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Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, opening the Defence Seminar 2012, said much progress had been made since the end of the war in the five important areas of reconstruction, resettlement, rehabilitation, reintegration and reconciliation. He said there would be no demilitarisation in the Northern Province, though the number of troops there had been reduced by about 21,000. He said the troops would remain at strategic locations for security purposes, but their presence would be non-intrusive with law and order being handled by the police.
Some Government leaders accused the Tamil National Alliance parliamentarians of having been proxies for the LTTE and now being the mouth piece of the international Tamil Diaspora. Whatever the Government leaders may say, the TNA MPs were elected by the people of the North, and therefore they represent the people. Despite local and international demands for immediate elections to the Northern Provincial Council to discern the will of the people, the Government says it will not hold elections there till September next year. Instead the Government is conducting early elections to the Eastern, North Central and Sabaragamuwa Provincial Councils. Opposition leaders and independent analysts say most people – suffering from the soaring cost of living, the criminalisation of politics and other problems – did not want these elections. The National Bhikku Front said recently the elections were not being conducted by the Elections Department but more by the ruling UPFA. The Elections Commissioner himself has admitted he is helpless and has no powers to prevent the blatant abuse of state property and human resources for the benefit of the ruling alliance. The Police also are unable to prevent the violation of election laws because under the 18th Amendment there is no Independent Police Commission or an Independent Elections Commission.