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Heavy fighting rages in Sri Lanka as troops move on Tamil Tigers' capital
Posted: 04 September 2008 1651 hrs

 
 
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COLOMBO: Government forces and Tamil separatists were locked in heavy combat in northern Sri Lanka with at least 26 rebels killed in fresh fighting, the defence ministry said on Thursday.

Six soldiers were wounded and another was missing following the latest clashes with the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) since Wednesday, the ministry said in a statement.

"The LTTE continues to steadily lose manpower as the Sri Lankan security forces continue to advance further into the heart of the LTTE administrative power, Kilinochchi," the ministry said.

"This is a major set back for the terrorists."

The military has said that it wants to dismantle the Tigers' de facto mini-state by capturing the town of Kilinochchi, 330 kilometres (206 miles) north of Colombo.

Government troops were now said to be within striking distance.

The military on Wednesday evening accepted the bodies of 19 soldiers killed by the Tigers during this week's fighting that saw security forces capture the strategic town on Mallavi from the rebels.

The defence ministry described the capture of Mallavi as "one more decisive and impressive phase" in its campaign to defeat the Tigers, who have fought for decades for a homeland for minority Tamils in island's north and east.

The ethnic Sinhalese-dominated government has also asked tens of thousands of Tamil civilians living in rebel territory to cross over to government-held areas in the island's north to avoid getting caught up in the crossfire.

The number of rebels reportedly killed by troops since January has been raised to 6,318. The military said 604 soldiers were killed during the same period.

Tens of thousands have died on both sides of the conflict in more than three decades of bloodshed.


- AFP/so

 

 



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