A day after the two countries decided to set up the Joint Working Group (JWG), Sri Lankan Member of Parliament M A Sumanthiran said the biggest issue was of "bottom trawling".
"Ninety per cent of the issue is bottom trawling. Both sides have agreed that this is a problem and needs to be stopped. It destroys the seabed and drastically affects the marine life which will lead to no fish in the water," he told reporters at the Lankan High Commission here.
He said that a bill banning bottom trawling will be passed in the Lankan Parliament early next year.
"If this issue is resolved, the rest of the matter can easily be worked out," he said.
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The two sides agreed on setting up the JWG to meet every three months and a meeting between the Ministers for Fisheries every six months.
The delegations would include representatives from the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, the Coast Guards and Navies of both countries. The 1st Ministerial Meeting would be held on January 2, 2017 in Colombo.
"We think this is a significant progress in finding a solution to the outstanding issue which is also an emotional one," the Lankan leader said.
Both governments agreed to the request by the fishermen associations that there should be no violence and no loss of life in the handling of fishermen by the Navies and Coast Guards of the two countries.