SRI LANKA: More than a dozen Tamil refugees are killed in latest Sri Lanka violence
Record ID:
783304
SRI LANKA: More than a dozen Tamil refugees are killed in latest Sri Lanka violence
- Title: SRI LANKA: More than a dozen Tamil refugees are killed in latest Sri Lanka violence
- Date: 10th December 2006
- Summary: (BN06) KANTALE, SRI LANKA (REUTERS) (DECEMBER 9, 2006) EXTERIOR OF BASE HOSPITAL IN KANTALE HELICOPTER LANDING, CARRYING PEOPLE REPORTEDLY WOUNDED BY SRI LANKAN ARMY ARTILLERY FIRE ON TWO CAMPS IN REBEL TERRITORY ON DECEMBER 9 WOUNDED BOY BEING EXAMINED ON STRETCHER VARIOUS OF CIVILIANS REPORTEDLY INJURED BY REBEL ARTILLERY FIRE ON DECEMBER 7 INJURED GIRL IN HOSPITAL (SOUNDBITE) (Sinhala) C. K. NANDINI SAYING: "We were at home when the shell fell. It injured us and damaged part of the house" WOUNDED BOY ON HOSPITAL BED (SOUNDBITE) (Sinhala) R.D.SHANTHA SAYING: "I was playing with friends under a cashew tree when the shell fell nearby. I was the only one injured. My friends are O.K." INJURED SOLDIERS BEING BROUGHT TO HOSPITAL VARIOUS OF INJURED SOLDIERS
- Embargoed: 25th December 2006 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Sri Lanka
- Country: Sri Lanka
- Reuters ID: LVA4DZG8IXGRK9INGQ10XSKG0SD2
- Story Text: Sri Lankan army artillery fire hit two camps in rebel territory in the island's northeast, killing 15 refugees and injuring many more, the Tamil Tigers said on Saturday (December 9).
Wounded civilians, including children were taken to a military hospital for treatment.
"We were at home when the shell fell. It injured us and damaged part of the house," said C.K. Nandini, who was injured in the artillery fire.
"I was playing with friends under a cashew tree when the shell fell nearby. I was the only one injured. My friends are O.K.," said R.D. Shantha from his hospital bed.
Two days earlier the army had accused the rebels of a similar attack.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) also said the military mounted a major offensive in the eastern district of Batticaloa to push into their territory, which the army denied and accused the rebels of using civilians as cover.
As with other recent clashes, independent confirmation of what had happened behind rebel lines was impossible.
The incident occurred two days after the military said Tiger artillery hit a school in northeast Sri Lanka, killing a teacher, a schoolboy, three civilians and wounding 10 students.
The military said the Tigers continued to fire artillery further north in the neighbouring district of Trincomalee on Saturday, and said two soldiers were killed and 30 injured in retaliatory strikes.
Aid workers said around 50 displaced persons had reached the town of Kantale on Saturday morning, but the military had since closed access routes.
The fighting broke out after President Mahinda Rajapakse this week introduced new anti-terrorism laws in a crackdown on the Tigers and their supporters, after a failed suicide attack on his brother Gotabhaya, who is his Defence Secretary.
The rebels say the measures will only worsen a new chapter in the island's two-decade-old civil war. Rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran last week declared the Tigers were resuming their independence struggle.
More than 67,000 people have been killed since 1983 and more than 3,000 civilians, troops and rebel fighters have already been killed so far this year. Air strikes, suicide attacks and major artillery battles are increasingly common.
On Friday, the rebels called on the government to reopen the island's main north-south highway, which runs through their territory to the army-held northern Jaffna peninsula. Analysts say the closure has badly hampered rebel movements and their ability to mount attacks.
The Tigers also rounded on the international community, peace mediator Norway and the Nordic Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, which oversees the remnants of a 2002 ceasefire, warning Sri Lanka was heading for "a monumental irrecoverable state of destruction". - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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