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Friday, February 13, 2009

RPT-Wounded Sri Lankans flee harrowing days in war zone

TRINCOMALEE, Sri Lanka, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Tamil Tigers rebels shot at civilians trying to flee fighting in Sri Lanka's northern war zone, wounded witnesses said on Thursday after escaping with the help of the Red Cross.

The military says at least 32,000 people have fled the war zone in the Indian Ocean island's northeast, where troops aim to deal a death blow to separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) they have cornered there and end a 25-year-old civil war.

On Tuesday, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) ferried out 240 sick and wounded people by boat from the Tiger-held coastal village of Puttumatalan.

Among those was Sister Mary Colostica, a 74-year-old Catholic nun, who told how she and five other nuns shepherded more than 2,000 civilians from village to village as they tried to escape fighting and shelling.

First-hand accounts from the war zone are difficult to get because most civilians who flee are put into military-run camps that are off-limits to outsiders.

"When we tried to leave, the LTTE didn't allow civilians to leave and said only we can leave," she told Reuters from a hospital in Trincomalee, the eastern port where she and the others were taken by the Red Cross.

"So we stayed back with the civilians," she said. They stayed around a makeshift field hospital that had to be moved away from the rapidly advancing fighting, until they hit the shores of the Indian Ocean at Puttumatalan.

The ICRC said 16 patients were killed by artillery fire there on Monday. Another boatload of 160 patients was due to leave Puttumatalan on Thursday, the ICRC said.



NUN SHOT

Sister Mary, who was being treated for shrapnel wounds, described the crisis in the north as worse than what she saw during the 2004 tsunami, which killed about 30,000 people on the island.

"At least 10 to 15 people die a day and no one is there to bury them," she said. "The LTTE fired from close to civilians. We had objected, but that didn't work."

The entire war zone has been sealed off to journalists and most aid workers. Humanitarian agencies estimate about 250,000 people are trapped there.

The government says the number is half of that, while the United Nations is planning for an exodus of 150,000 people.

Another nun, Sister Louise, said the LTTE fired at people repeatedly when they begged to leave.

"When we tried to escape with civilians, LTTE had fired at me. I got shot in my leg," she said from her hospital bed.

The rebels have denied accusations from the government, a growing list of countries and rights groups that they have forcibly kept civilians inside the war zone to use as fighters.

The LTTE is on numerous international terrorism lists and has rebuffed repeated international calls to free civilians. The Tigers blame the military for civilian deaths.

Sri Lanka's government has also refused calls for a ceasefire but pledged to give civilians safe passage. Both sides deny targeting civilians.

Another 2,000 people reached army-held areas on Wednesday and at least another 200 had come out by Thursday morning, military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.

More than 50,000 soldiers are converging on the 175 square km (67 sq miles) pocket still held by the Tigers. Analysts say they have no more than 2,000 guerrillas left and face defeat.

Nanayakkara said that number had shrunk to about 700.

"It can be increased, because the people are still with them and can be forcibly recruited and trained to fight," he said.

(Writing by Bryson Hull; Editing by Paul Tait)

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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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