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    South Asia
     Oct 8, 2008
Cornered Tigers bare their teeth
By Inter Press Service correspondents

COLOMBO - Cornered by the Sri Lankan army in their northern stronghold of Kilinochchi, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) struck back on Monday with the deadliest weapon in their arsenal, the suicide bomber, killing a former army chief and 24 other people.

Retired Major General Janaka Perera, one of Sri Lanka's most popular and decorated military commanders, was killed while inaugurating the new offices of the main opposition United National Party (UNP), of which he was the local leader. His wife was among those who died in the blast.

In recent months, the LTTE has lost considerable stretches of territory and now faces the army's forward brigades at the gates of

 

its political nerve center, Kilinochchi.

Since the early 1990s, LTTE suicide cadres, called the Black Tigers, have been responsible for the deaths of one Sri Lankan president, a former Indian prime minister, at least four Sri Lankan ministers and a navy commander. Former president Chandrika Kumaratunga narrowly escaped a suicide bomber attack in 1999, but lost an eye.

The present army commander, Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka, and Defense Secretary Gottabaya Rajapakse, who are leading the thrust into LTTE-held territory in the north, have also survived suicide attacks while in office.

Perera, army chief from 2000 to 2001, is credited by many with the thwarting of an LTTE onslaught on the northern Jaffna Peninsula in 2000.

After retiring from the military he served as his country's envoy in Indonesia and Australia before returning to Sri Lanka and joining politics on behalf of the UNP.

"Initial investigations said the Tiger suicide bomber, disguised as a party supporter, had mingled with other civilians in the compound, minutes before the arrival of the retired military officer and other invitees for the opening of the North Central Province opposition leader's new office," the Sri Lankan army said.

The Defense Ministry said the bomber walked into the midst of the crowd gathered for the ceremony and detonated the explosives. The blast left the entrance to the building strewn with bodies and body parts.

Only two days ago when army chief Fonseka attended ceremonies to mark the 59th Army Day in Anuradhapura, he had announced that his troops were now two kilometers away from the center of Kilinochchi town.

In an interview with the state-owned English newspaper Sunday Observer, Fonseka urged the Tigers to surrender to advancing forces rather than risk fighting. "It is the best time for the LTTEers to surrender. Arrangements are being made for them to be rehabilitated," he was quoted as saying.

Sri Lankan government forces lost control of Kilinochchi town in September 1998 to the LTTE, which is fighting to carve out a homeland for ethnic Tamils in the north and east of the island nation. Tamils make up 11.9% of Sri Lanka's population of 20 million and Sinhalese almost 74%.

The Defense Ministry said that fighting was reported south of Kilinochchi over the weekend and that the air force also carried out raids on Monday.

"Defense sources in the frontlines reveal that troops ... kept the momentum of their advance in the south of Kilinochchi and the west of Mankulam areas despite heavy resistance from the LTTE," the ministry said.

Fonseka said the military would allow the tens of thousands of civilians trapped in areas northeast of the town escape to safer demarcated areas.

According to the latest UN humanitarian updates, over 220,000 internally displaced persons remain in areas northeast of Kilinochchi. The government and several humanitarian agencies have accused the LTTE of preventing civilians from moving into government-held areas.

Perera's UNP said the government should take responsibility for the assassination and charged it with doing little despite being aware of the threat to the former general's life.

"The government was very aware of the threat, in fact a senior police officer personally informed him [Perera] of it," UNP secretary general Tissa Attanayake told the media. "The government began conducting search operations, including in Anuradhapura, several days before the assassination. How can it explain the presence of a suicide cadre?"

Senior UNP member John Amaratunga told the media that it was still not clear who carried out the attack. "It appears as if someone who wanted to stop his progress as a politician was behind this."

President Mahinda Rajapakse, however, said the assassination was the work of the Tigers and that it served as yet another reminder that the country needs to unite to defeat them. "We have lost so many lives to terrorism, it is time for us to unite and defeat this curse," he said while addressing a function in southern Sri Lanka.

(Inter Press Service)


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