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Tamil Tigers sink navy weapons ship amid rising violence ahead of troubled elections



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Published Date: 11 May 2008
TAMIL Tiger rebels sank a navy ammunition ship moored in the north-east of Sri Lanka yesterday in an attack coinciding with key elections in the tense eastern province. In an upsurge of violence ahead of polls in the troubled country, infantry clashes in the embattled north killed 24 rebels and two soldiers, the military said.
The guerrillas said their Sea Tiger commandos managed to infiltrate the tightly guarded port of Trincomalee in the early hours, holing the cargo ship as it was being loaded with ammunition destined for government troops. The navy said the MV Invincib
le sank after the underwater explosion but no lives were lost.

"Commandos from Kangkai Amaran unit of the Sea Tigers took part in the naval mission in destroying the 80-metre-long vessel," the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) said in a statement from their northern mini-state.

The explosion came just hours after a bomb ripped through a crowded cafe in Ampara, also in the east, late on Friday, killing 12 people and wounding at least 36. Officials also blamed the LTTE for that attack.

Despite the ongoing violence, voting was held yesterday for the eastern provincial council that the government hopes will boost its fight against the ethnic rebels, who control a large part of the island's north.

The polls are the first to be held in the eastern districts of Batticaloa, Trincomalee and Ampara in 20 years, and close to a million people are eligible to vote. The eastern region, once home to several LTTE enclaves, was brought under government control after heavy fighting last year and Colombo is determined to show normality has returned.

In Trincomalee district, which shares the same name as the port town, voting was low-key. People's Action for Free and Fair Elections (PAFRELL), a Sri Lanka rights group, said many locals preferred to stay home after the pre-dawn blast.

"Turnout in Trincomalee and Ampara is around 50% each, and Batticaloa 30%. People are really frightened to go out and vote," said PAFRELL chairman Kingsley Rodrigo.

The hawkish, ethnic Sinhalese-dominated government of President Mahinda Rajapakse also says the election of a 35-member provincial council is proof it is willing to devolve some power to areas with large Tamil communities.

It hopes this will ideologically undercut the LTTE, which is fighting for full independence for Tamils in the north and east, and provide a show of public support for an escalating and bloody offensive in the north.

Rajapakse pulled out of a ceasefire with the LTTE in January and has poured $1.5bn into defeating the rebels.

In the east, the president's ruling United People's Freedom Alliance has allied itself with the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pullikal (TMVP), or Tamil People's Liberation Tigers, a militia comprised of LTTE defectors.

The TMVP swept a smaller municipal poll virtually unopposed in Batticaloa in March. But although its leaders claim to have embraced the democratic process, they continue to be accused of murder, kidnapping and using child soldiers.

The main opposition UNP, which has teamed up with the biggest Muslim party, the SLMC, say the defectors have instilled a climate of fear in the multi-ethnic east.

"Voting is not peaceful. In Batticaloa there are number of cases where people are being terrorised, chased away by armed gangs," SLMC leader Rauff Hakeem said.

He is also hoping to be chief minister of the east – and challenge the government by pushing for a restoration of a truce and resumption of what he says should be "bold" peace talks with the LTTE that address the grievances of both minority Tamils and Muslims.

Analysts say the election is too close to call. Results are expected late today.



The full article contains 630 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 May 2008 10:55 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Sri Lanka
 
1

Maisie from Morningside,

Morningside 11/05/2008 00:50:51
Stop romanticising these Tamil terrorists by giving them cosy nicknames.
The correct name is LTTE.
Leave it at that.
2

Neanderthal75,

Rocky Mountains USA 12/05/2008 08:22:22
Hello Maisie,

My dear, the US Govt. needs to ship some MOABs to Sri Lanka, have the Govt. clear the Eastern half of the island of women and children from the villages-keeping them safe in the Western half, and then drop interlocking MOABs across the entire Eastern Half.

Nothing much would be left, but that includes the murderous Tamil Terrorists.

Harsh, but at least the whole horrific affair would come to an end-at least for a while.

Cheers from the Rockies

 

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