Sri Lanka - Tamil Tigers
Government steps up offensive against Tamil Tigers
Sunday 16 November 2008
A day after troops said they had re-taken the town of Pooneryn from separatist guerrillas following months of heavy fighting, the military used helicopters and jets Sunday to strike rebel bases on the Jaffna peninsula and the mainland.
Sunday 16 November 2008
By AFP (text) / Philip CROWTHER (video)Sri Lanka stepped up air attacks against suspected rebel targets in the island's north Sunday, a day after ground troops re-captured a highly strategic town, the defence ministry said.
Mi-24 helicopter gunships and fighter jets were deployed to pound defence lines of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on the Jaffna peninsula and on the mainland, the defence ministry said.
"Sri Lanka air force has launched a series of air strikes in support of ground troops in the Muhamalai area," the ministry said in a statement.
The attacks came a day after Sri Lanka's president asked Tamil Tiger rebels to surrender after troops said they had re-taken the town of Pooneryn from the separatist guerrillas following months of heavy fighting.
President Mahinda Rajapakse said in a televised address to the nation that security forces took Pooneryn and the main northwestern coastal A-32 route on Saturday morning. The town was taken by troops after several failed attempts during 15 years of Tiger occupation.
Military officials said the fall of Pooneryn was a severe blow to the Tigers who are defending their main de facto capital of Kilinochchi, further southeast, amid a multi-pronged military thrust.
"Despite all their efforts, they failed in their bid to hold Pooneryn," the Sunday Times defence analyst Iqbal Athas said. "That it was a humiliating defeat for the guerrillas came from radio intercepts from the battle field."
The fall of Pooneryn shrank Tiger territory by about half and prevented the rebels from using the north-western seaboard to smuggle weapons and other supplies by boat from neighbouring India, military officials said.
They said the bigger advantage for the military was the removal of Tiger artillery guns at Pooneryn which had been used to hit the main Palaly airbase in the Jaffna peninsula and disrupted regular military flights.
The military has not given details of losses suffered by either side in the battle for Pooneryn, but Athas said both sides had suffered "very heavy casualties" in the fighting.
The government is banking on a military victory against the Tamil Tiger rebels after pulling out of a moribund Norwegian-arranged truce in January.
Security forces have in recent months stepped up their offensive in a bid to capture Kilinochchi, the political capital of the Tigers in the north of Sri Lanka, where they received visiting foreign dignitaries.
With the fall of Pooneryn, the military has taken the northwestern seaboard of the island and is poised to make a final push for Kilinochchi, defence officials said.
There had been no comment from the Tigers on the latest military action, but Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran is due to make an annual speech on November 27 setting out his plans for the next year.
The Tigers commemorate their war dead during a "Heroes' week" starting November 21. Tens of thousands of people have been killed in Sri Lanka's Tamil separatist conflict since 1972.
Last month, the military stopped releasing its own losses in daily bulletins, saying it would hinder operations.
However, official figures tabled in parliament show that 1,269 troops were killed in the first 10 months of this year. The military says it killed more than 7,500 Tiger rebels during the same period.
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Pour aller plus loin



19/11/2008 23:03:34 Alert a moderator
Another perspective to the previously posted comment
By Jay - USA
Regardless of how one feels about Sri Lanka, you only need to see Colombo to understand that it is truly a multiethnic and harmonious state of Singhalese, Tamils, and Muslims. LTTE is a ruthless terrorist organization (Don't take my word for it, it's banned in India, USA, France, Canada, and UK to name a few), this is not because they claim to represent Tamils, but because they don't. LTTE has killed many good Tamils in Sri Lanka such as the former foreign minister (Yes, a cabinet position appointed by the Singhalese President).
Certainly it's not a perfect country, but which democracy is. The government forces are no DC Congo, they are skilled and well disciplined force whipping the rag tag LTTE on a daily basis (Don't take my word for it, see the facts and publications). Sri Lanka's economy is strong and the private sector is leading the way. In Colombo the challenge is not ethnic harmony, is the lack of a middle class. Don't believe the cynical perspective of those who left the country after obtaining a free government education, free healthcare, and benefited from a literacy rate of over 90%. The LTTE, once destroyed militarily, which will happen soon, the country will progress at a rapid pace....The talent (Singhalese, Tamils, and Muslims), infrastructure, and the will is there.
15/11/2008 15:45:23 Alert a moderator
Claims by Sinhala government of Sri Lanka mainly propaganda
By Anonyme - Canada
Having visited Sri Lanka which is after all a third world country, obne should not take any claims that it is winning the war against Tamil EELAM. At best Sri Lankan soldier are a coolie unit, they might be good at cleaning up places, but not even in World War II, were they ever used as frontline potential. All they are are loud-mouthed braggarts, who make outlandish claims, hoping to get praise.
As the novelist Art Linkletter said, the best part of Sro Lanka was when you were leaving it behind. IF you really want to see a country that's rundown and backbord go to Sri Lanka, it might well compare with the Republic of Congo but that's all.
Corruption is the mainstay of Sro Lanka and even the customs officers at the ports are on the take, that's the way Sri Lanka has always been in Serendeep (Sri Lanka) even from the days of King Parakrama.