Tuesday, August 29, 2006

HAKEEM CONDEMNS ABDUCTION OF SOORIYAN FM'S NEWS CHIEF

The Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) national leader Rauff Hakeem MP has strongly condemned the abduction of Nadaraja Kurubaran, chief news editor of popular Colombo-based Tamil radio channel Sooriyan FM (Asia Broadcasting Corporation Pvt Ltd.), this morning by unidentified persons. The abduction is a threat not only to journalists but also to media freedom and freedom of expression, he has stated. If impartial and competent media men continue to become targets of such threats and harassment, it will have serious and damaging repercussions in the international arena and will bring discredit to the country, he has also stated

Recalling his parliamentary discourses where he had repeatedly pointed out that truth is the first casualty of war , he stated that the abduction of Kurubaran has proved once again that journalists who never hesitated to bring to light the destructions caused by war, including losses of innocent lives and civilian properties, are under constant threat

The abducted journalists played an important role towards a good rapport between Tamil nationalism and Muslim nationalism and he associated closely with Tamil and Muslim political leaders, senior government officials and all VIPs, the SLMC leader has stated. He was well-balanced in presenting his reports but, unfortunately, those who cannot digest his news presentations have taken recourse to such a dastardly acts which deserves condemnation by all.

The SLMC calls on the abductors to release him without endangering his life and also calls on the government to take all necessary measures to get him released safely, he has stated.

SLMC LEADER CALLS ON GOVT TO COMPENSATE FARMERS

Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) leader Rauff Hakeem MP has made a request to the government to pay compensation to Muslim farmers of Muttur and Thoppur whose paddy crops have been destgroyed due to the Mavil Aru irrigation blockade.

This request was made subsequent to the leader's two day visit last week to the affected Muttur and Thoppur areas and also the Kantalai area where the displaced Muslims are living as refugees. The affected farmers explained the extensive losses incurred by them due to the irrigation blockade.

During his visit Hakeem also went to see the Allai Kulam irrigation tank that is now in a fully parched state and the withered crops in paddy fields. He also observed that paddy crops in other adjacent villages such as Alayadikudah, Vilankulam, Puduveli, Kiranveli and Sinna Poomalaivettu were also destroyed. The affected farmers brought to the notice of the leader that in some villages where paddy crops were intact were now being ruined by herds of stray cattle coming from Sandanavettai area.

The farmers depended on the Allaikulam Tank for Irrigating 1500 acres of paddy lands and for other water requirements including drinking water, the affected people told. Volleys of artillery shells that struck the tank killed all fish life and heads of cattle and the emanating stench is a major health hazard, they told. They also told that certain government high officials were trying to prevent compensations being paid to the Muslim farmers while limiting all such payments to farmers belonging to the majority community of Seruwila and Kantalai. The farmers insisted that in case of such a partial attitude , the SLMC should take up the matter on an international level.

Military offensive in northeast Sri Lanka leaves 95 combatants dead

Associated Press, Tue August 29, 2006 07:57 EDT . CASSIE BIGGS Associated Press Writer COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) _ Three days of clashes between security forces and ethnic Tamil rebels in Sri Lanka's volatile north and east has killed at least 95 people, the military said Tuesday.

The military launched a major assault on Sunday to retake a Tiger-held enclave in the east, which it claimed posed a threat to a strategic naval base in Trincomalee district.

The military said 79 combatants had been killed in the combined army, navy and air force operation. The rebels said 82 people, including 20 civilians, were killed in intense shelling and airstrikes.

Military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe said another 16 Tamil Tiger rebels were killed Tuesday morning when they fired on an army check point in northern Vavuniya district. The soldiers returned fire, killing the 16. He did not say if any soldiers were killed or wounded in the attack.

Also Tuesday, air force jets bombed a rebel naval base in Tiger-controlled Mullaithivu district, in the northeast. No casualty figures were available.

Both sides routinely inflate the other's death tolls, and independent confirmation is virtually impossible as conflict zones are off limits to outsiders.

The push to retake Sampur, in northeast Trincomalee district, opens a new front in the more than two-decade conflict between ethnic Tamil rebels and the Sinhalese-dominated government, which was temporarily halted by a 2002 cease-fire.

Samarasinghe said the goal of the operation was to loosen the rebels' hold on the area south of Trincomalee naval base and specifically to destroy their fire power.

``Our aim is to neutralize (rebel) artillery and heavy mortar bases. Yesterday we destroyed a minimum of three artillery bases,'' Samarasinghe said Tuesday.

``These bases are a very big threat. The (rebels) have been firing at the naval base and also at civilians in the area,'' he said.

Thirteen soldiers and 66 insurgents have been killed since Sunday, the military said. The rebels' political leader for the east, S. Elilan, said that 50 government soldiers, 12 rebel fighters and 20 civilians had been killed.

``They tried to advance into our areas from two directions yesterday and when we counterattacked, they stopped before the forward defense lines,'' the de facto frontier between rebel and government-held territory.

``Today they started moving again and we have halted them,'' he told The Associated Press from Trincomalee.

An officer at the National Media Center for Defense said troops are advancing slowly toward Sampur and that heavy fighting was ongoing.

Elilan said the rebels would never cede Sampur to the government.

``If the government attempts to come into our territory we will continue to attack them .... These are people's homes. We will not let the enemy invade,'' he said.

The country's top-ranking military official, Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, told The Associated Press on Monday that the operation was intended to safeguard the strategic Trincomalee harbor and navy base.

He said the insurgents have been using four villages south of Trincomalee to fire artillery and mortars at the base. ``If the (rebels) continue to attack the harbor it will paralyze the Trincomalee-to-Jaffna supply route,'' the general said.

The Sri Lankan military is reliant upon the Trincomalee port to supply its more than 43,000 troops on Jaffna Peninsula, since the road link passes through rebel territory.

The Tigers took up arms in 1983, claiming that the country's 3.2 million Tamils needed a separate homeland away from the discrimination of the majority Sinhalese.

The resulting conflict cost the lives of at least 65,000 people before the 2002 cease-fire halted large-scale fighting.

In recent months, however, Sri Lanka has returned to the brink of full-scale war, with both sides launching major military offensives, although neither has officially withdrawn from the cease-fire.

Hundreds of combatants and civilians have been killed since late July, and 204,000 people have been displaced by near-daily airstrikes and shelling.

Sri Lanka army battles rebels in northeast

Reuters, 29 Aug 2006 03:29:19 GMT. -

COLOMBO, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka's army said on Tuesday it continued an offensive into Tamil Tiger-controlled territory, with military sources saying the ultimate aim was to sweep the rebels from the entrance of a strategic harbour.

The government says the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) must vacate their positions on the southern edge of Trincomalee harbour, from where they have launched attacks on military shipping and shelled the port and a military base.

"The battle is still going on," said an army spokesman. "We hope there will be more than 90 LTTE cadres killed. On our side, there are 13 killed and 71 injured."

Officially, the purpose of the new offensive into rebel territory is to allow the return to tens of thousands of displaced people to the town of Mutur, just south of the harbour, as well as the surrounding area.

The Tigers, who ultimately want a separate Tamil homeland in the north and east, launched a push into army-held Mutur from the neighbouring rebel-held Sampur area at the beginning of the month after a government offensive on a nearby rebel-held water supply.

They withdrew days later but the mainly Muslim population fled and since then mortar fire has deterred their return.

But military sources say the main goal is simply to push the LTTE out of Sampur. Diplomats say they are not sure the army can succeed.

After almost a month of heavy fighting around Trincomalee and on the northern Jaffna peninsula, front lines have barely moved and both sides seem bogged down.