/ 7 January 2009

Tamil Tigers vow to beat back army offensive

Sri Lankan soldiers pressured the Tamil Tigers’ last stronghold on the Jaffna Peninsula on Wednesday, while the separatist rebels vowed to overcome the latest in a series of battlefield losses.

Soldiers began sandwiching the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on Tuesday from the north and south of the bottleneck linking the island to the peninsula, and skirmished on Wednesday, military spokesperson Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.

That 12km by 6km wide area, covered with bunkers, landmines and defences, is the only part of the traditionally Tamil land of Jaffna the rebels have controlled since the military seized the bulk of the peninsula in 1995.

Nanayakkara said resistance had lowered on Wednesday.

”The number of fighters and the volume of fire is lower, in terms of artillery,” he said.

On Tuesday troops on the northern front seized a rebel defence line as soldiers began to advance from the south on Elephant Pass, the gateway to Jaffna and site where the army lost one of its key bases in a stinging defeat in 2000.

Two soldiers and five rebels were killed in fighting there and elsewhere in the war zone on Tuesday, Nanayakkara said. The rebels had no immediate comment. Confirmation is nearly impossible because the military and LTTE bar most media from the area.

Once that strip is cleared, the military is expected to then direct most of its forces toward Mullaittivu, the only major town still held by the rebels, and where analysts say the LTTE has been moving its fighters and heavy weapons for a final stand.

The northeastern port is across the jungle from Kilinochchi, the self-proclaimed rebel capital the Tigers lost on Friday, in a crushing blow.

LTTE political head B Nadesan, in an interview published overnight on the pro-rebel web site www.TamilNet.com, said the Tigers had lost and reclaimed Kilinochchi before.

”The simple truth is that we have taken forward our struggle for more than 30 years, solely relying on the support of our people. We are certain that the continued support will enable us to overcome current and future challenges,” TamilNet quoted him as saying.

The Tigers formed in the 1970s and began waging war in earnest in 1983, saying they were fighting for Sri Lankan Tamils against mistreatment by the majority Sinhalese, who dominated government since independence from Britain in 1948.

But their prolific use of suicide bombings and assassinations of opponents including Tamil politicians not in their ranks has landed them on United States, European Union and Indian terrorism lists.

In the roughly 40 square kilometre wedge of jungle still held by the Tigers are what aid agencies say are up to 230 000 displaced Tamils, forced to live in crude shelter if they have any at all.

Rights groups say the Tigers won’t let them leave and forcibly conscript many to fight and build defences, while those that escape fear life in military-guarded refugee camps where they are viewed as potential Tiger sympathisers.

The LTTE rejects those allegations, Nadesan told TamilNet. Nanayakkara said about 150 civilians had come to army-held areas over the past two days.

United Kingdom Secretary of State for International Development Douglas Alexander and Foreign Minister Mark Malloch-Brown late on Tuesday said Kilinochchi’s fall had made more urgent the need to set out a political deal to address the underlying issues of the war. – Reuters