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NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is unlikely to go to Sri Lanka to attend the CHOGM summit in view of the strong sentiments in Tamil Nadu against the visit.
At a meeting of the top brass of the Congress at the residence of the Prime Minister on Friday morning a view emerged that it would be "difficult" for Singh to visit Sri Lanka at this juncture, party sources said.
They said that the meeting took note of the fact that all political parties in Tamil Nadu are opposed to a visit by the Prime Minister to Sri Lanka and that the state assembly had passed a unanimous resolution against India participating in the Commonwealth summit.
The Congress core group meeting at the Prime Minister's residence was chaired by party presidentSonia Gandhi and was attended among others by senior ministers A K Antony, P Chidambaram, Sushilkumar Shinde and Gandhi's political secretary Ahmed Patel.
The sources, however, said that a final decision has not been taken. It could take a day or two for the government to formalize its stand, they indicated.
Political parties in Tamil Nadu and several other outfits have opposed India's participation at any level in the CHOGM meet alleging that the Sri Lankan government had committed gross violation of human rights and had no plans to devolve powers to the ethnic Tamils.
PM likely to skip Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka - The Times of India
Pure vote bank politics by the most corrupt guv. on earth
At a meeting of the top brass of the Congress at the residence of the Prime Minister on Friday morning a view emerged that it would be "difficult" for Singh to visit Sri Lanka at this juncture, party sources said.
They said that the meeting took note of the fact that all political parties in Tamil Nadu are opposed to a visit by the Prime Minister to Sri Lanka and that the state assembly had passed a unanimous resolution against India participating in the Commonwealth summit.
The Congress core group meeting at the Prime Minister's residence was chaired by party presidentSonia Gandhi and was attended among others by senior ministers A K Antony, P Chidambaram, Sushilkumar Shinde and Gandhi's political secretary Ahmed Patel.
The sources, however, said that a final decision has not been taken. It could take a day or two for the government to formalize its stand, they indicated.
Political parties in Tamil Nadu and several other outfits have opposed India's participation at any level in the CHOGM meet alleging that the Sri Lankan government had committed gross violation of human rights and had no plans to devolve powers to the ethnic Tamils.
PM likely to skip Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka - The Times of India
Pure vote bank politics by the most corrupt guv. on earth