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Suicide attack on Sri Lanka military convoy kills 92
COLOMBO—Suspected Tamil Tiger rebels rammed a truck loaded with
explosives into a Sri Lankan naval convoy on Monday, killing at least 92
people and deepening pessimism over this month's planned peace talks.
The attack near the town of Habarana, about 190 km (120 miles) northeast
of the capital Colombo, was one of the worst suicide bombings in the
troubled Indian Ocean island.
It came at the start of a week of hectic international diplomacy aimed
at ending a rash of fighting between the military and the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) ahead of planned peace talks in Geneva on
October 28-29.
The victims were mostly navy sailors going home on vacation, but some
civilians in the area were also killed, military officers at Colombo's
media center for national security said. More than 100 people were
wounded.
"This inhuman act is clear revenge by the terrorists on the navy which
inflicted successive defeats on the LTTE against their attempts to
smuggle arms and explosives in the recent past," the center said in a
statement.
Officers said the attack took place near a transit camp where the navy
gathers its men heading to or returning from the eastern naval base of
Trincomalee.
"There were about 15 buses and 13 were damaged in the explosion," one
navy officer in Colombo told Reuters.
The convoy had stopped near the town and many sailors had stepped out of
their buses when the truck rammed into the vehicles, he said.
There were some small shops in the area and civilians were also caught
in the blast, he said, adding that the toll could go up as bodies had
been blown to bits and a count was still on.
Tiger military spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiraiyan said he had to check with
a regional commander if the LTTE was responsible.
But he said the bombing could be justified if it was indeed the rebels
who had carried it out as government forces also launched attacks
outside the war zone and on civilians.
Sri Lankan air force jets bombed a village near the northeastern town of
Mullaithivu late on Monday and several civilians were feared killed, he
added.
Monday's attack came as Yasushi Akashi, the peace envoy of the island's
chief financial donor, Japan, began talks with government leaders to
push a four-year peace process that has been battered by mounting
violence.
Hundreds of people have been killed in spiraling violence in Sri Lanka
since late July, and a truce brokered in 2002 now exists only on paper.
Last week, dozens of troops and rebels were killed and hundreds wounded
in one of the deadliest battles since the truce.
On Sunday, the Sri Lankan navy shot and sunk a suspected rebel trawler
off the country's northwestern coast, killing six suspected Tamil
Tigers.
More than 65,000 people have been killed since 1983 when the rebels
began fighting for an independent Tamil homeland.
Diplomats said Monday's attack was a setback to the Geneva talks, about
which hope was already low.
Complicating matters further was a ruling by the country's Supreme Court
on Monday that the 1987 merger of the northern and eastern provinces,
home to the country's Tamils, was unconstitutional and invalid.
The merger of the two provinces was an emotive demand of the Tamils but
the hardline Marxist JVP party was opposed to it and had challenged it
in court.
The unarmed Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM), which oversees what is
left of the 2002 truce, said it had yet to determine who was responsible
for the suicide bombing.
"It's a serious and brutal attack," said SLMM spokesman Thorfinnur
Omarsson. "We hope it will not have difficult consequences for the peace
talks. It is important the talks are not affected by this." —Agencies |