China backs Sri Lankan fight against LTTE

China on Tuesday came out in support of the Sri Lankan government’s efforts to wipe out the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam andapprehend its leader V. Prabakaran. It also backed the decision of the Nepal's Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, Prachanda, to induct Maoist forces in the country’s army.

“Both Nepal and Sri Lanka are friendly to China. We support the efforts of their governments to safeguard national integrity while ensuring security and political stability,” Jiang Yu, spokeswoman for the Chinese foreign ministry said at a press briefing. She was responding to a question about the end of the 24 hour deadline for surrender given to Prabhakaran by the Sri Lankan government.

The statement comes at a time when relationship between China and Nepal has become stronger than ever before. China recently promised to enhance its annual assistance to Nepal by 50 per cent to 150 million yuan ($23 million). It is also considering investing in hydropower projects in the Himalayan kingdom bordering India.

Beijing is also pushing the international community to enhance financial support to help Somalia sort out its political problems and tackle the menace of pirates, who have been harassing foreign ships sailing past the country/ China is among the countries who have sent war ships to counter the challenge posed by the pirates.

"We expect positive outcome from the international donors’ conference on Somalia so as to provide substantive support for the Somali political process," Jiang said while referring to an international donor’s conference in Brussels on Wednesday and Thursday which would gather representatives from the United Nations, the African Union and the European Union.

Mass Tamil exodus from rebel area

An image released by the Sri Lankan Navy, which it says shows a Tamil being helped by soldiers after fleeing fighting
Many Tamils fled by sea, the Sri Lankan Army said

Sri Lanka says 63,000 Tamil civilians have escaped from the last remaining area of territory held by Tamil Tiger rebels in the past two days.

The army said it had made further inroads into the small area in the north, searching for the rebel leader.

It said some civilians fled by sea and were met by the navy. They were being transferred to government-run camps.

The rebels alleged the army had killed about 1,000 civilians in the latest fighting. There is no confirmation.

The rebels also said that about 2,300 civilians have been injured since Monday morning, and accused the government of using Tamil people as human shields and forcing them to clear landmines.

A deadline for the rebels to surrender or face a final assault expired at 0630 GMT on Tuesday with no word from the Tigers.

The head of the Sri Lankan army, Lt Gen Sarath Fonseka, told the BBC Sinhala service that troops know the "general area" of Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and that "action will be taken to destroy him".

This is our problem and we will sort out our problem.
Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara

"We do not know exactly the place where he is hiding, but we suspect he is most probably hiding among the civilians, trying to take cover behind them.

"Therefore we have to be very careful about what action we take to ensure that no civilians get harmed."

Rebel leader Prabhakaran was hiding in coastal strip about 8km long and 1.5km wide, Lt Gen Fonseka said.

Troops believe he could try to escape the war zone by boat, a method used by other rebel leaders.

There is no media access to the area, so it is difficult to interpret the parallel propaganda war, says the BBC's Charles Haviland in Colombo.

The general said only 300-400 Tamil Tiger fighters remained, but there may be 700 "forcibly armed" people in rebel bunkers.

Sri Lankan military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara told the BBC's Newshour programme that the army had rescued the civilians after breaking down earthen defences, rather than forcing them to flee amid fighting, as suggested by the rebels.

TAMIL TIGER DEFENCES BREACHED BY SRI LANKA ARMY
8010818
1. 12km-long defensive earthworks constructed by Tamil Tigers using mechanical diggers
2. Sri Lankan army uses explosives to destroy a 3km section
3. Gap allows thousands of refugees to flee Tiger-held territory

"We went in and people came towards us and we rescued them and [have] taken them to a better location, where they can have a better life than what they had in this safety zone under the LTTE [Tamil Tiger rebels]."

He dismissed any suggestion that international assistance would help resolve the conflict.

Brig Nanayakkara said: "This is our problem and we will sort out our problem."

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa also rejected international offers, telling British Prime Minister Gordon Brown that there was no need to send a special envoy and a pause in fighting was not necessary.

"President Rajapaksa observed that this movement of civilians had evoked a completely new situation and he had instructed that additional consignments of food, medicine and other essentials be dispatched," a government statement said.

Gordon Weiss, the UN spokesman in Sri Lanka, said it was not known how many civilians remained there but that the UN had been working off a figure of some 150,000 to 200,000 people in recent months.

'Catastrophic' situation

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was "extremely worried" about civilians still trapped in the zone.

"The situation is nothing short of catastrophic. Ongoing fighting has killed or wounded hundreds of civilians who have only minimal access to medical care," said director of operations Pierre Kraehenbuehl.

The rebel TamilNet website said the territory they still controlled was littered with bodies of civilians.

Video released by Tiger supporters shows mutilated bodies, but it is not clear when the recording was made.

They said it was filmed on Monday, but this cannot be verified.

It follows footage released by the government showing civilians fleeing the war zone.

MAP OF THE REGION
Sri Lanka map

Exodus from Sri Lanka war zone as Tamil Tigers ignore surrender deadline

• Sri Lankan military says rebels tried to force civilians to stay

• Penned-in fighters claim army shelling has killed hundreds

Thousands flee Sri Lanka war as deadline nears Link to this video

More than 40,000 civilians have fled the tiny "no-fire" war zone in northern Sri Lanka the government said today, as a 24-hour ultimatum to the Tamil Tigers to surrender passed at noon local time (6.30 GMT) with no sign of a final assault.

The exodus began after Monday's offensive, which breached an earth defence barrier erected by the remaining Tamil Tiger rebels in their last redoubt.

With possibly up to 100,000 civilians remaining in the 17 sq km (6.5 sq mile) strip of swampy coastline both sides exchanged allegations of brutality.

The Tigers' political head, B Nadesan, told the Tamilnet website that the Sri Lankan army had killed hundreds of people with internationally banned weapons such as cluster shells, napalm bombs and phosphorus bombs.

A rebel spokesman, who gave his name to the BBC as Thileepan, said a hospital, an orphanage and many houses had been hit and huge numbers of civilians had been killed in a military onslaught on the area.

The military says the rebels had forced the civilians to stay and were killing anyone who tried to escape. A Sri Lankan army spokesman said 17 people died and 200 were injured when suicide bombers among the fleeing crowds detonated devices. It was not possible to verify the claim and Nadesan denied it.

"The LTTE denies these fabricated stories that seek to discredit us and divert attention away from the suffering of the Tamil people," he said.

Video footage released by the Sri Lankan defence ministry yesterday showed civilians pouring through the breach in the earth barrier.

The civilians waded through a lagoon towards the army's lines, some carrying possessions in bags on their heads. One fugitive said that the rebels had warned people not to go, saying they would not be safe in government-controlled areas.

The military clearly regards the offensive of the past 24 hours as a breakthrough in its stand-off against the last remnants of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

A senior UN official told the Guardian that the UN had been briefed by the Sri Lankan government to expect thousands more people to come out of the area in coming days.

But the UN children's fund, Unicef, warned that the civilians still trapped faced grave danger.

"If fighting continues and if the LTTE refuses to allow people to leave the conflict zone, we face the intolerable inevitability of seeing many more children killed," said Unicef's regional director for south Asia, Daniel Toole.

"With this latest surge in fighting, our greatest fear is that the worst is yet to come."

How many civilians are left inside the zone is also a matter of debate. The Sri Lankan government has maintained that only about 40,000 remained before today's mass escape, while the UN estimated the figure at about 100,000.

The Sri Lankan government has repeatedly claimed that the rebels are using the civilians as human shields, a claim supported by the UN and many other independent observers. There have been a number of credible reports of civilians being killed by the LTTE as they tried to escape from the no-fire zone.

But the government has also faced intense criticism over the way it has gone after the rebels, with the UN estimating that at least 4,500 civilians have been killed in the past three months.

Doctors have described scenes of carnage as shells and bullets fired from government positions have slammed into the tightly packed civilians. Many have tried to protect themselves by digging bunkers in the sand, but dozens are still reported to have been killed or injured every day.

Despite the success of today's operation, there are estimated to be at least 300, and possibly as many as 500, well-armed LTTE cadres in the no-fire zone. Witnesses have told the Guardian they have seen the fighters manning earth embankments they have built across key access points and firing on government positions.

Setting the noon deadline yesterday the Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, said the LTTE leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran, should surrender or face military action.

"The only thing Prabhakaran can now do is to surrender. I don't want him to take cyanide and commit suicide. He has to face charges for his actions," he said.

A Sri Lankan military spokesman, Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara, had previously said the army would try to take the rebel leader alive, but "if he comes with a weapon and if he fights then we have to treat him as any other terrorist".

What now concerns the UN is how the military will seek to end the conflict. UN officials say that the government has been concerned about mounting pressure from some members of the UN security council over the civilian death toll, and had been making it clear during the last few days that a major push was being prepared.

The Sri Lankan government has defended its decision to place those who have escaped the fighting behind barbed wire inside camps in a high-security area around Vavuniya, south of the no-fire zone.

Its officials say that until they can be sure they have weeded out all LTTE members among the civilians in the camps everyone will have to be detained.

A small number of elderly people have been released, but the camps are still home to thousands of children, pregnant women and elderly people.

The UN has expressed concern about conditions in the camps, many of which are struggling to cope with the daily influx of new arrivals. Poor sanitation and shortages of water have raised concerns about the spread of disease, and the government and aid agencies face a major challenge in getting enough food into the camps, with many of those arriving – particularly children – showing signs of malnourishment.

Thousands flee Sri Lanka war as deadline nears

An exodus of civilians fleeing Sri Lanka's war zone topped 39,000 and more were coming, the military said on Tuesday before its final deadline for the Tamil Tiger rebels to surrender or die was to expire.

The huge outpouring of people started on Monday after soldiers breached an earthen berm blocking the main route out of a 17 square km (6.5 sq mile) no-fire zone on the northeastern coast, the last redoubt controlled the separatist Tigers.

The presence of tens of thousands of civilians trapped by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has been the main obstacle for the Sri Lankan military, which has cornered the rebels with the aim of finishing the 25-year-old war.

The United Nations and western governments have urged the military to renew a brief truce to negotiate the peoples' exit, a plea the government has rejected on the grounds that the Tigers have dismissed all entreaties to let the people out.

"There are 39,081 civilians that have arrived and they are still arriving," military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said. "Military operations are still continuing."

With Asia's longest-running civil war now nearing its end, Sri Lanka will face the twin challenges of healing the divide between the Tamil minority and Sinhalese majority, and reviving an $40 billion economy that is suffering on multiple fronts.

The island nation is seeking a $1.9 billion International Monetary Fund loan to shore up a balance of payments crisis and boost flagging foreign exchange reserves, half of which were spent defending the rupee in the last four months of 2008.

On Monday, the military had given the LTTE a last ultimatum to surrender by noon on Tuesday (0630 GMT). It has given similar ultimatums in the past, and it was not clear what would happen once it passed.

It was also unclear how many civilians remained inside the no-fire zone, but the military operation triggered protests by expatriate Tamils in London and Paris on Monday.

In the latter city, around 180 people were arrested and four injured when the demonstration turned violent as protesters blocked an intersection and threw objects at buses and police, police said.

AERIAL FOOTAGE

Sri Lanka's military on Monday released video shot by unmanned aerial drones it said showed the throngs of people waiting to be checked by soldiers outside the no-fire zone, and one showing people running out of the LTTE-held area.

Late on Monday, the military released another video shot by a drone, which it said showed several hundred people in a tight cluster along the shore.

A few seconds later, two people outside the cluster aim and fire what appears to be a rifle towards the people several times. Muzzle flashes are visible in the video, which the military said was taken near the northern border of the no-fire zone on Monday.

"They were being shot at by the LTTE. From the information we got from the 55 (army) Division, which was closest, quite a number of people were wounded by gunshots," air force spokesman Wing Commander Janaka Nanayakkara said.

The United Nations has long said the LTTE was forcibly preventing people from leaving and forcing others to fight.

The LTTE insists people are staying out of choice, and on Monday the pro-LTTE web site www.Tamilet.com reported that a large number of people had fled towards Tiger areas as the military moved into the no-fire zone.

TamilNet also said nearly 1,000 were killed in the assault, quoting LTTE political head B. Nadesan. The military denies killing civilians.

It was impossible to independently verify the competing accounts since the battlezone is off-limits to most outsiders.