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Sirisena calls for ‘uniting hearts, minds’ of Lankans

Calling for a national reconciliation, Sri Lanka’s new President Maithripala Sirisena on Wednesday regretted that past leaders had failed to bring together the “hearts and minds” of communities since the end of the war against the LTTE.

Addressing the island’s 67th anniversary of independence here that saw the country’s main Tamil party TNA attend the celebrations for the first time in decades, Sirisena asked: “Can we be truly happy with our achievements since 1948?”

“All leaders must take the blame for their failures,” in an apparent reference to his predecessor and two-term president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was despised for allegedly sidelining the Tamil and Muslim minorities in order to retain his popularity with the majority Sinhalese.

His speech was in stark contrast to those of Rajapaksa, who typically celebrated the country’s military victory over the Tamil Tigers after the nearly three decade-long conflict in 2009.

“The biggest challenge today is to unite the hearts of the people of the north and south through a national reconciliation process,” Sirisena said at the ceremony, where a “declaration of peace” was also read out to pay respect to all those who were killed in the civil war. The LTTE, based in the northern and eastern parts of the country, were fighting for an independent state for Sri Lanka’s minority Tamils.

“We ventured into massive physical development since the end of the war in 2009. But we failed to bring together the hearts and minds of communities,” said Sirisena, who trounced Rajapaksa in the January 8 polls. At the same time, he said “it is not proper to point fingers at each other”.

“All political parties and leaders who governed this country must look at themselves and meditate on their role and look to the future,” Sirisena said. 
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