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Sri Lanka clashes leave 16 Tiger rebels dead
Posted: 17 May 2008 1651 hrs

 
 
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10 dead, scores wounded in Sri Lanka suicide blast

COLOMBO : Sri Lankan ground troops killed at least 16 Tamil Tiger rebels while airforce fighter jets bombed guerrilla targets in the island's north, the defence ministry said on Saturday.

The air sorties were carried out over the rebel-held Iranamadu area late on Friday, the ministry said in a statement.

The offensive came hours after a suicide bomber rammed into a police bus in the capital of Colombo, killing 11 people and injuring more than 80.

Troops advancing into rebel-held areas killed at least 16 guerrillas in Vavuniya on Friday, the statement said, without detailing the casualties suffered by government forces.

Friday's fighting brought the number of rebels killed by security forces since the start of the year to 3,716 while 276 soldiers have died in combat during the same period, according to ministry figures.

Casualty numbers cannot be independently verified as Colombo bars journalists and rights groups from travelling to embattled areas.

The government said it had opened investigations into Friday's attack in Colombo's heavily-guarded commercial area of Fort.

The toll from the blast rose to 11 overnight.

The area is home to the official residence of President Mahinda Rajapakse, the five-star Hilton and Galadari Hotels and the twin-tower World Trade Centre office complex - a previous target of the Tiger rebels.

Friday's bomb was the third suicide attack in a week.

On the eve of the May 10 provincial elections, a bomb ripped through a crowded cafe in eastern Ampara town, killing 12 people and wounding at least 36. Also, hours before polling started, a Tiger suicide diver sank a navy cargo ship docked at the eastern port of Trincomalee.

Tens of thousands of people have died since the Tigers launched an armed struggle in 1972 to carve out a separate homeland for minority Tamils in the Sinhalese-majority island's north and east.

Rajapakse on Friday denounced the bus attack as "savagery" and said it reinforced his decision in January to pull out of a truce with the Tigers and step up a military drive against the rebels' mini-state in the island's north.

Colombo has poured a record 1.5 billion dollars into the war effort this year, hoping for a quick end to the bloody conflict. - AFP/ms

 

 



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