Aid Organizations in Sri Lanka Deny Siding with Rebels

International charitable organizations, accused of siding with the rebels in Sri Lanka's civil war, are denying the charge. The country's defense ministry has stated aid groups find continued bloodshed there "a lucrative business" and want terrorism to prevail in the South Asian island nation.

Government soldier stands guard at roadside check point in Colombo, 16 Mar 2009
Government soldier stands guard at roadside check point in Colombo, 16 Mar 2009
One of the international aid organizations working in Sri Lanka is rejecting the military's accusation it is part of a "vicious coalition" seeking to prolong the country's civil war.

In a statement posted on its Internet site, the Defense Ministry mentioned by name CARE International. It accused one of its local workers, who reportedly died last week in shelling in a "no-fire zone," as being a "hardcore" cadre of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. A bitterly worded military release Tuesday accused CARE and other international aid groups of actively supporting terrorism in Sri Lanka.

From its international headquarters in Geneva, CARE spokeswoman Melanie Brooks tells VOA the organization, which has operated in Sri Lanka since 1950, has never sided with the rebels during the decades-long civil war.

"CARE does not support terrorist activities," Brooks said. "CARE is not a political organization and we do not have any political affiliations."

Melanie Brooks says the government is well aware of the humanitarian mission of international aid organizations, such as hers.

"We do obviously work very closely with the communities in Sri Lanka, with the government in Sri Lanka," Brooks said. "And everything that we do must be done in cooperation with communities and the people of Sri Lanka on the ground."

The military says the rebels, fighting for Tamil independence, are now confined to less than 30 square kilometers of jungle and beach. The rebels once controlled a wide swath of the northern part of the country.

A number of international organizations have recently spoken about the toll the latest clashes in northern Sri Lanka are taking on civilians.

The government has accused the United Nations and other organizations of inflating the numbers of civilians killed and trapped in the war zone.

While some local workers of international aid groups remain in the conflict area, the Sri Lankan government prohibits international employees of such organizations, as well as independent journalists, from traveling to the north. That has made it difficult to verify the situation there.

Sri Lanka's government says since Tuesday more than 1,500 civilians crossed into military-held territory near the last town still held by the Tamil Tigers.

The rebels have been fighting since 1983 for a Tamil homeland free of control of the island's Sinhalese majority. The rebel group LTTE is considered a terrorist organization by a number of countries, including the United States and India.

Five SL farmers killed in LTTE attack

Colombo, March 25: Five farmers were killed and two wounded in a suspected Tamil Tigers attack in a village in Sri Lanka's eastern province, the defence ministry said here Wednesday.

It said that the killing took place at Neelapola, a village at Kantale in the Trincomalee district, late Tuesday night, when a group of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) cadres stormed the village.

The wounded people have been rushed to hospital.

The military had said that the LTTE has now been boxed into a mere 28 square km land area in the Mullaitivu district in north-eastern Sri Lanka, facing a multi-pronged military onslaught.

It said that the number of civilians fleeing the rebel-held areas defying LTTE orders was on the rise and over 47,000 displaced people have entered the government-held areas since the beginning of 2009.

They are being temporarily housed in welfare centres and villages in the northern Vavuniya district.

SL Army captures LTTE intelligence chief's hideout

Colombo, March 25: Sri Lankan troops forcing their way into the last strongholds of the Tamil Tigers have captured a hideout of the rebels' intelligence wing chief, Pottu Amman, in the north-eastern Mullaitivu district, the defence ministry said Wednesday.

It said that the 58 Division have captured "the safe house (that) was used by both Pottu Amman and (another LTTE leader) Kapil Amman" in the general area south of Iranapalai at the Mullaitivu battlefront after fierce clashes Tuesday.

The ministry said that the troops during the subsequent search operation "have also found a jeep believed (to be) used by Pottu Amman himself".

The capture of the hideout of Pottu Amman has come amid media reports that he was now leading the offensive against the advancing troops along with the elusive rebel chief, Velupillai Prabhakaran and his elder son Charles Antony.

Prabhakaran and Pottu Amman are wanted in India for their links with the 1991 assassination of former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi.

The defence ministry in a separate report said that the 58 Division troops have "repulsed an LTTE offensive thrust against the advancing military formations, north of Iranapalai", inflicting heavy damages among the rebels Tuesday.

"The LTTE terrorists had made a desperate attempt to breach the military forward defences, only to be left in total disarray due to intense armour and small arms fire by security forces," it said, charging that the rebels have continued to fire heavy artillery and mortar from several locations at the declared No Fire Zone.

The military had said that the LTTE was now boxed into a mere 28 square km land area in Mullaitivu district and was facing a multi-pronged military onslaught.

It said that the number of civilians fleeing the rebel-held areas defying LTTE orders was on the rise and over 47,000 displaced people have entered the government-held areas since the beginning of 2009.

They are being temporarily housed in welfare centres and villages in the northern Vavuniya district.