Sri Lanka Launches Assault On Rebels
Air Force Bombs Tamil Tiger Positions; Navy Sinks Rebel Ship
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A Sri Lankan soldier mans a roadside checkpoint in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Nov. 27, 2008. Tamil Tiger rebels and government forces have clashed in the Kilinochchi district, the Tigers' stronghold. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)
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The fighting came amid a sharp escalation in the 25-year-old civil war between government forces and the ethnic Tamil rebels. The military has forced the rebels to retreat from large swaths of their stronghold in the north in recent months.
On Friday, air force jets pounded rebel bunker lines and other fortifications in the Kilinochchi district in the north, the military said in a statement. Helicopters also attacked a flotilla of boats belong to the Sea Tigers, the rebel naval wing, that were gathered in a lagoon, the military said.
With most communication to the north cut off in recent months, the rebels could not be reached for comment.
Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said a navy vessel destroyed a suspected rebel ship early Saturday. The 100-foot ship was "engulfed in a ball of fire" after it opened fire on a patrol boat, the navy said in a statement.
Four small attack boats that came to support the Tiger vessel, which was carrying "warlike materials," were also destroyed, it said.
Government forces also broke through a section of an earth berm and moat fortification the rebels built to protect their administrative capital of Kilinochchi, the government said.
Troops destroyed several rebel bunkers and established a beachhead on the other side, the government said in a statement. The government said Thursday that troops had broken through the fortifications north of Kilinochchi.
The government said last month the town's capture was "imminent," but it remains in rebel hands despite a series of bloody battles in the area in recent weeks.
Meanwhile, fighting continued to rage in the Jaffna and Kilinochchi districts, the military said.
The Tamil Tigers have been fighting since 1983 to create an independent homeland for ethnic minority Tamils who suffered decades of marginalization by successive governments controlled by the Sinhalese majority. More than 70,000 people have been killed in the violence.
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- sepa2: yes i agree. I am a Sri Lankan living in the US. this civil war between the givernment and the tamil terrorists have been going on for over 20 years now. LTTE is a banned terrorist organization. btw BRdecked it is banned in the US as well. and no, there are no drugs in Sri Lanka. Also incase u don''t know were SL is, it is half way across the world. 12 hour time difference. the only thing we export is Tea. sure u have seen Ceylon tea. good stuff:)
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- Sri Lanka lies in the middle of the main sea route from suez to pacific. Tamil Tigers introduce suicide bomber concept and considered a main threat to US and India(http://www.fbi.gov/page2/jan08/tamil_tigers011008.html
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- zertrat: You have BRdeckard figured out.
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- Does BRdeckard even have a clue where in the world Sri Lanka is? He implies there is a hearty drug relationship between Sri Lanka and the US. Does he have any guesses about drugs exported from Sri Lanka? His comment suggests that soon the US will decide to back someone. Does he have any clue that the US position over 25 yrs has been consistent? And that the chances of it changing are basically zilch?
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