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Friday, January 30, 2009

Sri Lanka rejects ceasefire calls

Sri Lanka has said there will be "no ceasefire" with Tamil Tiger fighters, despite growing international fears over the fate of 250,000 civilians trapped by the fighting.

Mahinda Samarasinghe, Sri Lanka's human rights minister, rejected calls for a ceasefire on Friday, vowing to continue the military offensive against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

"There will be no ceasefire," Samarasinghe said.

"We will continue with our military operations and we will continue to liberate areas which had not been liberated so far."

Samarasinghe's announcement came despite a call by Louis Michel, the EU's humanitarian aid commissioner, for a ceasefire to allow trapped civilians to flee the combat zone.

"This is an escalating humanitarian catastrophe. We are extremely worried about the terrible situation facing people trapped in the fighting," Michel said in a statement.

Attack suspended

On Thursday, the government announced it would temporarily suspend its operations in order to allow civilians to flee the fighting.

The military said it would not cease all combat operations, but would stop shooting to allow civilians to get out as it did for a UN convoy on Thursday that carried out 226 seriously wounded people.

The Sri Lankan government pulled out of a Norwegian-brokered truce with the Tigers a year ago, and has since been battling to dismantle the rebel's de facto mini-state in the north.

Following months of heavy fighting, government troops have captured the Tiger's political capital of Kilinochchi and, later, the Tamil Tiger bastion of Mullaittivu on the northeast coast.

Government forces say they have confined the Tamil Tigers into a 300 square kilometres pocket of territory in Mullaittivu district.

Humanitarian relief organisations say that about 250,000 civilians are still trapped in the rebel-held area.

Tony Birtley, Al Jazeera's correspondent, reporting from Sri Lanka, said that in general civilians did not appear to be fleeing the fighting.

"The military are saying they're not coming because the Tamil Tigers are refusing to allow them out, that they are using them as a human shield. There are even stories of mines being put around their settlements to stop them from leaving," Birtley reported.

"Of course, the Tigers say that people are scared to come because they may be abused by the army, they may be killed by the army and they'll almost certainly go into a camp to be interrogated by the army.

"It's very unclear why [civilians are not leaving], but these people have spent a long long time living under the Tamil Tigers ... and there's a lot of distrust."

'Safe passage'

In an appeal published on a government website, Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka's president, said the Tigers were endangering the civilians' lives by refusing to let them flee.

"I urge the LTTE, within the next 48 hours, to allow free movement of civilians to ensure their safety and security. For all those civilians, I assure a safe passage to a secure environment," he said.

The military also accuses the Tigers of firing artillery from populated areas inside an army-declared no-fire zone with the hope of creating a crisis to build pressure for a truce.

The Tigers deny that and have continually accused the military of firing into the no-fire zone.

The International Committee of the Red Cross has said that hundreds of people have been killed or wounded in the fighting since last week.

The government says that the reported numbers are too high, but it has not provided an exact figure.

It also insists there have been "zero civilian casualties".

More than 70,000 people have been killed in Sri Lanka's civil war, which grew out of complaints by Tamils, who have suffered decades of marginalisation at the hands of successive governments controlled by the Sinhalese majority.

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About This Blog

Velupillai Prabhakaran

The rest of the world might never understand the violence Velupillai Prabhakaran stood for, but its imprint on Sri Lanka is wide and deep. For 26 years, the elusive leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had waged war with the government to win an independent homeland, or eelam, for the island's Tamil minority. The struggle claimed more than 70,000 lives--including, on May 18, Prabhakaran's. The government says he was killed, along with 17 of his trusted lieutenants, while fleeing an army ambush.

Prabhakaran, 54, was born to a middle-class family on the Jaffna Peninsula. Incensed by discrimination against Tamils and radicalized by a militant grade-school teacher, Prabhakaran founded the LTTE in 1976, a year after a group he headed claimed responsibility for killing Jaffna's mayor. By 1983 the guerrilla movement--which pioneered suicide bombings and the recruitment of child soldiers--escalated the fighting into a civil war.

At the height of his power earlier this decade, Prabhakaran led a de facto government that controlled vast swaths of territory and boasted its own systems of taxes, roads and courts. As the army closed in, he allegedly used thousands of Tamil civilians as human shields. By the final days, just 250 LTTE members remained. They died too, along with the dream of eelam.

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