ANYTHING FOR PEACE
A glimmer of hope has broken through the gloom that clouded hope for a political resolution of Sri Lanka´s bloody ethnic crisis, which has cost an estimated 50,000 lives on both sides of the line in the last 17 years. On 19 January, Ranil Wickremesinghe, the leader of the opposition United National Party (UNP) who challenged Chandrika Kumaratunga for the presidency on 21 December, indicated his willingness to support the government´s constitutional amendments, which the president has consistently maintained was the key to a political solution to what is often called the "Tamil problem". (Cause for hope is also springing from as far away as Scandinavia, as Norway has expressed its desire to play an intermediary role in talks between the government and the LTTE.)
Wickremesinghe, however, is not as optimistic as the president that the constitutional changes she proposes is the way forward to peace. Pledging his party´s parliamentary support for her proposals, the UNP leader expressed his reservations on the likelihood of the constitutional changes laying the groundwork for peace. "Our stand is that this problem cannot be successfully solved by the process you intend to resolve the issue. But since you don´t have any other solution, we would not block the process".