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Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan troops seize rebel training camps
2009-01-12
Sri Lankan soldiers captured two Tamil Tiger rebel camps amid heavy fighting while the air force launched attacks on retreating rebels as government troops pressed ahead with their offensive against the guerrillas in the north, the military said on Sunday.

The military has achieved a string of major victories against the rebels in recent months -- including the capture of the Tamil Tiger administrative capital of Kilinochchi a week ago. The government has vowed to crush the separatist guerrillas and end the Indian Ocean island nation's 25-year-old civil war in the coming months. Air force fighter jets bombed retreating Tamil rebels on Sunday and destroyed a rebel boat in a lagoon near the village of Chundikulam on the Jaffna peninsula, the military said in a statement.

The Sri Lankan defence ministry has said the security forces are ready to deal a "decisive blow" to the rebels after the capture of the strategic Elephant Pass on Friday.

As the soldiers advance into the rapidly shrinking rebel territory, the rebels retreat southward to their last stronghold of Mullaittivu where they were expected to make a stand after months of government offensives. On Saturday, soldiers captured a guerrilla camp in the village of Aiyamperumal in Mullaittivu, the military said in a separate statement.

Soldiers separately seized a rebel training camp near the village of Mulliyaweli, also in Mullaitivu, on Friday. There were underground bunkers and an auditorium in the camp, the statement said.

Both military statements did not provide details of casualties.

Separately, the military said soldiers found three bodies of Tamil rebels killed in fighting in Waddakachchi in the Kilinochchi district. Rebel spokesmen could not be reached for comment on the fighting. Independent verification of battlefield reports released by the two sides is not possible because journalists are barred from the war zone.

Civilians: Meanwhile, the pro-rebel TamilNet website reported that four civilians were killed on Saturday night in a government artillery assault on a rebel-held village in Mullaitivu.

Military spokesman Brig Udaya Nanayakkara denied the rebel claim and said the military attacks only identified rebel positions. Human rights groups have warned that casualties among the hundreds of thousands of civilians living in the shrinking pocket of rebel territory are likely to mount as the government closes in on the insurgents. The rebels have been fighting since 1983 to create an independent homeland for ethnic minority Tamils, who have suffered decades of marginalisation by governments controlled by the Sinhalese majority.

The conflict has killed more than 70,000 people. Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse said in a New Year's address that 2009 would be the year of "heroic victory" over the Tigers. The leader of the Tiger rebels, Velupillai Prabhakaran, vowed in a radio broadcast late last year to fight on, and his guerrillas have frustrated government hopes of victory many times before.
Posted by:Fred

#2  WORLD MIL FORUM [paraph = Google Chinglish translation]> IIUC CHINESE MILITARY, ECONOMIC AID ALLOWS SRI LANKA TO CONTROL THEIR OWN COUNTRY; + [also IIUC]INDIAN MEDIAS: CHINA's STRATEGIC REDEPLOYMENT OF TWO PLA ARMY DIVISIONS TO AKSAI CHIN REGION ILLUSTRATES "CHINA'S NATIONAL HOSTILITY"[Face] TO INDIA.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-01-12 20:50  

#1  any sign of the 100K civilians missing from kilonochi
Posted by: Abu do you love   2009-01-12 16:05  

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