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Lankave minissu echchara moda naaa .... bada gana vithrak hithna minissu naaa....
SF horek .......
London: A former Tory adviser who was sacked for making a controversial remark about London’s Caribbean population is one of the
masterminds behind the presidential election campaign of General Sarath Fonseka.
James
McGrath, who has worked for David Cameron, Boris Johnson, the London mayor, and George Osborne, the shadow chancellor, was in Gen. Fonseka’s campaign war-room, at night on election-day, compiling alleged reports of intimidation by supporters of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and advising on strategy in the run-up to yesterday’s declaration.
If Gen Fonseka had won, much of the credit would have gone to McGrath, who has played a key role in sharpening the campaign since his arrival last month. In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, he said he did not have any qualms about supporting Gen.
Fonseka’s campaign, despite the general facing allegations of war crimes relating to his role in crushing the Tamil insurgency.
He said he believed that Gen. Fonseka would introduce democratic reforms, respect human rights and improve people’s standard of living.
McGrath was forced to resign as Boris Johnson’s chief political adviser in 2008 after he said London’s elderly Caribbeans could leave Britain "if they don’t like it here".
His comment was in response to a question on whether a Johnson victory might cause an exodus.
Although he became a political liability in Britain, his reputation as an effective campaign strategist was restored when he masterminded the 2008 presidential election victory of the Maldives opposition leader Mohamed Nasheed. His role in the Maldives resulted in the former Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the leader of the main opposition group, the United National Party, persuading him to join Gen Fonseka’s campaign.
McGrath helped to draft pledges to abolish the president’s executive powers, restore the primacy of the prime minister and speed up the resettling of Tamils.
"The best way to help countries to grow is to say ‘let’s help you build a democracy’," he said. "I don’t have any qualms about backing an army chief. I’m here on behalf of the leader of the opposition.
"The United National Party is a proud pluralist party, strong on protecting minorities, sometimes to their political cost." —
The Telegraph