Tamil Tigers strike Sri Lanka capital, naval base 

by Amal Jayasinghe 1 hour, 33 minutes ago 

COLOMBO (AFP) - Tamil Tiger rebels blew up an army bus in Sri Lanka's
capital Thursday, killing at least one soldier, just hours after the
guerrillas said they had stormed a naval base and killed 35 sailors. 

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The escalation in violence came days after the Tigers, who have been
fighting for a separate state since 1972, vowed they would never return to
peace talks unless the government halted a military campaign against them.

Initial investigations suggested that a Tiger suicide bomber on a rigged
motorcycle had rammed into the army bus, but a police spokesman said the
bomb could have been detonated by remote control.

"We are now looking at the possibility that the motorcycle was placed by the
side of the road and detonated as the bus passed," the spokesman said from
the scene of the blast, just outside the capital's sea port.

National Hospital spokeswoman Pushpa Soysa said the driver of the bus died
from his injuries and another soldier was in a critical condition. Four
soldiers and three civilians were brought in for treatment following the
blast.

The attack came just hours after the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
staged a pre-dawn raid on a strategic naval base at Delft, an islet off the
northern Jaffna peninsula.

"During a search operation, we found 35 bodies of Sri Lankan sailors and
weapons," Tiger spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiriyan told AFP by telephone from the
rebel-held Wanni region.

Four rebels were killed in the operation, he said, adding the Tigers had
captured two anti-aircraft guns, two machine guns, one rocket-propelled
grenade launcher and eight automatic assault rifles.

Sri Lanka's defence ministry, however, said in a statement that the attack
was resisted and that 18 rebels were killed for the loss of four sailors.

"Intercepted LTTE communications revealed that 18 Sea Tiger cadres,
including four leaders, had been killed and another large number injured,"
the ministry said.

Each side is known to discount casualty figures claimed by the other. There
is no independent verification because foreign truce monitors have little or
no access to combat areas.

Local officials said a curfew had been imposed in Delft, which has a small
population of fishermen.

In another attack, the Tigers killed three constables from the police
homeguard unit in the northern district of Vavuniya early Thursday, the
defence ministry said.

It said troops had also killed two Tiger rebels in a separate confrontation
in the east of the island.

Fighting has intensified across the island in recent days, and on Wednesday
the International Committee of the Red Cross said it had pulled its staff
away from northern frontlines dividing government and rebel forces.

Sri Lankan troops and Tamil rebels have been locked in combat following the
breakdown of a 2002 Norwegian-arranged truce.

Nearly 5,000 people have died in the past 18 months, and the 35-year-long
separatist conflict has claimed 60,000 lives.

The Tigers' political wing on Sunday said a return to peace talks was out of
the question if government attacks continued. 

Tit-for-tat attacks have left the February 2002 truce in tatters, and both
sides are apparently convinced there is a military solution to the conflict.

 

 
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070524/wl_asia_afp/srilankaunrest_07052412024
9;_ylt=As9eYUqSsgFAg5HdNHDFiNvMWM0F> 

 

 

 



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