``We now have confirmation that 10 have died and four are wounded,'' military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe said. The soldiers were traveling in a military truck when the Claymore anti-personnel mine was triggered.
Initial report said that there were 15 people on the truck, but Samarasinghe said ``all 14'' had been accounted for.
He blamed the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam for the attack.
``Who else can do that?'' he said of the rebels, who want to set up a separate homeland for the country's 3.2 million ethnic Tamils in the northeast.
The soldiers were on leave and en route to the airport when the mine exploded.
Violence has escalated in
``They are trying to provoke the military and draw them into open hostility,'' said Goonetilleke, who is also former head of the
The Norwegian-backed peace talks that started after the 2002 cease-fire were halted in 2004 after the rebels demands for wide-ranging autonomy. Efforts to resume the talks have failed to bring about a resolution, with the two sides unable to agree even on a venue.
Sri Lankan shares plunged a provisional 7.5 percent Tuesday after the attack, in one of the biggest drops this year. The benchmark All Share Index fell 153.16 points to close at 1880.15 points, Dow Jones Newswire said.
The attack follows Monday's killing by Sri Lankan soldiers of two suspected rebels in eastern
With Tuesday's fatalities, a total of 43 Sri Lankan security forces personnel have died this month in violence blamed on the rebels.
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