Delhi may ignore Jayalalithaa
demand on training Lankan forcesTamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa’s demand to scrap
training courses for Sri Lankan Air Force personnel is unlikely to find takers
in New Delhi because Sri Lanka and India, just last week, have decided to
enhance cooperation in security issues.
Asked for a reaction, a senior official said that Sri Lanka
could not react to the demands of a Chief Minister of an Indian State. All
bilateral issues were discussed and decided by Colombo and New Delhi, and
hence, there was no need to respond, the official said.
When there is an outside factor that affects training, as had
happened earlier, the defence institutions moved the trainees to another
facility in a ‘neutral’ State.
Despite relations between the two countries not being at its
best in recent times following the Indian vote for a resolution against Sri
Lanka at the United Nations Human Rights Council in March, defence and security
cooperation between the two countries are firmly looking up.
Indian National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon, after a
meeting with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, and Defence Secretary
Gotabaya Rajapaksa, among others, told the Indian media stationed in Colombo
last Friday, that security related issues were indeed discussed. “We also
discussed maritime cooperation and other security related issues. It was agreed
that we could take this further. Sri Lanka is our close neighbour, with whom we
enjoy a multifaceted and dynamic relationship. We look forward to strengthening
and further developing this engagement,” he said.
After the Defence Secretary-level talks in December 2010, India
had made available additional slots in Indian Armed Forces training
institutions, apart from agreeing to hold bilateral exercises. The Indo-Sri
Lanka Naval exercises were subsequently held off Trincomalee. India is also in
the process of building two Off Shore Patrol vessels for Sri Lanka.
India’s peacetime defence engagement with Sri Lanka was shaped
in a series of talks after the fall of the Tamil Tigers in May 2009. The talks,
which began at staff-level in the Army, Navy and Air Force then, has also seen
the service Chiefs of all three Indian Armed Forces visit Sri Lanka to firm up
this relationship. The Defence Secretary level talks are structured,
institutionalised and periodic. It caters to the defence concerns of both
countries, apart from taking into consideration the larger question of security
issues in the region..
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