Addressing the India-Sri Lanka Society, Samaraweera was critical of the majority Sinhala community for raising unfounded fears over the Indian influence in Sri Lanka.
He said misguided Sinhalese Buddhists who wear their ethnicity and religion on their sleeve and who claim blood relationship to a lion (the Mahavamsa) as related in the mythical history of the Sinhala people, are the ones who fear India the most.
"It is true that most races have founding myths recounting the origins of their races, but these myths are designed to inspire and are not meant to be taken literally.
These neo-fascists seem to see an Indian under every bush and live in eternal fear of Indians swarming into Sri Lanka.
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"Whenever a bridge over the Palk Straits to connect our two nations is proposed, they get into a paranoid frenzy that all of India is waiting to drive over that bridge and make Sri Lanka their home, when trade agreements are discussed they see swarms of Indian doctors and barbers coming across to flood the Sri Lankan market," the foreign minister said.
He was responding to the opposition raised by nationalist groups to the proposed Economic and Technological Cooperation Agreement between Sri Lanka and India.
He said that India needs to be vigilant to the needs, hopes and aspirations of ordinary Lankans, so that recurring issues, like the bottom trawling crisis in the North of Sri Lanka, which not only affects the livelihoods of thousands of poor families and results in dangerous environmental damage to the rich seafloor of the Palk Straits, are resolved.
"My friend and counterpart, the Hon. Sushma Swaraj, will be making her third visit in a year and we welcomed the Indian Foreign Secretary a fortnight ago," he said.