Lanka Newspapers

Sri Lanka News Updates with Discussions

Sri Lankan News & Discussions

Search All News and Discussions  

Return to LNP



This News Site:

Lanka Newspapers is the largest Sri Lanka News forum online. Thousands of Sri Lankans from around the world gather here daily to discuss current news events of Sri Lanka. Join Today!

Mangala in secret talks with JVP
Full News Article
Page  < Prev   | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | 11  | 12  | 13  | 14  | 15  |  >Next
JRJayawardena
Senior Member

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 4919
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 01:47:34 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Shall we start a moment to stop those $s coming to SL:):):)


Malli,

I'm not in the 'Yudha Virodhi Peramuna' (National Alliance for anti-war) :) :) :) (Guess Kumar Rupasinghe is the man to contact for that :) :) :)

I'm heading to bed malli, see you later on take care!!

JRJ
Revy
Senior Member

Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 7846
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 01:55:19 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Along with twin engined boats that only have one engine, we have more hillarity from your MoDaya ministry:

SL Army troops repulse LTTE mortar attack- Jaffna
SL Army troops thwarted an LTTE mortar attack at the Kilali, Forward Defence Lines(FDL), Jaffna on Monday the 12th of February, at 11.30a.m.

The SL Army troops has retaliated and successfully repulsed the LTTE offensive. Meantime, the casualty figures to the terrorists are yet to be confirmed said a defence official.

According to military reports three soldiers were killed, while another sustained injuries. The injured soldier was later transferred to the Army Base Hospital in Palally.


Seems three goons 'repusled' the mortar rounds with their bodies LOL
Edited By - Revy - 13 Feb 2007 01:56:05 GMT
Ruchira
Senior Member

Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 1936
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 01:55:42 GMT  Report for Abuse   
I'm not in the 'Yudha Virodhi Peramuna' (National Alliance for anti-war) :) :) :) (Guess Kumar Rupasinghe is the man to contact for that :) :) :)


he is a pro $ man I'm asking you to start a movement to stop those $s Coming to SL.Please talk to me I will definitely join with you.Please think twice about my proposal b4 you sleep
SenaM
Senior Member

Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 1034
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 02:29:24 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Best place for Mangala and Anura ..

Mangala and Anura should both go to UK, and remain with CBK. MS could be CBK's companion, accompanying her where-ever she goes, holding a protective 'umbrella' over her .. provide 'shade' for her delicate skin, and try to 'hold-back' the aging process ..

Anura can 'sit at her feet' .. and try to learn how he could ascend the political stakes in SL .. become PM ..

(She has enough money .. diverted from diverse 'operations' in SL .. to support both these people in luxury .. to the end of their days).
Edited By - SenaM - 13 Feb 2007 02:30:22 GMT
Revy
Senior Member

Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 7846
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 02:30:58 GMT  Report for Abuse   
She has enough money .. diverted from diverse 'operations' in SL .. to support both these people in luxury .. to the end of their days


Exactly, but not just her all your corrupt politicians are like that, which is why we Tamils want no part of the sorry state.
Thambi
Senior Member

Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 6720
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 02:38:27 GMT  Report for Abuse   
House Democrats unveil text of Iraq resolution opposing Bush's troop buildup plan

By ANNE FLAHERTY
Associated Press Writer
AP Photo
AP Photo/MAYA ALLERUZZO
U.S. Video
Advertisement
Click to learn more...
PHOTO GALLERY
AP Photo

Latest photos from Iraq
Multimedia
Anti-War Protests: Then and Now
3,000 Fallen: A Look at U.S. Deaths in Iraq
Reaction to Saddam's Execution
Saddam Hussein, 1937-2006
Soldier Diagnosed Before Attack
U.S. Conflicts Since WWII
Civilians Killed in Haditha
Coalition Casualties
Latest Photos from Iraq
Recent Stories
Iran's hard-line leader softens his tone, saying he wants dialogue, not confrontation on Iraq

Car bombs shatter Baghdad's oldest and largest market; at least 78 killed

U.S. military deaths in Iraq at 3,125 Monday, according to count by The Associated Press

Bush makes fresh pitch for free-trade policies as way to keep economy healthy

Bush honors black history through tales of today's success

Documents
Executive Summary: DOD Inspector General on Pre-Iraq War Intelligence Activities(2/9/2007)
Unclassified National Intelligence Estimate Summary on Iraq (2/2/2007)
Inspector General Report on Iraq Reconstruction (1/31/2007)
Iraq Study Group Report (12/2006)
Senate Prewar Intelligence (9/2006)
Pentagon Report Iraq, (8/2006)
Congressional Report on Appropriations, (4/2006)
Latest News
New transportation committee chairman claims win on old solar energy measure

House Democrats unveil text of Iraq resolution opposing Bush's troop buildup plan

$1.3 billion House tax break package sweetens minimum wage measure

Dingell seeks White House testimony on its proposed fuel economy standards

Text of the House Iraq resolution

Interactives
The 110th Congress' First 100 Hours

Sen. Max Baucus: The AP Interview

Congressional Scandals

Mark Foley Scandal Timeline

Harry Reid Land Deal

Lobbyists Family Ties

Congressional Leadership Financial Disclosure

Congressional Pay

Congressional Pensions

Buy AP Photo Reprints

WASHINGTON (AP) -- House Democrats rolled out their resolution opposing President Bush's troop increase in Iraq on Monday, setting up a likely rebuke in a political landscape turned upside-down since Congress' overwhelming 2002 endorsement of force against Saddam Hussein.

Lawmakers are expected to vote on a resolution by week's end opposing Bush's decision to send 21,500 more troops to Iraq. The measure states simply that the House 'will continue to support and protect' troops serving in Iraq but 'disapproves' of the troop buildup.

Debate was to begin Tuesday, and the House vote will mark its first on the war since Democrats won control in the November elections. While the measure is not binding and would not affect the funding of the war, passage would be an embarrassing rejection of Bush's Iraq war policy and could force many Republicans to choose between backing the president or criticizing a deeply unpopular war.

'What the American people want to know is: Does their member of Congress support the president's proposed escalation or do they not?' said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer.

Hoyer, D-Md., told reporters he had heard from about 20 Republicans who said they opposed the troop buildup, and from one Democrat reluctant to support the resolution. The measure's simple language - it totaled just a few dozen words - was crafted to maximize the number of Republicans who would support it and to emphasize support for the troops

While Democrats predicted the measure would pass easily, Republican leaders tried to refocus debate on the measure in hopes of putting Democrats on the defensive.

'This resolution is the first step in the Democrats' plan to cut off funding for American troops who are in harm's way, and their leaders have made this abundantly clear,' said House Republican leader John Boehner, R-Ohio.

Each of the House's 435 members and five delegates will be allotted five minutes to speak on the issue - stretching the debate until midnight most nights until Friday's vote. Democratic leaders said Monday they planned a weeklong debate that would restrict members to a single vote by week's end, barring any amendments or a GOP alternative.

This week's debate will be in sharp contrast to the one in 2002, which authorized Bush to use force if Iraqi President Saddam Hussein did not comply with U.N. weapons inspectors.

That debate resulted in solid margins of support from Republicans and Democrats - a victory for a president buoyed by popular ratings following the Sept. 11 attacks and easily assuring a jittery nation that Hussein posed an imminent threat to the United States.

In October 2002, just over half of the public - 52 percent - approved of Bush's handling of Iraq in Gallup polling.

But Bush now faces a new political landscape. After 47 months of war, more than 3,100 U.S. troops have died and the justification for the invasion - Saddam's ties to al-Qaida and development of weapons of mass destruction - has been discredited. And last November, voters unseated enough Republicans with anti-war candidates to hand the reins to Democrats, who are united against the war if not what to do about it.

Public approval of Bush's handling of Iraq is now at 32 percent, the lowest in AP-Ipsos polling. And the latest intelligence estimate on Iraq found that Iraqi leaders will be hard pressed to craft a lasting political settlement - a key component of Bush's strategy - in the next year and a half.

In 2002, midterm elections were a month away and control of both chambers up for grabs when Congress held its most heated debates on whether to invade Iraq. Many did not want to be on the opposite side from a popular president if war came, and the White House played on domestic political concerns to roll up big margins of support in both houses.

After quarreling among themselves on Iraq over the summer, Republicans lined up dutifully behind Bush when the final votes were tallied. With the economy stagnant, consumer confidence shaken and the stock market in the dumps, the Iraq crisis offered a common rallying theme.

House Democrats were divided on the issue. Hoyer voted in favor of authorizing the war, whereas Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who has since risen to power as House speaker, voted against it. But overall, Democrats were eager to vote quickly and get back to their states and districts to campaign, hoping there was still time to change the subject back to domestic issues like prescription drugs and Social Security.

Ultimately, Bush prevailed by a 296-133 vote in the GOP-run House and a 77-23 vote in the Democratic-led Senate. Only six House Republicans and one GOP senator - Sen. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island - voted against the president.

This time, midterm elections are again playing a role in the debate - but not in Bush's favor. Last November, Chafee and other Republicans were ousted by voters angered by the war. And with every House member up for re-election in 2008, Republicans are questioning whether to stick with a lame-duck president who has lost favor with the American public.

Rep. Walter Jones of North Carolina, one of 215 Republicans who voted to authorize force in Iraq, is now co-sponsoring the Democratic resolution condemning the troop buildup.

As the House moved toward debate this week, Senate Republicans opposed to Bush's Iraq plan sought to revive a vote on a similar resolution that was stalled by GOP procedural moves last week.

Sen. John Warner, R-Va., proposed Monday attaching his resolution to a must-pass budget bill. While Warner was considered unlikely to be successful, his proposal suggested he was not backing down.

'I, like my colleagues, intend to do everything in our power as United States senators to ensure a full and open debate of the Iraq war here on the Senate floor in front of the American people,' said Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., who supports Warner's resolution.

Edited By - Thambi - 13 Feb 2007 02:38:54 GMT
Pera
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 5399
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 02:47:44 GMT  Report for Abuse   
People,

JVP will USE Mangala and Ranil to appoint one of their members as the leader of the opposition.

As usual TNA will go shopping for Sinhala politicians (usual practice since GG Ponnambalam) and will be kicked aside once the leader of opposition Hon Weerawanse is elected.

Anura will be doing the donkey dances for the audience.

Cheers

PERA
Edited By - Pera - 13 Feb 2007 02:48:16 GMT
SenaM
Senior Member

Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 1034
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 02:53:08 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Revy

You know how the moneys 'contributed' by the Tamil diaspora .. (collected 'willingly', and 'un-willingly' from them) .. is 'spent' by the 'Tamil mafia', also known as the LTTE ?
stopterro
Senior Member

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1714
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 04:00:08 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Hehe...

lets say you visited your friend...it is called by Ranil 'secret talks'

how many times have you visited your friend and stayed until 10-11 pm....I dont have enough fingers to count...if this is called secret then we dont have mention what can be super secret.

how can you have secret talks if everyone knows what they discussed?

ironic!
Rays123
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 351
Member Profile
13 Feb 2007 04:06:32 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Mangala is wasting his time. Even comparing with the Lalith, Gamini who challenged the Late Premadasa, these three are bunch of jokers. Those Banda's try to go ride on Mangala to gain their lost prestige. At the End some how Banda will survive, Mangala has to go home as a looser.
 Post a reply to this      E-mail this to a friend
Page  < Prev   | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | 11  | 12  | 13  | 14  | 15  |  >Next

(C) 2000-2007 www.lankanewspapers.com - Sri Lankan News & Discussions - Contact Us - RSS Feed - News Archives - src - FAQ
Welcome to the largest news forum on Sri Lanka. This is a discussion table for millions of Sri Lankans living around the world to express their thoughts on the latest Sri Lankan news events. This site is a powerful tool for all Sri Lankan ethnic groups to share information, knowledge and wisdom.