FACTBOX: Sri Lankan leaders, long a target of rebels
(Reuters) - A suspected Tamil Tiger rebel killed Sri Lanka's highways minister and nine others in a suicide attack near Colombo on Sunday, the military said.
Following are some of the high-profile killings of top leaders blamed on the Tamil Tigers on the war-scarred island.
March 1991: Defense Minister Ranjan Wijeratne is among 19 killed when a car bomb is detonated in Colombo, the first major killing of a top leader.
May 1991: Former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi is killed in southern India by a suspected woman LTTE suicide bomber during an election rally.
May 1993: President Ranasinghe Premadasa and 23 others are killed by a suicide bomber during a May Day march.
December 1999: President Chandrika Kumaratunga is wounded in an attempted assassination by a suicide bomber in Colombo just as she is getting into her car following an election rally. At least 34 are killed in two explosions. She loses an eye.
June 2000: Industrial Development Minister C.V. Gunaratne and 21 others are killed in a suicide bomb blast in Colombo. The minister was involved in raising funds for the war against the LTTE.
August 2005: Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar is shot dead at his home in Colombo by a suspected Tamil Tiger sniper.
April 2006: Army Commander Major General Sarath Fonseka is badly hurt in an abortive suicide attack inside the Army headquarters in Colombo.
December 2006: Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, defence secretary and brother of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, narrowly escapes a suicide attack by Tamil Tiger rebels in Colombo.
January 8, 2008: Nation Building Minister D.M. Dassanayake is killed by a roadside bomb planted by the rebels in the town of Ja-Ela, 19 km (12 miles) north of Colombo.
April 6: Suicide bomb blast kills Highways Minister Jeyaraj Fernandopulle and at least 11 other people in the western town of Weliveriya, 30 km (19 miles) from Colombo.
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