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Sri Lanka
34 Tamil rebels, soldier killed in S Lanka fighting
2008-01-06
Sri Lankan troops killed 34 Tamil Tiger rebels in northern Sri Lanka, the military said on Saturday, following the governmentÂ’s formal scrapping of an already tattered truce in the two-decade civil war.

One soldier was killed and 11 wounded in fighting in the northern Jaffna peninsula, the northern district of Vavuniya and northwestern district of Mannar.

“Fighting on Saturday in Jaffna, Vavuniya and Mannar killed 26 LTTE terrorists. Eight soldiers were also wounded from the fighting,” said a spokesman at the Media Centre for National Security,who asked not to be named in line with the policy.

The military also said fighting on Friday killed eight Tamil Tiger rebels in Jaffna and Mannar, while one soldier was killed and three wounded in three different mine blasts in Vavuniya. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who are seeking to carve out an independent state in north and east Sri Lanka, were not immediately available for comment on the fighting.

There were no independent accounts of how many people were killed or what had happened. Analysts say both sides tend to overstate enemy losses and play down their own. President Mahinda RajapaksaÂ’s administration formally notified mediator Norway late on Thursday it was giving a stipulated 14-day notice period to end the truce.

The Nordic Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, which kept a tally of violations of the truce agreement, was initially seen as a deterrent to human rights abuses by both sides, but became increasingly ineffective as its access in conflict areas was hampered. Its role ends with the ceasefire. The end of the truce dashes hopes of resurrecting collapsed peace talks any time soon. Analysts expect the 70,000 death toll from the 25-year-long civil war to continue its inexorable rise.

Monitoring mission: Sri Lanka urgently needs an international rights monitoring mission following ColomboÂ’s decision to pull out of a ceasefire pact with Tamil rebels, a London-based rights group said Saturday.

The Minority Rights Group International said ColomboÂ’s decision to formally withdraw from the ceasefire deal with the rebels would result in escalating violence and lead to more rights abuses against minority Tamils and Muslims. The Scandinavian monitoring mission appointed to oversee the ceasefire will cease operations January 16 following the governmentÂ’s decision announced earlier this week.

“There is now going to be a greater void in the monitoring and reporting of human rights abuses in the conflict zone,” Minority Rights Group’s director Mark Lattimer said in a statement received here. “The need for international human rights monitors is now ever more crucial,” Lattimer said. Sri Lanka has rejected previous calls for a UN rights mission here.

The rights group accused the Sri Lankan government of reducing security of key minority politicians and called on Colombo to ensure proper protection for minority political leaders. The statement came after opposition Tamil lawmaker T. Maheswaran was gunned down earlier this week in Colombo as he prayed at a Hindu Temple.
Posted by:Fred

#1  result in escalating violence and lead to more rights abuses against minority Tamils and Muslims.

Gosh, the fact that the minority Tamils caused the cease-fire to end themselves totally escapes them, eh? This disconnect between cause and effect totally escapes me.
Posted by: gromky   2008-01-06 12:34  

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