Dokument #1048559
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
The main JVP group is reportedly not
acknowledged by the Soviet Union, but there are splinter groups
which may be backed by the Soviet government. [ Yearbook on
International Communist Affairs 1988, (California: Hoover
Institution Press, 1988), p. 223.] According to a Professor of
Political Science knowledgeable in the area, Moscow-oriented
communist parties in Sri Lanka have tried to undermine and
infiltrate the JVP. According to the Professor, the current Sri
Lankan government looks upon the Marxist-Leninist parties with
"considerable hostility". However, the governments' attitudes
towards Marxist parties have varied historically. The 1970-1977
United Front government included Marxist-Leninist parliamentarians,
although they lost most of their seats in the 1977 elections. The
Professor states that the government does not presently consider
Marxist parties a threat because of their poor electoral
backing.
According to External Affairs, non-Soviet citizens do not need a
visa to exit the Soviet Union, although they may be told by the
authorities from which point of departure they must leave.
Please find attached copies of the
following documents which provide information related to the
requested subjects:
-Yearbook on International Communist
Affairs 1988, (California: Hoover Institution Press, 1988),
pp.222-223.
-Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements, (London: Longman, 1988), pp. 350-351 (section on the
JVP).
-"Taming terrorists is his only hope", in
The Globe and Mail, 3 April 1989, p. A7.