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GENEVA, Feb. 23 (Xinhuanet) -- The Sri Lankan
government and the Tamil Tiger rebels ended their two-day talks on Thursday and
promised to end all violent acts against each other.
"The government of Sri Lanka and the Liberation
Tigers of TamilEelam (LTTE) are committed to taking all necessary measures to
ensure that there will be no intimidation, acts of violence, abductions or
killings," said a statement issued after the talks, held in an ancient chateau
near Geneva.
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| Sri Lankan chief negotiator Nimal Siripala de Silva (R) with his counterpart from the Tamil Tiger rebel group, Anton Balasingham (L). (Xinhua) | Read by Norwegian mediator Erik Solheim, the
statement also said that the two parties were committed to respecting and
upholding a Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement, which had been violated many
times.
According to Solheim, Norway's minister for
international development, the two parties held very hard, tough but realistic
talks.
They had serious discussions on strengthening the
four year-old ceasefire and confidence had been built between them after the
talks, Solheim said.
The two sides also agreed to continue their talks and
the next session of talks will be held on April 19 to 21 in Switzerland.
"Now the two sides will go back to Sri Lanka and
implement whatthey have agreed during the talks," said Solheim, adding that a
monitoring mission will report on implementation of the above-mentioned
agreements at the next session of talks.
The Switzerland-hosted talks were the first
face-to-face meeting between the Sri Lankan government and the Tamil Tigers
since April 2003 and after an upsurge of violence in the war battered north and
east regions of Sri Lanka.
The ethnic bloodshed in Sri Lanka has lasted three
decades and some 60,000 people have died in the Tigers battle for independence
for the Tamil minority. Enditem |