| Sri Lanka president demands new truce with Tigers(AFP)
 Updated: 2005-11-25 14:51
 
 Sri Lanka's new President Mahinda Rajapakse has demanded a new ceasefire deal 
with Tamil Tiger rebels in the ethnically troubled island and "transparent" 
monitoring of the Norwegian-brokered truce. 
 Rajapakse, in his first policy statement to parliament following his election 
victory last week, said he wanted to institute a new peace process that would 
not tolerate "terrorism" and recruitment of child soldiers. 
 The president did not spell out any details, but said the peace process 
between the previous government and the Tamil Tigers did not make progress 
because other stakeholders were left out. 
 "I will have an open and transparent peace process, which will respect human 
rights. It will not allow child recruitment," he said on Friday. "The ceasefire 
agreement will be amended so as to ensure that acts of terrorism would not be 
permitted." 
 The president said he was ready to open talks with the Liberation Tigers of 
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) but rejected a long-standing Tiger demand for the recognition 
of a traditional homeland for the minority Tamils. 
 "Sri Lanka will be the traditional homeland of all its people -- Sinhalese, 
Tamils, Muslims, Malays and Burgers," the president said. 
 He said a solution to the island's decades-old Tamil separatist conflict 
would be found within a "unitary state," a U-turn for his Sri Lanka Freedom 
party that earlier agreed to devolve powers under a federal structure. 
 In 2002, his party said it was willing to turn the country into a federal 
state in exchange for ethnic peace and to end three decades of bloodshed that 
has cost over 60,000 lives. 
 There was no immediate response from the LTTE to the president's statements. 
 The election of Rajapakse, dubbed the "war candidate" by the Tamil Tigers 
during the campaign, had fanned fears among some diplomatic observers that Sri 
Lanka could return to civil war. A truce has been in effect since 2002. 
 Rajapakse said his administration was committed to peacefully ending the 
conflict and would pursue peace talks but they would not only be between the 
government and the Tigers. 
 "Our agenda, which shall be open and transparent, shall include vital 
concerns such as renouncing separatism, demilitarisation, discussion towards a 
final solution and the implementation of such a solution." 
 "Talks are not going to be easy," he said. "But the path we choose is talks." 
 Rajapakse came to power last week with the backing of two nationalist 
hard-line parties -- the Marxist JVP, or People's Liberation Front and the all 
Buddhist monks' party of JHU -- which oppose any concessions to Tamil Tigers. 
 The two hardline parties also oppose peacebroker Norway's role and want 
Scandinavian truce monitors sent home, accusing them of siding with the 
Tigers. 
 
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