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Sri Lanka president-elect wants peace talks
(AP)
Updated: 2005-11-19 00:44

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse, elected the new president of Sri Lanka by a slim margin, said Friday he wanted to hold face-to-face peace talks with the secretive leader of the rebel Tamil Tigers in an effort to end two decades of civil war.


Prime Minister and winner of the tightly contested presidential elections Mahinda Rajapakse greets supporters as he enters the office of the Election Commissioner to accept the result of the presidential election in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Friday, Nov. 18, 2005. Rajapakse won the presidential elections by a slim margin, and said Friday that once in office he wants to hold face-to-face peace talks with the secretive leader of the rebel Tamil Tigers. [AP]

Throughout the campaign, Rajapakse took a hard line on the rebels, and his victory in Thursday's vote clearly was aided by a Tiger boycott that kept thousands of minority Tamils, who overwhelmingly supported his dovish opponent, away from the polls.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Rajapakse said he wanted to hold talks with Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran.

It is a pledge that Rajapakse made throughout the campaign, but one that may be easier said than done — Prabhakaran rarely sees anyone outside a tight inner circle and makes only a single public appearance a year on Heroes' Day, a Tiger holiday honoring guerillas killed in the civil war.

Still, asked about his plans for Sri Lanka's stalled peace process, Rajapakse said: "I am ready to talk to the (Tigers), and I am ready to meet Prabhakaran."
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