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Sri Lanka bombs Tiger territory, says donors misled
22 Nov 2006 07:52:29 GMT
Source: Reuters
•  Sri Lanka conflict

(Updates with fresh violence, details throughout)

By Simon Gardner

COLOMBO, Nov 22 (Reuters) - Sri Lankan air force jets bombed Tamil Tiger territory for a second day on Wednesday, as the government accused Nordic truce monitors and a U.N. envoy of misleading financial donors about military truce violations.

The military said fighter jets hit two rebel naval bases in the northwestern district of Mannar, while the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) said the army was shelling a planned humanitarian aid route to thousands of displaced in their territory in the east.

The fresh violence came after the main donors to Sri Lanka -- the United States, Japan, the European Union and Norway -- condemned the government and Tamil Tiger rebels for "systematic ceasefire violations".

President Mahinda Rajapakse's government has repeatedly rejected allegations by international truce monitors of troop involvement in extrajudicial killings during a surge in violence this year.

U.N. envoy Allan Rock has also accused elements of the military of helping to abduct children to turn them into soldiers for a renegade rebel faction.

"The co-chairs would have been influenced by Allan Rock and the SLMM (Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission) and that is misleading," government defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told Reuters hours after the donors issued their damning statement.

Rambukwella said neither Rock nor the SLMM -- who have both been vilified by government officials and state-run media -- had provided the government with proof of troop involvement in abuses, despite requests.

While the Tigers have violated a battered truce thousands of times since it was hammered out in 2002, monitors cite an alarming rise in violations by the military this year.

"Obviously on the basis of national security, we have to react on certain issues. That can be ... systematic erosion or violation of the ceasefire," Rambukwella added. "But this becomes inevitable unless the LTTE change their stance of terror."

More than 3,000 civilians, troops and rebel fighters have been killed this year and many fear a conflict that has killed more than 67,000 people since 1983 could escalate.

So far, most of the violence is confined to the northeast, where the Tigers run a de facto state they want recognised as a separate homeland for minority ethnic Tamils.

"The co-chairs view with alarm the rising level of violence in Sri Lanka that has led to significant loss of life and widespread human rights violations," the donors said in a statement issued out of Washington.

"The co-chairs condemn the continued and systematic ceasefire violations by government of Sri Lanka and LTTE," it added.

"The co-chairs particularly condemn the LTTE for initiating hostilities from heavily populated areas and the government of Sri Lanka for firing into such vulnerable areas and killing and wounding innocent civilians."

The donors also called on both sides to set up demilitarised zones to protect civilians, and appealed to the government to reopen the main north-south highway that runs through rebel territory to the northern army-held Jaffna peninsula.

The government has offered to reopen the A9 highway for a one-off aid convoy to drive to Jaffna, but the Tigers say that is not good enough and want the road -- seen as a key revenue source thanks to levies charged -- reopened permanently. (Additional reporting by Ranga Sirilal in COLOMBO)


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Last updated:Wed Nov 22 07:54:30 2006