Seychelles President James Michel was at the Seychelles’ International Airport at Pointe Larue, to welcome the head of state and the Sri Lankan First Lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa, who disembarked from a chartered SriLankan Airlines flight at 1430 local time.
The welcoming party included Vice President Danny Faure, other high government officials as well as the newly accredited Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Seychelles Rajatha Piyatissa and the Honorary Consul of Sri Lanka in Seychelles Errol Fonseka.
This is Rajapaksa’s second visit to the Indian Ocean archipelago following his state visit in June last year.
It comes seven months after Seychelles President James Michel attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Sri Lanka in November last year. Michel went to Sri Lanka on a state visit in August 2012.
The Seychelles Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said that the visit “cements the close relations between the two countries and demonstrates Sri Lanka’s active engagement with Seychelles as a resolute partner in bilateral relations.”
During his three day official visit to the Indian Ocean archipelago Rajapaksa will hold talks with his Seychellois counterpart and together they will lead bilateral discussions between officials of the two countries.
The Sri Lankan President will also open offices of the Bank of Ceylon, Sri Lanka Insurance, Mihin Lanka, the Nawaloka Medical centre as well as the Sri Lankan High Commission in Seychelles on Saturday following the accreditation earlier this week of the first resident Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Seychelles on Tuesday.
The diplomatic office will be based in the Capital City building in the centre of the Seychelles capital of Victoria, the same building which houses the Sri Lankan Bank of Ceylon, which started operating in January this year.
The accreditation of the first resident Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Seychelles and the opening of its first diplomatic office in the archipelago comes after almost 26 years of diplomatic relations between Seychelles and Sri Lanka.
The two states established diplomatic ties on October 3, 1988.
Sri Lanka’s move to set up a mission in Seychelles also follows recent state visits by the presidents of the two states.
During President Michel’s visit to Sri Lanka in 2012, the heads of state of the two Commonwealth member nations witnessed the signing of agreements in various fields such as health, labour and education.
During Rajapaksa’s visit to Seychelles last year at a time the two countries signed more bilateral agreements.
Since then, the agreements have started to materialize for example there has been increased cooperation in fisheries as well as the opening of air access, with Sri Lanka’s airline Mihin Lanka now flying to Seychelles.
Minister of External Affairs Prof. G.L. Peiris, Minister of Higher Education Mr. S.B. Dissanayake, Monitoring MP of the Ministry of External Affairs Mr. Sajin de Vass Gunawardena, Members of Parliament Mr. A.H.M. Azwar, Mr. Lohan Ratwatta, Mr. Udith Lokubandara, Mr. Ranjith de Zoysa and Mr. Thenuka Vidanagamage, Secretary to the President Mr. Lalith Weeratunga and Secretary to the Ministry of External Affairs Mrs. Kshenuka Senewiratne are accompanying the President during the
Seychelles visit.(HC)
news & Pix By:Seychelles News Agency_Sudath Silva