The LTTE roadmap

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The Norwegian facilitators' late-June announcement that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was willing to re-enter peace talks with the government, which LTTE chief spokesman Dr Anton Balasingham confirmed in London, came as welcome news. The London meeting between the LTTE and the facilitators was the first in nearly a month, and the timing of the announcement, coming during a prime ministerial state visit to the United Kingdom, helped to bolster Ranil Wickremesinghe's credibility.

As the LTTE's chief political negotiator, it appears that Balasingham can act with relative authority to help or to hinder the peace process. On this occasion, as on several others, he chose to help. However, accompanying this softening of stance was a call from Balasingham to redefine the peace talk agenda. He would rather address crucial issues relating to the harsh realities of the people in the underdeveloped north and east than pursue guidelines, milestones and roadmaps for what he described as an imaginary solution. Balasingham's statements since the LTTE suspended participation in peace talks on 21 April have uniformly called for a radically "new, innovative" approach to the peace process.

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