Sri Lanka PM's India Visit: Strengthening Ties Amid Digital Governance Praise

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya is visiting India to strengthen the longstanding relationship between the two neighboring countries. During her trip, she visited her former college and expressed optimism about the future while interacting with students. She strongly advocated for political reform, calling for the elimination of corruption and nepotism in politics. The Sri Lankan leader also praised India's digital governance model as an excellent example that her country hopes to emulate.

Key Points: Sri Lanka PM Harini Amarasuriya Strengthens India Partnership Visit

  • Sri Lankan PM aims to strengthen bilateral relationship during maiden India visit
  • Visited her alma mater Hindu College, expressed hope seeing current students
  • Praised India's digital governance as excellent example for accountability
  • Called for political reform while urging youth not to reject politics
  • Advocated removing corruption and nepotism from political culture
  • Expressed interest in adopting India's digital governance model in Sri Lanka
2 min read

Visit focused on strengthening India-Sri Lanka partnership: PM Harini Amarasuriya

Sri Lankan PM Harini Amarasuriya visits India to strengthen bilateral ties, praises India's digital governance model, and advocates political reform during Delhi University address.

"Let's change what we don't like about politics — the corruption, the nepotism, the distance from normal citizens - PM Harini Amarasuriya"

New Delhi, October 16

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya on Thursday said that her visit to India aims to further strengthen the longstanding relationship between the two neighbouring countries.

Speaking to ANI about the purpose of her visit, Prime Minister Amarasuriya said, "Further increasing and strengthening our (India-Sri Lanka) relationship."

The Sri Lankan leader, who is on her maiden visit to India as Prime Minister, visited Hindu College in New Delhi, where she once studied. During her interaction with students, she reflected on her time at the institution and expressed optimism about the future.

"It is lovely to be back. It is lovely to see the current students. I become so hopeful when I see them," Amarasuriya said.

Earlier in the day, during her address at the University of Delhi, she called for transforming the political culture by removing corruption and nepotism, while urging citizens not to turn away from politics, saying it remains the key to bringing meaningful change.

"Let's change what we don't like about politics -- the cultures of some political parties, the corruption, the nepotism, the distance from normal, ordinary citizens. Let's change that, but don't reject politics, because without politics, you won't be able to change the world, and that's what we have to do," Amarasuriya said.

She also praised India's progress in digital governance, describing it as an example for others to follow. When asked how technology could be leveraged to make governance more participatory, she said, "I think India has done that amazingly well. The digitalisation of governance systems is making the public sector digitalised. I think India is actually an excellent example of how digitalisation can lead to more accountable governments, more accessible, transparent systems."

She added that Sri Lanka is looking closely at India's model to see how similar initiatives could be implemented at home. "This is something that we are looking at. We are looking at India to see how we can do the same thing in Sri Lanka. But I also have a -- my friends sometimes have called me -- a late adapter to technology," she said with a smile.

On Thursday morning, Amarasuriya arrived in New Delhi for her maiden visit to India after assuming office.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Finally some positive news about India-Sri Lanka relations! Both countries have so much to gain from stronger cooperation. Her comments about digital governance are spot on - India has really led the way in this area.
A
Arjun K
While I appreciate the positive tone, I hope this visit actually leads to concrete outcomes. Too often these diplomatic visits are just photo ops without real progress on issues like fishing rights and trade barriers.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech governance, it's great to see India's digital initiatives getting international recognition. The UPI system and Aadhaar have truly revolutionized how citizens interact with government services.
M
Meera T
Her message about not rejecting politics but reforming it is so important! Young people in India also need to hear this - we can't bring change by staying away from the system completely.
V
Vikram M
Strong India-Sri Lanka ties benefit the entire South Asian region. Hope this leads to more cultural exchanges and tourism opportunities. The shared Buddhist heritage alone offers so much potential for collaboration.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50