n the run-up to the commencement of President Mahinda Rajapaksa s second term, Sri Lanka  s contemporary achievement received a glowing testimonial from an  important political personality in the East Asian region, the Deputy  Prime Minister and Defence Minister of Singapore, Teo Chee Hean. 
The Singaporean Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister was  delivering the keynote address as guest-of-honour at the 6th  International Conference of South Asia on the theme of  South Asia in  the New Decade: Challenges and Prospects , organised by the Institute of  South Asian Studies (ISAS) of the National University of Singapore  (NUS) which has been rated three years running by the Times Higher  Educational Supplement as one of the world s 25 top universities. 
Speaking on Thursday at the Mandarin Orchard hotel in Singapore, Teo Chee Hian observed: 
`Sri Lanka has emerged from a decades-long civil war, and is  enjoying an economic revival. It is currently the second-fastest growing  Asian economy after China, a fact not lost upon the IMF, which recently  upgraded Sri Lanka to middle income emerging market status. 
Like Brazil, Sri Lanka enjoys an adult literacy rate of just over  90%. Sri Lanka s gross enrolment ratio, which gives an indication of  school attendance, is also comparable to that of China. 
What is particularly noteworthy of Sri Lanka s growth is the  narrowness of its gender gap. In the Global Gender Gap Report 2010  published by the World Economic Forum, which measures gender-based  disparities on economic, political, education and health-based criteria,  Sri Lanka ranked within the top 20, the only South Asian country to do  so. Closing the gender gap is not just an issue of gender equity  it is  also one of harnessing the current human resource potential, and  uplifting the potential of the next generation. The most important  determinant of a country s competitiveness is its human talent   the  skills, education and productivity of its workforce. In any country,  women account for half of the current talent base and have a key role in  nurturing the next generation.` 
Deputy PM Teo previously served as Singapore s Minister for  Education from 1997-2003, and Minister for the Environment from 1996-97.  Prior to entering politics, he served as Singapore s Chief of Navy from  1991-92. 
Courtesy - lankanewspapers.com