
| Font Size |



"We want the government and the LTTE discuss ways to end the hostilities," said Robert Wood, Acting Spokesman of the State Department.
He said one of their primary concerns is the humanitarian situation. "We're worried about IDPs (internally displaced persons), what happens to them, we are worried about civilians that are caught up in the hostilities that are going on," Wood said.
When asked if the US would like to have a negotiated solution and it does not think that this should end militarily, Wood said: "Eventually you need to have a political framework that deals with some of the questions that are being put forth by various parties in the country."
"We just want to see, again, an end to hostilities. We want to see civilians protected as best they can be protected in this conflict. We want to be able to deal effectively with the humanitarian situation that we're very concerned about," He said.
Asked if the US is calling for a ceasefire, he reiterated the US wants an end to the hostilities.
"Well, look, again, we're getting ahead of the game here. What we're trying to do with this, as I said first off, is to deal with the concerns we have about IDPs and the humanitarian situation. That's our foremost objective, to deal with those issues."
He said: "We obviously want to see an end to that conflict and for that to happen, there has to be a discussion of the issues that are - you know, that are coming between the two sides."
Both the US Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the South Asia Bureau in the State Department are communicating with the government of Sri Lanka in this regard. "There are other parties in the international community that are engaged in trying to do this," he added.
When asked if the US would like to end negotiate between Sri Lanka and LTTE, Wood said: "As far as I know, we have not been asked to do that. This is something - there is a process that has been put forward to try to help end this conflict.
We will do what we can to support efforts to end the conflict. But in the end, the two sides have got to, as I said, discuss ways of ending this conflict and bring a cessation to hostilities."


Discuss this story on expressindia forums
|
|


US has no moral authority to demand an independent nation to stop its fighting against terrorism and a terror organization. Sri Lanka is fighting its own war on terror and not interfering in other nations' internal affairs and so US can not ask any other country. US itself is promoting terrorism in the world just to feed its weapon manufacturing industry and the world is crying foul. The more US goes into war against so called jehadists (once its own creation), more and more people become radicalised and opting a path of terrorism. It is upto the world, how they take the menace of the US which is not actually fighting the terrorism rather it is just testing its own WMDs and terrorising the people worldover. US is main culprit and perpetrator of todays terrorism faced by the world. The free nations have to counter the US hegemoney otherwise the US will make them its slaves.
You may have your own axe to grind against the US, but please do not use the poor Tamils of Srilanka for your propaganda. If the USA is bringing to surface all Jihadists and future Jihadists, it is good for this world, which will be a peaceful heaven once these Muslim Jihadists are eliminated once and for all, even if their numbers have to be in millions. Cowards in the garb of terrorists, in the name of a religion, take glee in beheading innocent people and those like you find fault with the USA. Have you ever written anything against the butchers who call themselves Jihadists? Go elsewhere to spit your venom, not in an article on the Srilankan Crisis.