Ajit K. Doval’s message in Colombo talks

Three weeks ahead of Sri Lanka’s crucial Presidential election National Security Adviser Ajit K. Doval, who arrived in Colombo on Thursday, met prominent Presidential aspirants, apart from political leaders representing the island nation’s Tamil and Muslim minorities.

In his meeting with President Ranil Wickremesinghe, who is seeking a mandate promising “economic stability,” Mr. Doval discussed ongoing economic collaboration between Sri Lanka and India, the Presidential Media Division said.

Mr. Doval also met opposition figures Sajith Premadasa and Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who are the incumbent Mr. Wickremesinghe’s chief challengers in the Sept. 21 contest — that will see nearly three dozen other aspirants vying for the country’s top office. India’s bilateral cooperation in economic development and security interests were among the main talking points in the meetings, sources said.

Mr. Premadasa leads Sri Lanka’s main Opposition party Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB or United People’s Force), a break-away faction of Mr. Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP).

Posting on social media platform ‘X’ after his meeting with the visiting Indian NSA, Mr. Dissanayake, who leads the centre-left National People’s Power coalition, said: “We discussed the political relations between our two countries and the current political situation leading up to the presidential election.”

Mr. Doval also held extensive discussions with leaders representing the country’s ethnic minorities such as Tamils living in the north and east, the Malaiyaha (hill country) Tamils spread across the south and central parts of the island, and the Muslims.

In what political sources took away as a key message from the meetings, Mr. Doval reportedly told the leaders that Tamil parties, currently grappling with internal divisions, could strengthen their position in national politics by working together with a coherent position.

Mr. Doval is said to have remarked that in a democracy, it is “numbers that count,” a Colombo-based political source, who requested anonymity, said on Friday.