UKboy wrote: tubal wrote: dimithri wrote:
I think, this is not only credit clearance. Foreign selling are high these days.All Asian markets are down.This is Muammar Gaddafi ‘s case.
Foreign selling has been high for a long long time. It has been constantly highlighted here but most people chose to ignore it and people are still living in a dream world saying they will be back with a bang.
Hahaha true true.
Come Tubal we are Sri Lankans isnt it? We like to follow things blindly, then knocked down & finally crying..
Otherwise how come we have sooo many magicians, fortune tellers etc in our tiny island.
We always try to keep away from the bitter reality.
The diplomatic community in Colombo is abuzz with speculation about the telephone call that beleaguered Libyan leader and Lanka’s ally Muammar Gaddafi made to President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Friday. Rajapaksa’s secretariat was only willing to share that he advised Gaddafi to look after his people’s i
nterests and ensure peace in his country.
"Establish peace in Libya as soon as possible and safeguard the lives of Libyan people," Rajapaksa was quoted as telling Gaddafi by media advisor Bandula Jayasekara.
State-run Libyan TV confirmed the conversation between the two leaders. "The Sri Lankan president asked the brother leader to inform him about the current developments in Libya," a BBC report quoting state run Al-Jamahiriya TV said.
But there was no word about the reason behind the sudden phone call at a time when the Libyan dictator was facing a fast-spreading popular uprising at home.
Gaddafi and Rajapaksa have built a warm rapport in the last couple of years after decades of indifferent diplomatic relationship. Rajapaksa was the first Lankan head of state to visit Libya. He did so twice in 2009; once in April even as the civil war between government troops and the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was reaching a climax. It was during Rajapaksa’s Presidency that the Lankan embassy was opened in the Libyan capital, Tripoli.
IN January, Rajapaksa’s son and Lanka’s youngest Parliamentarian, Namal, led a delegation of Members of Parliament to Libya where he met Gaddafi.
Meanwhile, the government said it has chartered a flight to evacuate its nationals working in Libya. The charter flight carrying 400 workers will arrive in Sri Lanka this weekend. Already 160 workers have returned to the country.
There were about 1200 Sri Lankans working in Libya and many of them now want to be repatriated. The Sri Lanka Foreign Employment Bureau is making the logistics with the External Affairs Ministry to bring back the Lankans trapped in Libya. Colombo had also requested New Delhi’s help in evacuating some of its citizens.