Sri Lanka military says 22 killed in fresh violence

Sun Mar 2, 2008 7:18am EST
 
Email | Print | | Reprints | Single Page
[-] Text [+]
By Shihar Aneez

COLOMBO, March 2 (Reuters) - Suspected Tamil Tiger rebels killed a soldier with a roadside bomb in the island's far north on Sunday, the military said, adding that troops killed 21 insurgents in ground fighting a day earlier.

The fighting comes on the heels of near daily land battles and air raids as the state and separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fight a new phase of a 25-year civil war in which an estimated 70,000 have been killed.

"One soldier was killed in a Claymore mine attack in ... Vavuniya this morning," said military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara, referring to a northern district which straddles rebel-held and government territory.

"Twenty one LTTE cadres were killed on Saturday," he added, in reference to fighting in the northern districts of Jaffna, Mannar, Vavuniya and a northern area called Welioya, he added.

The Tigers, who are seeking to carve out an independent state in the island's north and east, dismissed the death toll claim.

"It's not true," said a rebel official at the Tigers' peace secretariat in the northern stronghold of Kilinochchi, which the government has made off-limits to journalists as it seeks to crush the rebels military.

The Tigers routinely deny involvement in deadly roadside bombings and suicide attacks across the island, which are increasingly focused on civilians.

The military has reported near daily rebel death tolls in the dozens in recent weeks, and analysts say the statistics are laughable and inflated. They say both sides exaggerate enemy losses and play down their own.

The military said on Saturday it had handed over eight rebel corpses to the Red Cross, a fraction of the number it claimed to have killed over the past week.

Proof of kills is rarely offered by either side, and with Nordic truce monitors banished by the government after President Mahinda Rajapaksa formally scrapped a 6-year truce in January, independent confirmation of deaths is rarely possible.

Analysts say the government has the upper hand given strength of numbers, improved air power and battlefield gains in the east, but see no clear winner on the horizon.

The violence hurt tourist arrivals last year, which fell 12 percent from a year earlier, while the stock market slid nearly 7 percent in 2007, with some businesses shelving investment plans. (Editing by Simon Gardner)



 

Featured Broker sponsored link

Editor's Choice

  • Pictures
  • Video
  • Articles
Photo

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  View Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video
  • Recommended

Reuters Oddly Enough

Funny, quirky, strange-but-true stories from around the world.