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Pakistan Assists Sri Lanka In War Against Tigers

Sri Lankan troops flush out LTTE from Jaffna
Thursday, January 15, 2009


COLOMBO: Sri Lankan troops have established total control over the northern peninsula of Jaffna on Wednesday after flushing out the last remaining pockets of rebel resistance, defence officials said.

Security forces fought their way into and began dominating the Chundikkulam bird sanctuary area, where the guerrillas had several Sea Tiger bases, a defence official said.

There was no comment from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), but their hold on the peninsula began crumbling last week after troops took Elephant Pass, the causeway linking Jaffna with the Sri Lankan mainland.

“A senior LTTE Sea Tiger leader identified as ‘Lieutenant Colonel Thiru’ was killed along with several others,” the ministry said referring to clashes in the area Tuesday.

The troops established full control over Jaffna as authorities on Wednesday buried 41 bodies of suspected Tiger rebels killed by security forces in the island’s northern mainland.

Military officials said about 1,700 Tamil civilians had sought shelter with government forces after escaping from the remaining rebel-held areas of the island’s north-east. “In the past two weeks a total of 1,707 civilians have crossed into government-held areas in the north,” a military official said, adding that the authorities were arranging emergency relief for them.

Hospital officials in the town of Vavuniya, 260 kilometres north of here, said ongoing fighting had made it difficult to transfer the bodies of 41 suspected Tiger rebels back to the LTTE through the Red Cross.

“The Tigers have not specified a place where the Red Cross can hand over the bodies to them,” a hospital official said. “Because we have no storage facilities, we have arranged for the burials after forensic examinations.”

Both the military and the Tigers had earlier used the International Committee of the Red Cross to swap their war dead.

The burials came as warplanes bombed and destroyed two LTTE artillery guns, the defence ministry said. It was not clear how many artillery pieces the Tigers still had. The air force had stepped up strikes against the remaining LTTE strong points in the island’s north Tuesday with at least 10 bombing sorties, a ministry spokesman said.

Fighting was also reported around guerrilla-controlled Mullaittivu district.

Sri Lanka’s military started this year on a high, seizing the capital of the rebels’ de facto state, securing Elephant Pass and forcing the retreating rebels into a small territory in the northeast.

Authorities say that they now hope in the coming months to finally crush the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. The rebels arefighting to establish an independent state for minority Tamils, who have suffered marginalization at the hands of successive governments controlled by majority ethnic Sinhalese.

The LTTE has not commented on the latest fighting, but has admitted losing ground in recent weeks — including the town of Kilinochchi, which they used as their political base for nearly a decade.

Sri Lankan troops flush out LTTE from Jaffna
 
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Sri Lankan troops take another rebel camp

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan soldiers captured a Tamil Tiger rebel camp and a factory in the war-ravaged north as government forces closed in on the beleaguered rebels, pushing them into a shrinking enclave, the military said on Sunday.

A defence ministry statement said soldiers seized “a highly fortified camp” in the village of Maruthampuvel in the rebels’ last stronghold of Mullaittivu on Saturday.

It did not provide details of casualties, but said soldiers found eight bodies of rebel fighters killed in fighting elsewhere in the region.

The military has vowed to destroy the rebel group this year.

Government forces in recent weeks have captured the guerrillas’ de facto capital of Kilinochchi and say they have boxed the insurgents into a small pocket of territory in the northeast.

Factory: On Saturday, soldiers captured a rebel boat-manufacturing factory near Maruthampuvel where troops found two fast attack vessels and seven small boats used by rebels for suicide attacks, the statement said.

The Tamil Tigers have a naval wing that rams small vessels packed with explosives into government naval ships in suicide attacks.

Rebel spokesmen could not be contacted for comment because communication to the north has been severed.

Meanwhile, the pro-rebel website TamilNet reported that an army artillery attack on a rebel-held village in Mullaittivu killed four civilians on Saturday. Military spokesman Brig Udaya Nanayakkara denied the rebel claim and said the military attacks only identified rebel positions.

Human rights groups have warned that casualties among civilians living in the shrinking pocket of rebel territory are likely to mount as the government closes in on the insurgents.

An estimated 250,000 civilians remain in the war zone, many of them having fled from other areas ahead of advancing troops, according to aid groups.

India: Separately, India has expressed concerns at the humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka’s north, India’s External Affairs ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon, who held talks with top Sri Lankan officials on Saturday, conveyed India’s concerns and “the need to ensure the safety and security of the internally displaced civilian population”, the statement said. Sri Lankan army chief Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka told reporters late on Saturday he believed Tiger chief Velupillai Prabhakaran might already have escaped by sea.

“We don’t know if he is still there. He may have already fled in a boat,” Fonseka said. agencies

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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What hepl or role?You means AT THIS END OF DRAMA Pakistan should play a helpful role. would you please tell me what would b pak role in the end. either we will doing bandage to the woundeds or burried the died ones. coz these two major roles for help are here only and if u want any military strikes then Pakistan has its owwn so many headaches

Instead Pakistan can provide some supporting things to rehabilitates the Tamil people wid sri govt . Thats only role which is acoording to our country profile.
 
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durin zia ruling SRI lankan P rrequstia pak that it would help SRI but zia traped india in SRI by the foolishness of MAHA PATI BAHARAM SHSTARI GGGGGGGGG
 
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What hepl or role?You means AT THIS END OF DRAMA Pakistan should play a helpful role. would you please tell me what would b pak role in the end. either we will doing bandage to the woundeds or burried the died ones. coz these two major roles for help are here only and if u want any military strikes then Pakistan has its owwn so many headaches

Instead Pakistan can provide some supporting things to rehabilitates the Tamil people wid sri govt . Thats only role which is acoording to our country profile.

ur lack of knowledge really surprises me.
 
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durin zia ruling SRI lankan P rrequstia pak that it would help SRI but zia traped india in SRI by the foolishness of MAHA PATI BAHARAM SHSTARI GGGGGGGGG

What is this. Care to explain.
 
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Navy thwarts LTTE Attempt to get away and destroys 04 LTTE Boats - off Mullaithivu


Sri Lanka Navy thwarted an LTTE attempt to get away and destroyed four (04) LTTE boats during a fierce gun battle that erupted off the coast of Mullaithivu around 11.30 p.m. yesterday (19th January).

The Navy's Fast Attack Craft (FACs) intercepted a flotilla of LTTE Sea Tiger boats launched from Mullaithivu which were attempting to get away and engaged them destroying four (04) LTTE boats forcing the enemy to retreat and abandon the mission.

One SLN FAC sustained damages due to an explosion of an LTTE suicide boat close by.

Sri Lanka Navy maintains four (04) defence barriers off the coast of Mullaithivu consisting of more than twenty-five (25) Fast Attack Craft (FACs), Offshore Patrol Vessels (OPVs), Gun Boats, the Rapid Action Boat Squadron (RABS) and the Special Boat Squadron (SBS) to cut off the escape of LTTE cadres by sea and to prevent the unloading of warlike materials on the North-eastern coast.


Navy thwarts LTTE Attempt to get away and destroys 04 LTTE Boats - off Mullaithivu
 
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Sri Lankan troops take last Tiger bastion: Army
Updated at: 0800 PST, Monday, January 26, 2009


COLOMBO: Sri Lankan government troops were Monday pushing into the last pockets of jungle still held by Tamil Tigers after the capture of the rebels' last urban stronghold and military headquarters.

Soldiers on Sunday overran Mullaittivu, a northeastern coastal lagoon town that was the Tigers' main base for more than a decade, the island's army chief announced in a televised address to the nation.

The Tigers' latest setback follows the loss three weeks ago of their political capital of Kilinochchi, where they had the trappings of a separate state with their own police, courts and a bank.

Army chief Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka said the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) now controlled just a "small strip" of land in the northeast and were completely cornered.

Sri Lankan troops take last Tiger bastion: Army
 
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As war nears end, India's power blunted in Sri Lanka

Thu Jan 29, 2009 6:04pm IST

By Krittivas Mukherjee

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - After decades of strong-arming tiny neighbour Sri Lanka, India finds itself jostling for influence as the civil war nears an end, its power blunted by the island nation's growing ties with Pakistan and China.

While domestic political sensitivities over the fate of Sri Lanka's Tamils forced India to ease its leverage, rivals China and Pakistan stepped into the breach, offering Colombo military assistance in its war against the Tamil Tiger rebels.

China has sold Jian-7 fighters, anti-aircraft guns and JY-11 3D air surveillance radars to the resurgent Sri Lankan army as it seeks to finish one of Asia's longest-running wars by squeezing the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam fighters in a shrinking patch of jungle in the north.

Pakistan also supplied the army small arms, multi-barrel rocket launchers and trained Sri Lankan air force in precision guided attacks against the rebels, strategic analysts said.

"There have been several shipments of weapons from Pakistan. What has made a real difference to the outcome of the war is the Sri Lankan air force which has been rigorously trained by Pakistan in precision-guided attacks.," retired Indian army major general Ashok Mehta said.

India, by contrast, has limited its military assistance to the Sri Lankan army to "defensive weapons".

India has been limited by its insistence on protection of Sri lanka's Tamils, who are closely linked to 60 million Tamils in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, across a narrow strait from Sri Lanka.

"The shine has somewhat gone off from the leverage India has over Sri Lanka, partly because India has allowed it to happen," said Pakiasothy Saravanamuttu of the Colombo-based Centre for Policy Alternative. Continued...
 
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Pakistan, China role limits Indian influence in Sri Lanka

* Strategic battle in Sri Lanka is seen as part of a wider power struggle in South Asia

NEW DELHI: After decades of strong-arming tiny neighbour Sri Lanka, India finds itself jostling for influence, as its power has blunted by the island nation’s growing ties with Pakistan and China, with the civil war nearing an end.

While domestic political sensitivities over the fate of Sri Lanka’s Tamils forced India to ease its leverage, China and Pakistan stepped into the breach, offering Colombo military assistance in its war against the Tamil Tiger rebels.

China has sold Jian-7 fighters, anti-aircraft guns and JY-11 3D air surveillance radars to the resurgent Sri Lankan Army, as it seeks to finish one of Asia’s longest-running wars by squeezing the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fighters in a shrinking patch of the jungle in the north.

Pakistan also supplied the army small arms and multi-barrel rocket launchers, and trained the Sri Lankan air force in precision-guided attacks against the rebels, strategic analysts said.

“There have been several shipments of weapons from Pakistan. What has made a real difference to the outcome of the war is the Sri Lankan air force, which has been rigorously trained by Pakistan in precision-guided attacks,” Indian Army Major General (r) Ashok Mehta said. India, by contrast, had limited its military assistance to the Sri Lankan Army to ‘defensive weapons’.

India has been limited by its insistence on protection of Sri Lanka’s Tamils, who are closely linked to 60 million Tamils in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, across a narrow strait from Sri Lanka. “The shine has somewhat gone off from the leverage India has over Sri Lanka, partly because India has allowed it to happen,” said Pakiasothy Saravanamuttu of the Colombo-based Centre for Policy Alternative.

China’s and Pakistan’s help against Tamil Tiger rebels may have been crucial, a former Sri Lankan official said.

“If not for China and Pakistan, we would not have been able to finish off the insurgency,” K Godage, a former deputy head of Sri Lanka’s foreign office, told Reuters.

India trained and armed Tamil Tiger rebels in the early 1980s and followed it up a disastrous 1987-1990 peacekeeping foray into Sri Lanka, which has cast a long shadow over the war and made Sri Lanka wary of its giant neighbour. National Security Adviser MK Narayanan asked Sri Lanka to stop seeking arms from China or Pakistan last year, saying India as the regional power would still meet its defence requirements.

Narayanan made an unscheduled visit to Colombo last year to ensure Sri Lanka did not become a cockpit of regional rivalry, as with Afghanistan where Islamabad feared Indian influence. This week, Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee visited Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, and the two discussed safety measures for Tamils trapped in fighting between the army and Tamil Tigers separatists, and post-war reconstruction.

The visit was also to cool tensions with Tamil Nadu politicians in India’s ruling coalition who were sympathetic to the Tigers and demanded India broker a ceasefire.

Power struggle: The strategic battle in Sri Lanka is seen as part of a wider power struggle in South Asia, involving not only India and Pakistan but also China, which seeks to gain influence in the important economic region. China has made strides developing strategic assets, like the Gwadar port in Pakistan, the Sri Lankan port of Hambantota and assets in Yangon, part of a strategy to protect shipping lanes.

Sri Lanka sits next to shipping lanes that feed 80 percent of China’s and 65 percent of India’s oil needs. “There is a convergence of strategic interest in Sri Lanka among regional powers,” said security analyst C Uday Bhaskar.

But ignoring India may be hard for Sri Lanka, as the war appears to draw to a close, the focus is turning to the state of Sri Lanka’s $32 billion economy. Sri Lanka is suffering from costly short-term foreign debt. The war is expected to cost nearly $2 billion this year. Indian investments in Sri Lanka have grown. reuters

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Now that the LTTE is finished, India won't have any sensitivities holding it back from engaging with Sri Lanka fully. So much for Pakistani and Chinese influence.
 
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i don't think position of India will diminish so fast because after war there is strong support for India among Tamils. since Tamils are biggest minority there, many key position will be given to them it will be hard for Pakistan and china to isolate India from political picture of sri lanka.
 
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SriLanka knows India was behind all the mess up so much for India's territorial pissing gone and the days now will be full fledged bilateral AND strategic relationship among SriLanka-China-Pakistan side lining India..
 
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All parties???I don't see no party except India fingering its neighboring countries..
Yeah by the way whatever i dream on about it comes true...See Sri-Lanka is finishing off the mess created by Hindu raj.

Don't let me dream or see nitemares for the fact you might not getup tomw lol. :enjoy:

When u Indians didn't help Sri-Lanka in hour of need and instead supported terrorists what makes you think Sri-Lanka will give u a warm welcome and a big hug..Dream on kiddo...gets air refresher i smell stinky breath...
 
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