New Delhi: Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse will be the guest of honour at Thursday's closing ceremony of the Delhi Commonwealth Games, where participants include nations deeply critical of his rights record.
"I can confirm that the Sri Lankan president will be the guest of honour. He will also be meeting his Indian counterpart and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh," a senior Indian foreign ministry official said on Tuesday.
Rajapakse will be the chief guest with Britian's Prince Edward, who will close the games on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II -- the head of the Commonwealth.
Britain, along with prominent Commonwealth members Australia and Canada, has called for an independent probe into allegations of rights abuses during the Sri Lankan military's final victory last year in its long civil war with Tamil Tiger rebels.
Colombo had been slated to host the Commonwealth heads of government meeting in 2011, but interventions by Britain and Canada, which have large Tamil communities, resulted in the venue being shifted to Perth in Australia.
A statement from the Sri Lankan foreign ministry Tuesday had confirmed that Rajapakse would be "the guest of honour", but the text was later corrected to read "an honoured guest."
The defeat of the Tamil Tigers ended nearly 40 years of separatist conflict in Sri Lanka, but rights groups say thousands of civilians were killed in the final onslaught against the rebels.
Sri Lanka has rejected all calls for an independent international war crimes investigation.
"I can confirm that the Sri Lankan president will be the guest of honour. He will also be meeting his Indian counterpart and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh," a senior Indian foreign ministry official said on Tuesday.
Rajapakse will be the chief guest with Britian's Prince Edward, who will close the games on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II -- the head of the Commonwealth.
Colombo had been slated to host the Commonwealth heads of government meeting in 2011, but interventions by Britain and Canada, which have large Tamil communities, resulted in the venue being shifted to Perth in Australia.
Advertisement
The defeat of the Tamil Tigers ended nearly 40 years of separatist conflict in Sri Lanka, but rights groups say thousands of civilians were killed in the final onslaught against the rebels.
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
CWG Baton handed over to Glasgow at 1.8 million pound ceremony Oz media on CWG: We fell in love with Delhi CWG: India being too self-congratulatory? Woman On Scooter With 2 Kids Punched, Left Bleeding In Pune Road Rage Case After Retest, Haryana NEET Centre With Most Top Scorers Gave This Result... The 'Fake' CrowdStrike Worker Who Took Credit For Biggest-Ever IT Outage Dalit Teen Gang-Raped In UP, 1 Arrested: Cops Man Killed After He Objects To Barking Of Pet Dogs In Madya Pradesh Woman On Scooter With 2 Kids Punched, Left Bleeding In Pune Road Rage Case Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.