the strong ties between the two neighbours, External Affairs Minister Jaishankar met his Sri Lankan Foreign Minister GL Peiris in New York last month and held a comprehensive discussion on close relationship between the two countries.

Expectations from Foreign Secretary’s Visit

During the four-day visit, Foreign Secretary Shringla is set to have a bilateral discussions with the Sri Lankan Foreign Secretary and call on President Gotabaya Rajapaksha.

His programme also includes a meeting with Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksha, Foreign Minister Peris and Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa.

He is expected to visit Kandy, Trincomalee and Jaffna during his stay in Sri Lanka.

He is also set to review ongoing bilateral projects in Sri Lanka through India’s overall commitment to the tune of USD 3.5 billion.

Some of the ongoing projects include Walahanduwa Estate in Galle, part of India’s ambitious project to construct 50,000 houses in war affected areas and estate workers in plantation areas with a total allocation of $270 million in grants.

During his visit to the provinces of the island-nation, he is set to inspect the ongoing construction of the Jaffna Cultural Centre which Prime Minister Narendra Modi had dedicated to the people of Sri Lanka in 2017 and other projects in Kandy and Trincomalee.

All in all, the Foreign Secretary Shringla’s visit will lay the groundwork for fast-tracking of bilateral ties including meaningful execution of projects. It will also pave the way for another bilateral summit in the near future, thus taking the political ties to a new zenith. (India News Network)

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