/ 24 October 2007

Sri Lanka says 11 rebels killed in northern clashes

Sri Lankan troops killed 11 Tamil Tiger rebels in a series of clashes in the island’s restive north and one soldier also died, the military said on Wednesday.

Troops fought four separate engagements with Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fighters in the northern district of Vavuniya late on Tuesday, a day after the rebels mounted their biggest suicide operation by land backed by air strikes.

The military’s death toll from Monday’s rebel assault, in which several aircraft were damaged, rose to 14 after one wounded serviceman died in hospital.

”The army killed 11 LTTE terrorists and a large number of terrorists were wounded in four different attacks in Vavuniya on Tuesday evening,” said military spokesperson Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara.

He said one soldier was killed and two others were wounded in a rebel mortar bomb and artillery attack.

The Tigers were not immediately available for comment on the fighting and there were no independent accounts of what had happened or how many people were killed.

Military analysts say both sides tend to exaggerate enemy losses and play down their own.

The fighting in the north, where a new chapter of a two-decade civil war is now focused after troops drove the Tigers from bastions in the east of the island, comes after the military said dozens of Tigers were killed in heavy clashes in the north last week.

An estimated 5 000 people have been killed since early last year in renewed fighting, taking the death toll since the conflict erupted in 1983 to around 70 000.

While the government has had the upper hand in recent months, analysts say there is no clear winner on the horizon and fear the conflict could rumble on for years.

Counter-terrorism experts say there is no military solution to Sri Lanka’s protracted conflict, and say the only hope is for both sides to reach a long-elusive political settlement. ‒ Reuters