India visit doesn’t mean change of stance on Sri Lanka Telecom, Amul says AKD
COLOMBO — The National People’s Power (NPP) cannot be bought by any foreign power or corporation, party leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake said on Sunday (11), claiming the NPP delegation’s recent visit to India does not mean the leftist alliance now supports an investment by India’s Amul or the divestment of Sri Lanka Telecom.
Speaking at a women’s rally held in Anuradhapura, Dissanayake was emphatic that the NPP’s policies have not changed following his widely publicized visit to India at the invitation of the Indian government.
News of Dissanayake meeting with India’s Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar and representatives of Tata and the Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation of India (Amul) made headlines in Colombo.
The NPP, an alliance led by the Marxist-Leninist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) that Dissanayake also leads, had been vocal in its opposition to proposed plans to divest shares of Sri Lanka Telecom (SLT), which at least one Indian firm has expressed interest in, and purported plans to sell Milco, Highland and 31 dairy farms owned by the National Livestock Development Board (NLDB) to Amul.
Historically, the JVP has also been critical of what it once called “Indian expansionism”, particularly at the height of the second violent insurrection the party in Sri Lanka’s south in the late 1980s, which led to thousands of deaths as the then United National Party (UNP) government sought to quell it by any means necessary.
“We have a strong foreign policy,” said Dissanayake speaking at Sunday’s event, emphasizing, “We’re small people, but no powerful nation or corporation can buy us. Just because Mahinda was bought, we can’t be bought.”
Recounting that they had told India that the world has changed and they have changed along with it and that India’s foreign minister agreed and said, India has also changed with the world, Dissanayake scoffed at comments on social media that the party is about to change its tune on Indian investments in the country.
“Some are saying after we went to India that we will support the sale of Telecom or support Amul. No, that will not happen, remember that.
“We will under no circumstances mix up our dealing with foreign countries and meeting their leaders with a national economic policy,” he said.
Dissanayake said the party’s approach to foreign relations is to first formulate a national economic policy and then formulate a foreign policy to secure the international support needed to fortify that economic policy.
“That is our objective,” he said.
Dissanayake accused President Ranil Wickremesinghe of alleged attempts to cancel the presidential election that’s due to be held this year.
“He’s trying various tactics to not have the election. There is definitely going to be a presidential election before October 17 this year,” he said, alleging that the ruling party was forming all sorts of alliances under various names and that former president Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunge has become a party leader once again in 2024.
Questioning, “Why? They’re panicking” he said, “This is the Maha season. By the time of the Yala harvest, there will be a new government.”
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