Do More With Reuters
Partner Services

Sri Lanka says can fund offensive against rebels

Mon Oct 13, 2008 8:14am IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Rob Taylor

CANBERRA (Reuters) - Sri Lanka's war on separatist rebels will not be slowed by international financial turmoil placing pressure on the government's military budget, Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said on Monday.

Bogollagama, speaking in Australia where he was urged to seek a political end to the 25-year conflict, said Sri Lanka's military would continue to press its latest bloody offensive against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or LTTE.

"We are coming to the final stages of taking on the LTTE. We are quite confident our financial resources can sustain the current engagement," Bogollagama told journalists.

Sri Lanka's army last week pushed to within 2 kilometres (1 mile) of outer Kilinochchi, the strategic headquarters town of the Tigers, located 330 kilometres (205 miles) north of the capital Colombo.

As the offensive intensified, the government proposed a 2009 budget in which total local and international borrowings were projected to rise by 20 percent, in part to fund a 6.4 percent lift in the projected cost of the war, despite the current freeze in global credit markets.

Bogollagama said President Mahinda Rajapaksa had no option but to continue an offensive that gathered pace earlier this year when the government formally annulled a 2002 ceasefire, accusing the rebels of using it to re-arm.

"As far as the LTTE is concerned, we need them to lay down arms and start talking, and it's time the LTTE does that," he said.

Australia's foreign minister, Stephen Smith, said Canberra had "long-standing concerns" about the intensifying conflict and accusations of human rights violations on both sides.  Continued...

Dubai skyline
India won't be affected much

Dubai's debt crisis will not affect India much but the govt is keeping a close watch, finance minister Pranab Mukherjee said.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

Hoardings alongside Nakheel's Waterfront construction site at Jebel Ali in Dubai November 26, 2009.  REUTERS/Steve Crisp
Dubai Debt Fears

Investors recoiled from risky assets and dumped shares in Asian banks and builders, fearing a debt default could reignite the financial turmoil.  Full Article 

Photo
A man walks with the Indian national flag in front of the Taj Mahal hotel, one of the sites of last year's militant attacks, in Mumbai November 26, 2009.  REUTERS/Punit Paranjpe
One Year Later

Mumbai held tearful memorials as it marked the first anniversary of militant raids that killed 166 people.   Full Article | Full Coverage