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Sri Lanka
Lanka gives Tigers 24 hours to surrender
2009-04-21
[Bangla Daily Star] The Sri Lankan government gave Tamil Tiger fighters and their leader 24 hours to surrender yesterday, after tens of thousands of trapped civilians managed to flee rebel-held territory.

The ultimatum to Tigers supremo Velupillai Prabhakaran and his cadres would run out midday (0630 GMT) Tuesday, said the government's defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella. "We warn Prabhakaran and his cadres to surrender within the next 24 hours," Rambukwella told reporters, without specifying what action would be taken against the cornered rebels.

The warning came as aerial video footage provided by a Sri Lankan spy plane showed more than 35,000 civilians pouring out of the sliver of jungle territory where the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) are making a final stand. The presence of the civilians has been cited by the Sri Lankan military as one of the main reasons preventing a final, all-out assault on the Tigers' position.

Thousands of civilians Monday escaped from the area still held by Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers, signalling that the rebels' "complete defeat" was imminent, President Mahinda Rajapakse said.

Showing AFP aerial video from a military spy plane over the tiny area where the Tigers are staging a last stand, Rajapakse said 35,000 non-combatants had crossed the lines into government-held territory within a five-hour period. The military said the surge of civilians had continued 10 hours after the initial exodus of men, women and children. "The footage clearly shows that the people are defying the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) and escaping. They are running to safety," the president said. "What we are doing is not a military operation, but the world's biggest hostage rescue."

The government has accused the LTTE of using trapped civilians as a human shield, and the president suggested that their escape removed a final obstacle to an all-out military assault. "The process of the complete defeat of the LTTE has just begun," he told AFP. "It is now all over for the Tigers."

The live streaming video from the spy plane showed hordes of people running towards military lines, with some crossing a lagoon in neck-deep water.

The Sri Lankan Defence Ministry said the Tigers killed 17 civilians Monday in a reported suicide bombing aimed at preventing them escaping. "Without the civilians, the LTTE can't survive," airforce chief Roshan Goonetileke told AFP. "They were shamefully holding the civilians as a human shield, but they can no longer stop the civilians from escaping."

He said the rebels had tried to stop the civilians by shooting at them and setting off explosions, but the sheer size of the sudden exodus had appeared to overwhelm the Tiger cadre.

The United Nations had said that up to 100,000 civilians were trapped in the sliver of coastal jungle controlled by the LTTE and living in "dire humanitarian conditions." Both sides in the long-running conflict have traded accusations of targetting civilians, while the international community has repeatedly urged a permanent ceasefire to prevent any further loss of innocent lives. "What I have told the international community is that there is no need for a ceasefire... Just ask the Tigers to allow the civilians to go," Rajapakse said.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said it had evacuated 10,000 sick and their relatives from the rebel-held areas to hospitals in the government-controlled northeast of the island since early February.

Earlier Monday, Sri Lankan security forces said they overran a Tamil Tiger defensive line and rescued at least 5,000 civilians, sparking the mass exodus of 35,000 more. "This (the 5,000) is the biggest single rescue so far and we believe the number of civilians crossing over to our side will increase," said military spokesman Udaya Nanayakkara.

President Rajapakse, meanwhile, said time had finally run out for LTTE supremo Velupillai Prabhakaran, who has not been seen at the guerrillas' public functions for nearly 18 months. "The only thing Prabhakaran can now do is to surrender," the president said. "I don't want him to take cyanide and commit suicide. He has to face charges for his actions."
Posted by:Fred

#2  0630 GMT? That's past hasn't it? Then the final battle has begun.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon   2009-04-21 13:18  

#1  nobody in the central committee will surrender. The sound like "dead enders".
Posted by: 3dc   2009-04-21 00:38  

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