அமெரிக்க
வெளியுறவுத் துறை அமைச்சர் ஜான் கெர்ரி
இலங்கை வந்தடைந்தார்
அமெரிக்க
வெளியுறவுத் துறை அமைச்சர் ஜான் கெர்ரி
இரண்டு நாள்
பயணமாக இன்று
காலை இலங்கை
வந்து சேர்ந்தார்.
இலங்கையில்
மைத்ரிபால சிறிசேன தலைமையிலான
அரசு புதிதாக
பதவியேற்றதையடுத்து இலங்கையுடன் இணைந்து
செயல்பட அமெரிக்கா
விரும்புவதாக ஜான் கெர்ரி கூறியிருந்தார்.
இதையடுத்து
ஜான் கெர்ரியை
இலங்கை வருமாறு
ஜனாதிபதி மைத்ரிபால சிறிசேனா அழைப்பு
விடுத்தார். இந்த அழைப்பை ஏற்று ஜான்
கெர்ரி இன்று
இலங்கை வருகை தந்துள்ளார்.
ஜான்
கெர்ரியை, கட்டுநாயக்க விமான
நிலையத்தில், வெளிவிவகார அமைச்சர் மங்கள சமரவீர வரவேற்றார்.
இலங்கைக்கு 43 வருடங்களுக்குப் பின் வருகைதந்துள்ள முதலாவது அமெரிக்க
வெளியுறவுச் செயலர் ஜான் கெர்ரி என்பதும் குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.
Statement to Media by Mangala Samaraweera, Minister of Foreign Affairs on the occasion of the Official Visit of John Kerry, US Secretary of State to Sri Lanka
Good Morning Ladies and Gentleman,
It has been a great honour and
privilege to welcome the Honourable John F. Kerry, Secretary of State of the
United States, to the historic Republic Building which has been the home of our
Foreign Ministry since Independence.
Secretary Kerry’s visit is a
momentous occasion for Sri Lanka as it is the first official visit by a US
Secretary of State in nearly half a century - 43 years to be precise.
I believe that this important
visit signifies the return of our little island to the centre stage of
international affairs.
This morning we continued a dialogue
that began in Washington within a month of my appointment as Foreign Minister.
We agreed to build on a
multifaceted bilateral relationship and to forge stronger links between our
peoples.
We also agreed to formalize our
relationship through a partnership dialogue that will enable us to continue
this engagement on a regular basis.
Relations between our two
countries have existed since the adoption of the US constitution, at which time
records show that sailors from New England were anchored in the Galle Harbour.
American missionaries, including
Sir Henry Olcott, who jointly designed the Buddhist flag flown during Vesak,
played a vital role in founding and nurturing some of our best schools both in
the North and the South.
Secretary Kerry’s visit to Sri
Lanka comes at a very propitious moment.
On one hand, Buddhists in every
part of the country, and all over the world, will be celebrating the Lord
Buddha’s philosophy of tolerance and non-violence tomorrow, by lighting
beautiful paper lanterns in their homes and on the streets.
And on the other hand, it also
comes at a time when many Sri Lankans are celebrating the passage of the
19thAmendment to our constitution last Tuesday, which only one Member of
Parliament opposed.
This was the apex of the 100 day
programme which introduced far-reaching constitutional and democratic reforms.
Today, Sri Lanka is well on its
way to becoming a fully-fledged Parliamentary democracy, laying the foundations
for a new Sri Lanka, built on the pillars of democracy and ethnic harmony.
This will allow us to reap the
fruits of increased economic growth and prosperity, which have been eluding us
for nearly two decades.
Ensuring accountability in the
New Sri Lanka, will feature as a key component of the reconciliation process,
and the architecture of a domestic accountability mechanism with international
technical assistance as promised by our manifesto are now being planned.
In this context there are also
several areas where the United States can assist us by enhancing local capacity
and providing technical expertise.
Sri Lanka, now a middle-income
country, can no longer afford to rely solely on foreign aid.
It is in our government’s best
interest to attract foreign direct investment as part of a broader strategy to
kick-start the economy.
Sri Lanka has been considered a
paradise for tourists for many years, but our government is now also keen to
make Sri Lanka an investor’s paradise.
In order to do so, we are in the
process of cultivating a rule based investment climate. I hope that American
investors will take advantage of the many new economic opportunities now
opening up in Sri Lanka.
Later today, Secretary Kerry will
call on President Sirisena and have discussions with Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremasinghe.
I believe these discussions will
provide an opportunity for both sides to understand their respective priorities
and that the discussions will also heighten our existing close and friendly
relations.
I’d also like to take this
opportunity to thank Assistant Secretary Nisha Biswal for her unrelenting
belief in Sri Lanka and it’s potential, and for the support and encouragement
we have received from her over the last few months.
I hope there will be many more
high-level visits to come and that today is just the beginning of a very, very
special relationship between Sri Lanka and the United States.
I wish Secretary Kerry and his
delegation a pleasant stay in Sri Lanka, and hope that he will visit us again
soon, so we may have the opportunity to show him more of our beautiful and
diverse island.
Thank you.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Colombo
2nd May 2015
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