Monday, January 08, 2007

Security News Today

Security forces capture key rebel camp in Sri Lanka 's volatile east, military says

Associated Press, Mon January 8, 2007 08:16 EST . COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) _ Sri Lanka's elite police force on Monday seized a key Tamil Tiger rebel base in the country's east, a region where a clash with separatists the previous day left at least one soldier dead, the military said.

Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe told reporters that the rebels' ``Stanley Base'' in eastern Ampara district fell to Special Task Force personnel, who also recovered a large quantity of arms and ammunition.

Special Task Force chief Nimal Lewke said that four of his personnel were wounded in the fighting and a search was being conducted to flush out rebel fighters who he said had escaped into the jungles.

Eastern Sri Lanka has become a hotbed of violence between the military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which has been fighting for over 20 years for a separate homeland for Sri Lanka's 3.1 million ethnic Tamil minority who have suffered decades of discrimination by the majority-Sinhalese.

Lewke said the vast base was used by the guerrillas to launch attacks on government forces in the region, as a training camp for new Tiger recruits and also included a hospital.

The weapons left behind by the rebels included four mortar launchers, he said.

Rebel spokesman Rasiah Ilanthirayan confirmed a battle in the area but denied that their base had fallen.

``They (STF) have been trying to infiltrate our area and there was also a confrontation. But I deny that the camp has been captured,'' he said by telephone from the rebel stronghold of Kilinochchi.

In the nearby Batticaloa district, a clash between security forces and rebels late Sunday killed one soldier and left another wounded, Samarasinghe said. He had no details about rebel casualties, and the Tigers were not immediately available for comment. The two sides routinely inflate each other's casualty counts and independent verification was not possible.

Separately, the Defense Ministry said rebels infiltrated an electrical facility early Monday on the outskirts of Colombo and blew up a transformer, disrupting electricity to some areas.

``They (rebels) cut the wire mesh and may have used at least 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosive to blow up the transformer,'' Maj. Upali Rajapakse said.

``The security forces believe that the Tiger terrorists are attempting to disrupt normalcy in non-operational areas,'' Rajapakse said.

Rebel spokesman, Ilanthirayan, denied involvement.

The Elakanda power station is about 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) north of Colombo.

Also on Monday in northern Jaffna peninsula, masked men stopped a state-owned bus transporting school children, then forced the students off before setting it on fire, a bus employee said.

The group, shouting anti-government slogans, claimed that a pro-government Tamil party was abducting students in Jaffna, employee N. Rasadurai said.

The military said that some students themselves were involved in the arson attack, which was instigated by the rebels.

Sri Lankan Military: Rebels blow up transformer at electrical facility

Associated Press, Mon January 8, 2007 02:23 EST . - - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) The Sri Lankan Defense Ministry said Tamil rebels infiltrated an electrical facility early Monday on the outskirts of Colombo and blew up a transformer, disrupting electricity to some areas.

``They (rebels) cut the wire mesh and may have used at least 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosive to blow up the transformer,'' Acting military spokesman, Maj. Upali Rajapakse said.

The Elkanda power station is about 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) north of Colombo.

Sri Lanka beefs up security after bus bombings

Colombo, Jan 08: Sri Lanka on Monday stepped up security on public transport across the country after two weekend bomb attacks killed 21 passengers and wounded about 120, police said.

Passengers were forced to line up for security checks before boarding buses and trains that bring in about 70 per cent of the one million people who enter the capital daily for work, police said.

"We are having police and security forces at main bus terminals as well as volunteer groups who help with the checking," a police spokesman said.

President Mahinda Rajapakse yesterday accused Tamil Tiger rebels of stoking an ethnic backlash by majority Sinhalese on the minority Tamil community with the attacks on innocent civilians using public transport.

"The aim of the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) is to have a backlash against the Tamils and to undermine our efforts to find a peaceful solution," Rajapakse said in a statement released by his office yesterday.

An LTTE defence spokesman, Rasiah Ilanthirayan, denied any responsibility for the blasts which occurred on a road widely used by tourists to reach southern beach resorts.

The bus bombings came as security forces stepped up an aerial bombing campaign against the tigers in the rebel-held northeast of the island, and the guerrillas accused the military of hitting civilians.

The government information department said 15 people were killed and 47 wounded on Saturday in the second bus bombing near Ambalangoda, 85 kilometres south of Colombo.

The attack followed a bus blast late Friday when six passengers were killed and another 70 were wounded near Colombo.

Security News Today

Security forces capture key rebel camp in Sri Lanka 's volatile east, military says

Associated Press, Mon January 8, 2007 08:16 EST . COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) _ Sri Lanka's elite police force on Monday seized a key Tamil Tiger rebel base in the country's east, a region where a clash with separatists the previous day left at least one soldier dead, the military said.

Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe told reporters that the rebels' ``Stanley Base'' in eastern Ampara district fell to Special Task Force personnel, who also recovered a large quantity of arms and ammunition.

Special Task Force chief Nimal Lewke said that four of his personnel were wounded in the fighting and a search was being conducted to flush out rebel fighters who he said had escaped into the jungles.

Eastern Sri Lanka has become a hotbed of violence between the military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which has been fighting for over 20 years for a separate homeland for Sri Lanka's 3.1 million ethnic Tamil minority who have suffered decades of discrimination by the majority-Sinhalese.

Lewke said the vast base was used by the guerrillas to launch attacks on government forces in the region, as a training camp for new Tiger recruits and also included a hospital.

The weapons left behind by the rebels included four mortar launchers, he said.

Rebel spokesman Rasiah Ilanthirayan confirmed a battle in the area but denied that their base had fallen.

``They (STF) have been trying to infiltrate our area and there was also a confrontation. But I deny that the camp has been captured,'' he said by telephone from the rebel stronghold of Kilinochchi.

In the nearby Batticaloa district, a clash between security forces and rebels late Sunday killed one soldier and left another wounded, Samarasinghe said. He had no details about rebel casualties, and the Tigers were not immediately available for comment. The two sides routinely inflate each other's casualty counts and independent verification was not possible.

Separately, the Defense Ministry said rebels infiltrated an electrical facility early Monday on the outskirts of Colombo and blew up a transformer, disrupting electricity to some areas.

``They (rebels) cut the wire mesh and may have used at least 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosive to blow up the transformer,'' Maj. Upali Rajapakse said.

``The security forces believe that the Tiger terrorists are attempting to disrupt normalcy in non-operational areas,'' Rajapakse said.

Rebel spokesman, Ilanthirayan, denied involvement.

The Elakanda power station is about 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) north of Colombo.

Also on Monday in northern Jaffna peninsula, masked men stopped a state-owned bus transporting school children, then forced the students off before setting it on fire, a bus employee said.

The group, shouting anti-government slogans, claimed that a pro-government Tamil party was abducting students in Jaffna, employee N. Rasadurai said.

The military said that some students themselves were involved in the arson attack, which was instigated by the rebels.

Sri Lankan Military: Rebels blow up transformer at electrical facility

Associated Press, Mon January 8, 2007 02:23 EST . - - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) The Sri Lankan Defense Ministry said Tamil rebels infiltrated an electrical facility early Monday on the outskirts of Colombo and blew up a transformer, disrupting electricity to some areas.

``They (rebels) cut the wire mesh and may have used at least 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosive to blow up the transformer,'' Acting military spokesman, Maj. Upali Rajapakse said.

The Elkanda power station is about 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) north of Colombo.

Sri Lanka beefs up security after bus bombings

Colombo, Jan 08: Sri Lanka on Monday stepped up security on public transport across the country after two weekend bomb attacks killed 21 passengers and wounded about 120, police said.

Passengers were forced to line up for security checks before boarding buses and trains that bring in about 70 per cent of the one million people who enter the capital daily for work, police said.

"We are having police and security forces at main bus terminals as well as volunteer groups who help with the checking," a police spokesman said.

President Mahinda Rajapakse yesterday accused Tamil Tiger rebels of stoking an ethnic backlash by majority Sinhalese on the minority Tamil community with the attacks on innocent civilians using public transport.

"The aim of the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) is to have a backlash against the Tamils and to undermine our efforts to find a peaceful solution," Rajapakse said in a statement released by his office yesterday.

An LTTE defence spokesman, Rasiah Ilanthirayan, denied any responsibility for the blasts which occurred on a road widely used by tourists to reach southern beach resorts.

The bus bombings came as security forces stepped up an aerial bombing campaign against the tigers in the rebel-held northeast of the island, and the guerrillas accused the military of hitting civilians.

The government information department said 15 people were killed and 47 wounded on Saturday in the second bus bombing near Ambalangoda, 85 kilometres south of Colombo.

The attack followed a bus blast late Friday when six passengers were killed and another 70 were wounded near Colombo.

Security News Today

Security forces capture key rebel camp in Sri Lanka 's volatile east, military says

Associated Press, Mon January 8, 2007 08:16 EST . COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) _ Sri Lanka's elite police force on Monday seized a key Tamil Tiger rebel base in the country's east, a region where a clash with separatists the previous day left at least one soldier dead, the military said.

Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe told reporters that the rebels' ``Stanley Base'' in eastern Ampara district fell to Special Task Force personnel, who also recovered a large quantity of arms and ammunition.

Special Task Force chief Nimal Lewke said that four of his personnel were wounded in the fighting and a search was being conducted to flush out rebel fighters who he said had escaped into the jungles.

Eastern Sri Lanka has become a hotbed of violence between the military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which has been fighting for over 20 years for a separate homeland for Sri Lanka's 3.1 million ethnic Tamil minority who have suffered decades of discrimination by the majority-Sinhalese.

Lewke said the vast base was used by the guerrillas to launch attacks on government forces in the region, as a training camp for new Tiger recruits and also included a hospital.

The weapons left behind by the rebels included four mortar launchers, he said.

Rebel spokesman Rasiah Ilanthirayan confirmed a battle in the area but denied that their base had fallen.

``They (STF) have been trying to infiltrate our area and there was also a confrontation. But I deny that the camp has been captured,'' he said by telephone from the rebel stronghold of Kilinochchi.

In the nearby Batticaloa district, a clash between security forces and rebels late Sunday killed one soldier and left another wounded, Samarasinghe said. He had no details about rebel casualties, and the Tigers were not immediately available for comment. The two sides routinely inflate each other's casualty counts and independent verification was not possible.

Separately, the Defense Ministry said rebels infiltrated an electrical facility early Monday on the outskirts of Colombo and blew up a transformer, disrupting electricity to some areas.

``They (rebels) cut the wire mesh and may have used at least 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosive to blow up the transformer,'' Maj. Upali Rajapakse said.

``The security forces believe that the Tiger terrorists are attempting to disrupt normalcy in non-operational areas,'' Rajapakse said.

Rebel spokesman, Ilanthirayan, denied involvement.

The Elakanda power station is about 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) north of Colombo.

Also on Monday in northern Jaffna peninsula, masked men stopped a state-owned bus transporting school children, then forced the students off before setting it on fire, a bus employee said.

The group, shouting anti-government slogans, claimed that a pro-government Tamil party was abducting students in Jaffna, employee N. Rasadurai said.

The military said that some students themselves were involved in the arson attack, which was instigated by the rebels.

Sri Lankan Military: Rebels blow up transformer at electrical facility

Associated Press, Mon January 8, 2007 02:23 EST . - - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) The Sri Lankan Defense Ministry said Tamil rebels infiltrated an electrical facility early Monday on the outskirts of Colombo and blew up a transformer, disrupting electricity to some areas.

``They (rebels) cut the wire mesh and may have used at least 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosive to blow up the transformer,'' Acting military spokesman, Maj. Upali Rajapakse said.

The Elkanda power station is about 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) north of Colombo.

Sri Lanka beefs up security after bus bombings

Colombo, Jan 08: Sri Lanka on Monday stepped up security on public transport across the country after two weekend bomb attacks killed 21 passengers and wounded about 120, police said.

Passengers were forced to line up for security checks before boarding buses and trains that bring in about 70 per cent of the one million people who enter the capital daily for work, police said.

"We are having police and security forces at main bus terminals as well as volunteer groups who help with the checking," a police spokesman said.

President Mahinda Rajapakse yesterday accused Tamil Tiger rebels of stoking an ethnic backlash by majority Sinhalese on the minority Tamil community with the attacks on innocent civilians using public transport.

"The aim of the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) is to have a backlash against the Tamils and to undermine our efforts to find a peaceful solution," Rajapakse said in a statement released by his office yesterday.

An LTTE defence spokesman, Rasiah Ilanthirayan, denied any responsibility for the blasts which occurred on a road widely used by tourists to reach southern beach resorts.

The bus bombings came as security forces stepped up an aerial bombing campaign against the tigers in the rebel-held northeast of the island, and the guerrillas accused the military of hitting civilians.

The government information department said 15 people were killed and 47 wounded on Saturday in the second bus bombing near Ambalangoda, 85 kilometres south of Colombo.

The attack followed a bus blast late Friday when six passengers were killed and another 70 were wounded near Colombo.
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Sunday, January 07, 2007

Tamil Tigers Blamed for Sri Lankan Blast

Associated Press, Sat January 7, 2007 13:24 EST . KRISHAN FRANCIS - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) A bomb on a Sri Lankan passenger bus killed at least 15 people and wounded dozens more Saturday, officials said, blaming Tamil Tiger rebels for the country's second bus bombing in as many days. Though violence has risen sharply in Sri Lanka - over the past year, most of it has occurred in the ethnic Tamil-dominated north and east, where the rebels run their own de facto state.

Officials said the bus wreckage indicated that a suicide bomber may have been behind the attack, which ripped through the bus on the crowded southern coast road early Saturday afternoon.

``There is a female body inside the bus, and looking at the damage the blast has caused around her, we suspect that she could have been a suicide bomber,'' said senior police official Upul Ariyaratne.

About 65 passengers had been on bus, Ariyaratne said, and some 40 had been admitted to hospitals.

The Tigers have made suicide bombings a hallmark of their two-decade campaign to carve out a separate state for the minority Tamils, who suffered years of discrimination by the Sinhalese-dominated government.

However, the Tigers denied any role in Saturday's bloodshed.

``We totally deny that (the bus bombing). We did not do that,'' the rebels' military spokesman, Rasiah Ilanthirayan, told The Associated Press by telephone from the group's northern stronghold, Kilinochchi.

Sri Lankan officials said the two bombings six people were killed in a similar bus attack Friday on a highway northeast of Colombo indicate that a stepped-up government military campaign has weakened the rebels, officially called the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam or LTTE.

``The LTTE is losing their strength in the east. Because of this, they are targeting innocent civilians,'' said military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe.

Both bus explosions came days after the rebels warned the government of ``serious repercussions'' for government airstrikes they said had killed 16 Tamil civilians, including eight children, in a Tiger-controlled northwestern area. The military said it targeted only rebel positions in the airstrikes Tuesday.

``This looks like a retaliatory attack for the air force raids,'' said Sunanda Deshapriya, an independent political analyst.

``The LTTE has gone back to its previous tactic of attacking Sinhalese civilians,'' Deshapriya said. ``It wants to send a message through terror again.''

In other violence Saturday, three separate roadside bombings, blamed on the insurgents, killed four soldiers and a civilian in the north.

A 2002 cease-fire between the rebels and the government has come under serious threat as more than 3,600 fighters and civilians were killed in renewed fighting in 2006. The cease-fire still officially holds.

The civil war has claimed about 68,000 lives, and displaced 1.6 million people.

Associated Press writers Dilip Ganguly and Ruwan Weerakoon contributed to this report.

Bus Blasts Kill 15 People in Sri Lanka

Associated Press, Sat January 6, 2007 07:18 EST . COLOMBO, Sri Lanka _ A bomb on a Sri Lanka passenger bus killed at least 15 people and wounded dozens more Saturday, officials said, blaming Tamil Tiger rebels.

The blast, which police suspect was triggered by a female suicide bomber, was the country's second bus bombing in as many days _ a sign of escalation of the bloody ethnic conflict ravaging the tropical island nation off southern India.

Police blamed Tamil Tiger rebels for the bus attack in the coastal town of Meetiyagoda, 95 kilometers (60 miles) south of the capital, Colombo, and near a number of popular resort towns.

Though violence has risen sharply in Sri Lanka over the past year, most of it has occurred in the ethnic Tamil-dominated north and east.

Officials said the bus wreckage indicated that a suicide bomber may have been behind the attack, which ripped through the bus on the crowded southern coast road early Saturday afternoon.

``There is a female body inside the bus, and looking at the damage the blast has caused around her, we suspect that she could have been a suicide bomber,'' said senior police official Upul Ariyaratne.

About 65 passengers had been on bus, Ariyaratne said, and some 40 had been admitted to hospitals.

The Tigers have made suicide bombings a hallmark of their two-decade campaign to carve out a separate state for the minority Tamils, who suffered years of discrimination by the Sinhalese-dominated government.

However, the Tigers denied any role in Saturday's bloodshed.

``We totally deny that (the bus bombing). We did not do that,'' the rebels' military spokesman, Rasiah Ilanthirayan, told The Associated Press by telephone from the group's northern stronghold, Kilinochchi.

Officials say the two bombings _ six people were killed in a similar bus attack Friday on a highway northeast of Colombo _ indicate that months of fighting have weakened the rebels, officially called the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam or LTTE.

``The LTTE is losing their strength in the east. Because of this, they are targeting innocent civilians,'' said military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe.

The military has pushed harder in recent months against the rebels, who control much of the island's north and parts of the east, where they run their own de facto state.

Both bus explosions came days after the rebels warned the government of ``serious repercussions'' for government airstrikes they said had killed 16 Tamil civilians, including eight children, in a Tiger-controlled northwestern area. The military said it targeted only rebel positions in the airstrikes Tuesday.

``This looks like a retaliatory attack for the air force raids,'' said independent political analyst Sunanda Deshapriya.

``The LTTE has gone back to its previous tactic of attacking Sinhalese civilians,'' Deshapriya said. ``It wants to send a message through terror again.''

In other violence, three separate roadside bombings, blamed on the insurgents, killed four soldiers and a civilian in the north.

Violence has grown in Sri Lanka over the past year and has approached full-scale war, with more than 3,600 fighters and civilians killed in renewed fighting, according to the Defense Ministry.

A Norwegian-brokered 2002 cease-fire still officially holds, but is largely ignored by both sides.

The civil war has claimed about 68,000 lives, and displaced 1.6 million people.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

VARAURAIKAL - Posted Delay

We are apologies for the delayed publishing of the VARAURAIKAL Tamil newspaper for the date of 05.01.2007 by some technical experience.

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Roadside bombs kill 5 in northern Sri Lanka , military says

Associated Press, Sat January 6, 2007 03:00 EST . KRISHAN FRANCIS - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Suspected Tamil Tiger insurgents triggered three roadside bombs across Sri Lanka - 's volatile north on Saturday, killing four soldiers and a civilian, the military said, while police detained 10 people for questioning overnight after a bus bombing by suspected rebels killed six. Sri Lanka - has recently experienced a sharp rise in violence; more than 3,600 fighters and civilians were killed in renewed fighting in 2006, according to Defense Ministry.

A Norwegian-brokered 2002 cease-fire has all but disintegrated, although it still officially holds.

Before the cease-fire, the conflict between the Tigers, fighting for a separate state for ethnic minority Tamils and the majority Sinhalese-dominated government, claimed the lives of about 65,000 people and displaced another 1.6 million.

Blasts kill 5 in Sri Lanka as bus bombing probed

Sat Jan 6, 2007 4:09am ET
By Simon Gardner

COLOMBO (Reuters) - Suspected Tamil Tiger bomb attacks killed four soldiers and a civilian in north Sri Lanka on Saturday, as police questioned 18 people over a blast that killed six civilians and wounded dozens on a bus a day earlier.

Three soldiers and a civilian were killed when a truck hit a mine in the northern district of Vavuniya, while another soldier was killed in a similar attack on the northern Jaffna peninsula.

Police were still searching for the culprits of Friday's bus bombing 36 km (20 miles) outside Colombo -- the second such attack to directly target civilians rather than the military or politicians -- but had not yet made any arrests.

"We are still investigating. At the moment 18 people are being questioned, but no one is in custody," said E.W. Prathapasinghe, a Deputy Inspector General of Police for the island's Western Province.

Officials put the death toll at six, including one child, and said around 60 other passengers were hurt, 10 of them seriously.

"Every government has given promises of finishing the war, but they are only promises and a dream for us. We are suffering," 22-year-old survivor R. Rasika said from a Colombo hospital, unable to hear or see properly.

"People in the north are suffering and being killed too," the architecture student added. "The government needs to find a peaceful solution. This country is not just for (majority) Sinhalese people. I think we need to find a practical power sharing system.

The Tigers were not immediately available for comment on the blasts, but routinely deny involvement in bombings and ambushes.

"Yesterday's bombing bears all the hallmarks of Tiger attacks," said Iqbal Athas, an analyst for Jane's Defense Weekly. "The fact that they have now started targeting (civilians) is a cause for concern.

"One cannot rule out more attacks on civilians," he added.

More than 3,000 troops, civilians and rebel fighters were killed in a spree of ambushes, suicide bombings, air raids, naval clashes and land battles last year despite a 2002 ceasefire, which international monitors say now exists only on paper.

(Additional reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Buddhika Weerasinghe in COLOMBO)

((Editing by Jeremy Laurence; Colombo Newsroom +94-777-686-030, simon.gardner@reuters.com)

Monday, January 01, 2007

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Sunday, December 31, 2006

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