Sri Lanka military says it pushes back rebels




Sri Lanka's military said Thursday it had brushed off a Tamil Tiger counterattack by killing 30 guerrillas, pinning the rebels in a rapidly shrinking area and moving closer to ending the quarter-century-long civil war.

Ethnic Tamil lawmakers, meanwhile, rejected the president's invitation for talks, urging the government to first ensure the safety of civilians trapped in the war zone.

The latest fighting took place on the edge of an enclave controlled by the rebels, formally known as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or LTTE, in Sri Lanka's war-ravaged north. The rebels tried to attack government lines at the village of Iranaippalai, the military said.

"We successfully repulsed the attack and over 30 LTTE cadres were reported killed," military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said.

Nanayakkara said a number of soldiers were wounded in the battle, but did not give details.

Access to the war zone is restricted and it was not possible to confirm the report.

The rebels have been battling since 1983 for a separate Tamil state in the north and east of Sri Lanka where it once controlled a large swath of territory, but a series of major victories by government forces in recent weeks has pushed them into a small pocket on the coast.

The rebel holdouts — along with tens of thousands of terrified civilians — are confined to just 8.4 square miles (21 square kilometers) of jungle and beach on the northeastern coast.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa invited the Tamil politicians for talks Thursday evening to discuss the situation in the north. The Tamil National Alliance, the largest political party for ethnic Tamils, said it told Rajapaksa it would not participate until the government halts its military campaign and gives more food and medicine to people trapped in the war zone.

"Any political dialogue can be meaningful only when the humanitarian crisis comes to an end," TNA lawmaker Rajavarothayam Sambanthan told a news conference, adding that about 50 civilians are killed in the fighting daily.

The United Nations and European Union have recently voiced concern over the fate of civilians in Sri Lanka's conflict.

The government has rejected criticism it has not done enough to help them, and Minister of Human Rights and Disaster Management Mahinda Samarasinghe said Thursday that "sufficient food and medical supplies" had been sent to help the people. The government last week sent 10 tons of medicine — enough for two weeks, he said.

"We will ensure that there will be no shortage," he told a news conference.

John Holmes, the U.N.'s top humanitarian official, said Thursday that the international organization estimates between 150,000 and 190,000 civilians are trapped by the fighting and cannot escape, resulting in dozens of deaths each day.

The government says the number is 50,000 to 60,000, and accuses the rebels of using them as human shields in a bid to avoid defeat.

U.S. diplomat Rosemary DiCarlo said the U.S. has urged Sri Lanka's government to cease shelling in areas where there are large numbers of civilians, including hospitals.

"We've had promises, but we need to see results," she said. "The government of Sri Lanka must pay more attention to protecting the civilians in this conflict."

Sri Lanka's U.N. ambassador Hewa M.G.S. Palihakkara told reporters he would recommend his government consider a pause in fighting if the rebels are cooperative.

"If the LTTE's ready to let these people go, I will posit it to my government to let these people go," Palihakkara said.

The military says more than 55,000 civilians have escaped since the beginning of January.

All are being put into temporary camps, and Samarasinghe said the government decided to transfer the management of camps from the military to a civilian agency, upon the recommendation of Holmes.

Red Cross and ICRC and UNHCR officials will be present when people are screened to make sure they are not rebels, he said.

The rebels could not be reached for comment, because communication with their stronghold has been severed.

Associated Press reporter Krishan Francis in Colombo and John Heilprin at the United Nations contributed to this report.

31 Tamil Tigers, six soldiers killed in Lanka fighting

At least 31 Tamil Tigers and six soldiers were killed and over 30 rebels injured in fierce fighting between Sri Lankan security forces and the guerrillas in the northern combat zone as the troops repulsed a series of LTTE attempts to breach their forward defence lines.

Successive bids by LTTE to launch concentrated assaults at the military forward defences north of Iranapalai and east of Puthukudiyirippu were neutralised, the army said today citing battlefront sources.

It said sporadic fighting and small-scale door-to-door operations are continuing in the area targeting rebel pockets and resistance positions.

In Puthukkudiyirippu and Karaiyamullivaikal, troops advanced into rebel territory killing 13 Tigers and injuring 19 others, security sources said. Six soldiers also lost their lives in intense fighting in Puthukkudiyirippu.

During subsequent search operations conducted in the region, troops recovered bodies of six LTTE rebels, four T-56 assault rifles, two hand-grenades and a rebel boat.

At least 12 rebels were killed and 15 others seriously injured following fierce fighting between troops and LTTE north of Iranapalai yesterday, the military said.

Meanwhile, 380 more civilians fled LTTE areas to take shelter in government-held territory, officials said.

Food, medicine not used as weapon of war: Rajapaksa

Colombo, March 29: Sri Lankan government has never used food and medicine as a "weapon of war" in their conflict against the LTTE, President Mahinda Rajapaksa has said, insisting that his forces have been restrained in their advance so as to prevent civilian casualties.

Contending that Sri Lanka was perhaps the only state that has "fed" an insurgent group, Rajapaksa said supplies of essential items have not been disrupted and humanitarian reasons were behind the slowing down of security forces' advance in the past weeks.

"The government has never used food and medicine as a weapon of war (against LTTE). Indeed Sri Lankan state is one, if not the only, nation that has fed an armed group who is trying to dismember it by violence," he told a gathering here.

He said no one could confirm the number of people killed or injured and it is impossible to determine a civilian from a combatant when the LTTE cadres, who are not in uniform, mingle with civilians and fire on Sri Lankan forces from their midst.

Rajapaksa claimed that the LTTE has also stepped up forced recruitment including that of children.

"The Sri Lankan Armed Forces have very clearly stated that their operations are conducted in such a manner so as to ensure that no civilians are killed or injured," he said.

"That is why their (security forces) advance over the past few weeks has been so slow (in Wanni)," he said.