India today kept Colombo guessing over the participation of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in the CHOGM Summit here next month.
External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid, who is here on a two-day visit, refrained from giving any commitment on the issue.
"Our commitment to the Commonwealth is complete and profound. Commonwealth CHOGM events are very important for the growth and the sustenance of this very important movement in world governance.
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His was replying to a query by a Sri Lankan journalist on whether Prime Minister Singh will take part in the Summit here from November 15-17.
This year's CHOGM has been mired in controversy, with campaigners including Amnesty International calling for not holding the summit until an investigation is carried out into alleged human rights abuses in the final six months of the nearly three decade long civil war that left thousands dead.
Britain is facing pressure to lead a boycott of the meeting, with Canada indicating that it will not attend unless specific criteria are met.
"I am in touch with the honourable minister and we will keep Sri Lanka posted. I will myself obviously come as part of the delegation as the Foreign Minister. The rest of the announcement has to come from the Prime Minister's office. We will let you know," Khurshid said.
Khurshid today held bilateral talks with his Sri Lankan counterpart G L Peiris on a host of issues.
During a joint news conference with Peiris, he called for "meaningful devolution" of powers to provinces, including Tamil-inhabited areas in the north.
Khurshid also met a TNA delegation and a delegation of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress.