Tigers 'forcibly recruit UN man'

Tamil Tiger fighters rehearse to break through outer defense lines of a military camp at a training camp in the north east of Colombo, Sri Lanka, July 2007
The Tamil Tigers are being restricted to a shrinking jungle area

The United Nations has accused Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels of forcibly recruiting a UN staff worker along with members of his family.

The UN said the man and three members of his family, among them his 16-year-old daughter, were taken.

The UN said it feared for the safety of the four, who were seized over the weekend - the second such incident it has reported in the past two weeks.

The Tigers have made no comment yet on the UN statement.

However, the BBC's Anbarasan Ethirajan in Colombo says they have in the past always denied forcible recruitment.

The UN statement comes as tens of thousands of civilians remain trapped in the conflict zone in the country's north-east.

A military operation over the past few months has pushed the rebels back into a small area of jungle where there is heavy fighting.

The military says the rebel area has now been reduced to 30 sq km (12 sq miles).

Safe zone

The UN statement said: "The UN in Sri Lanka has protested to the [Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam] that UN national staff, as well as children in general, are protected under national and international law from recruitment by armed groups, and has called for their immediate release."

Another UN national staff member recruited two weeks ago has yet to be released, it said.

Last month, the agency accused the rebels of holding 11 of its local employees and more than 50 of their family members in the conflict zone against their will.

In another incident, UN spokesman Gordon Weiss said on Monday that "the wife of a UN staff member was injured by an anti-personnel mine while escaping with the staff member and their two children".

The organisation says some 2,800 civilians have been killed in the fighting this year. The government says those numbers are inflated and unsubstantiated.

The government has designated a "safe zone" for civilians but military spokesman Brig Udaya Nanayakkara said troops were "closing into the safe zone in certain areas".

The government says hundreds of civilians are still fleeing the war zone.

The UN and international powers have called for a ceasefire to allow civilians to be evacuated but the government says that will only allow the rebels to regroup.

Pro-rebel sources say the army is targeting civilians.

The Tigers' political chief B Nadesan told the TamilNet website the government was committing war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Independent reporters are not allowed in the war zone and information from either side cannot be verified.

Is LTTE using chemical weapons to halt Lankan final offensive?

As the Lankan army prepares to inflict a "decisive blow" to the LTTE guerrillas, the capture of a fertilizer warehouse by the military in the Mullaitivu district has fuelled speculation about the use of chemical weapons in the war zones, officials said today.

At least 14 LTTE guerrillas and three civilians were killed as the army intensified its offensives to capture the remaining pockets of the Tamil Tigers in embattled Northern Sri Lanka, the defence ministry said.

The ministry said the troops linked to the 8 Sinha Regiment (8th SR) reportedly discovered a fertilizer warehouse at Udayarkattu in Mullaitivu district's Pudukudiirippu West area.

The LTTE is one of the pioneering terrorist groups in the world to use fertilizer as explosives even before the Western governments became aware of its use as a terror weapon, it said.

The fate of the civilians trapped in the war zone has become a matter of international concern, with the government accusing the LTTE guerrillas of using civilians as human shields.

Three civilians, including a 9-year-old, were reported killed among 66 people who sought military protection after fleeing from LTTE held areas at Pudumathalan in the north yesterday, the defence ministry said.

The Tamil Tigers have been fighting since 1983 for an independent state for the minority ethnic Tamils, alleging marginalisation of the community for decades by governments dominated by the Sinhalese. Over 70,000 people have been killed in the civil war in the Island nation. PTI

Sri Lankan Army kills at least 57 Tamil Tigers in fierce clashes

Sri Lankan troops on Sunday moved further into the last LTTE held territory of Pudhukudiyyiruppu in Wanni region in the embattled north and killed at least 57 Tamil Tigers in fierce clashes.
Infantrymen of 58 Division further advanced into Pudhukudiyyirippu inflicting heavy damages to the Tiger militants, military reports received from the battlefront said.

"As many as 57 LTTE rebels were killed in intense clashes between the forces and rebels on Friday and Saturday in Pudhukudiyyirippu and Chalai areas of Mullaitivu district," Military spokesman Udaya Nanayakkara said.

In search operations conducted in the area following the confrontation, troops recovered a large cache of arms and ammunition from there.

"Troops of Task Force 5 (TF-5) engaged in search and clear operations in recently liberated areas have found more military items left behind by the rebels," a military report received from the battlefront said.

LTTE rebels sustained damages in a confrontation with the troops of 53 Division in Pudhukudiyyrippu area yesterday, the Army said, adding two T-56 weapons were found from the area.

'Abductor' killed by police

Police authorities in eastern Sri Lanka say that a suspect arrested on alleged abduction and rape of a six-year old schoolgirl was shot dead as he tried to escape.

Superintendant of Police (SP), Trincomalee, Vaas Gunawardene told BBC Sandeshaya that suspect Mervyn Niroushan was shot by a police sergeant as he attempted to escape from the police vehicle while being transported to hospital to investigate whether he was responsible for raping the girl.

Judy Mary Varsha, a schoolgirl from Palaiyuththu, Trincomalee was found dead on Friday after she went missing on 11 March.

Quoting from the post-mortem report, SP Gunawardene said the girl was raped before being killed.

The suspect who received gun shot injuries, "was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital," Mr. Gunawardene said.

TMVP links

The main suspect was the director of Sigaramfm website.

Police say that he has received journalism diploma in India.


Eastern CM Pillayan
Three suspects are members of CM Pillayan led TMVP, police say

Mr. Niroushan who visited Varsha's house to teach her IT lessons, and three other suspects are accused of seeking Rs. 30 million from the girl's family.

All four suspects are aged 18-22 and one of the suspects is a son of a woman police constable in Trincomalee police headquarters.

Police officials said three of the suspects are members of the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Puligal (TMVP).

Eastern province chief minister, Sivanesathurai Chandrakanathan widely known as Pillayan is the leader of the TMVP.

"The suspect has tried to secure a license for an FM radio station. The ransom was sought to pay political authorities to obtain the licence," SP Gunawardene said.

The Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (TRC) is the competent authority in Sri Lanka in approving radio licences.