UNP parliamentarian and Colombo District leader
Ravi Karunanayake yesterday confirmed that there was a policy
shift in the UNP on the ethnic issue.
The UNP will be abandoning its federalist stand
and abrogating the Oslo declaration. It will also be reviewing
the 2004 Ceasefire Agreement in order to suit the present ground
situation.
This decision has not been ratified or even
discussed at the UNP Political Affairs Committee or the Working
Committee as yet.
However, Karunanayake confirmed that the policy
shift is under serious consideration and that party leader Ranil
Wickremesinghe had proposed the change in the stand of the UNP
at the commemoration of the 101st birth anniversary of J. R.
Jayewardene held last week.
Karunanayake categorized this policy shift as a
case of the UNP "repositioning" itself.
When asked whether this was not an opportunistic
shift of policy, Karunanayake said that it was not so because it
is the UNP that had made representations to the All Party
Representatives Committee to the effect that it should not get
bogged down over semantics.
Karunanayake stressed that it was necessary for
the UNP to "reposition" itself with regard to the ethnic issue
because the way the public perceived what they said had resulted
in repeated defeats.
Our sources indicate there is wide spread
support for this policy shift within the UNP.
The UNP yesterday said it had never proposed
Federalism as a solution to the national issue. It was for
devolution of power to the maximum possible level while
protecting the rights of all ethnic groups, Colombo District UNP
Parliamentarian Ravi Karunanayake told a press conference at the
office of the Leader of the Opposition. It was vital to find a
political solution to the problem in the North and East without
conceding even an inch of land to the LTTE, he stressed.
"We had never come to an agreement with the LTTE
or any other party to go for a Federal solution and the UNP had
never accepted or proposed a Federal solution to the problem of
the North and East. It was only a creation by the media and not
by us," he said.
"Our party stands for maximum devolution of
power and when the Ceasefire Agreement was signed by the UNP
government of 2001 we did not have a Federal solution in mind,
but only a mode of maximum devolution of power to solve the
problem," he said.
He said the UNP was always prepared to amend the
CFA or to go for any change within these ambits to arrive at a
solution to the problem. The UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe had
briefed the diplomatic community in Colombo, yesterday on the
political solution of the UNP to settle the ethnic problem, he
said.