June 2008

Vol 7 - No. 12
 

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South Asia - Sri Lanka | June 2008

 


______________________________________________________________________________

 News Briefs

LTTE: Rising Desperation  

 



 (Afghanistan and Myanmar in the 
  map are not members of SAARC)

The North: Develop Now and Destroy Later?

 

BY SATHEESAN KUMAARAN (IDN) *

 

While Sri Lankan politicians and the people in the south enthusiastically celebrated the May Day 2008, the people in the North and East still yearned for permanent peace waiting to hear what the Sri Lankan leaders would say about the possibility of the government declaring a new truce with the Tamils. 

 

The promises were far from what they had expected and hoped for.  The Eastern people were promised that they would receive peace and economic prosperity if they voted for the paramilitary ‘TMVP group’. The

Northern people were told that they would see great economic development after the elections in the East under the leadership of another paramilitary ‘EPDP’ leader, Devananda.  The destiny of the Northern and Eastern people have been handed over to the paramilitaries and the people have no choice but to face the dire consequences in the months to come, unless and until the LTTE breaks its political and military strategies. 

The people in the Sri Lanka’s North are sick and tired of hearing empty promises by Sinhala politicians.

Let’s develop the North now

When Sri Lankan government leaders were energetic over a few important events that took place during the week leading up to May Day 2008, Sri Lankan President, Mahinda Rajapaksa, promised that he would liberate the North from the LTTE and establish permanent peace in the East.

Rajapaksa made this announcement the same week that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited Sri Lanka and signed a deal with his Sri Lankan counterpart to improve a refinery, and hydro-electric and irrigation schemes.  Last year, Iran agreed to soft loans and grants of $ 1.9 billion US for a hydroelectric and irrigation scheme and to upgrade a refinery, as well as to buy Iranian oil.  Ahmadinejad was escorted to observe the Iranian funded projects during his two-day official visit to Sri Lanka.  He arrived in Colombo on April 28, and Rajapaksa personally welcomed the Iranian delegation at the Bandaranaike International Airport.

Also that week, Rajapaksa’s government set up a multi-party “Task Force Committee for Northern Development” comprised of EPDP leader and cabinet Minister for Social Services, Douglas Devenanda (Tamil), Minister for Rehabilitation, Rishad Badiuddin (Muslim), and the President’s own brother and advisor, Basil Rajapaksa (Sinhalese).  The government said the establishment of this committee would pave the way for the proposed Northern Provincial Council, similar to the Eastern Provincial Council for which people in the East will vote on May 10. 

Rajapksa is waiting to see the results of this May 10 election. 

In the lead-up to the election, he has been urging people in the East to vote for his United People’s Front Alliance coalition with the former LTTE commander Karuna faction “Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Puligal” now led by Sivanesathurai Chanthirakanthan (alias Pillaiyan).  He appealed to the eastern people that their vote for the coalition would bring peace and development, compared to the LTTE opposition.

He also promised the Northern people that he would set up the Northern Task Force Committee with the powers vested in the hands of a once fierce militant group led by Minister Devananda. The President said that Northern people will be liberated as the Eastern people with this Task Force.  Northern people will elect their representatives to the Northern Provincial Council, just as the eastern people do to elect their representatives to the newly established Eastern Provincial Council.

Soon after the government’s announcement about the setting up of the Northern Provincial Council, the excited Devananda said that the Task Force Committee’s functions would be broad based and cover the areas of Jaffna, Vavuniya, Mannar, Kilinochchi and Mullaitheevu. Even the Sinhalese people mistrust Devananda. His antecedents are too well known.

Devananda stated that the formation of the council had been a longstanding demand of his for an interim council of peoples’ representatives to run the administration in the Tamil-speaking North and East Sri Lanka. “While the Eastern Province will have an elected provincial council after the May 10 elections, the Northern Province will have a nominated but representative political council till elections are held,” he said.

People in the North have no hope but only despair under the leadership of Douglas Devananda, for they fear that the Tamils will be overrun in the North with abductions and disappearances being the norm. 

Destroy it later – once bitten, twice shy

The fighting between the LTTE and GoSL armed forces has destroyed many properties and lives of the people in the North.  But, each time, as soon as the LTTE engages in peace talks with the Indian and Sri Lankan governments, the people immediately begin to rebuild their residential and commercial establishments.  But, until such talks commence, Northern people live under pathetic economic conditions. 

The people of the North and East have been bitten on many occasions. Many times they saw a hint of the possibility of peace but were disappointed when the battles resumed and their attempts to rebuild their lives were demolished.   

The people in the North want permanent peace to the national question and not piecemeal solutions. 

For that to happen, the GoSL needs to embrace the LTTE.  The setting up of provincial councils is nothing but a political game.

Who will benefit?

Only the paramilitaries, politicians, and international players like India and the U.S. would benefit in the so-called development of the North and East.  As these groups further destabilize the situation in the region, the government in Colombo would blame the LTTE for destroying their own homeland.

The establishment of provincial councils is only an attempt for the politicians in Colombo to buy more time so that the Tamil Eelam struggle will weaken.  In the meantime, the government could seek monetary aid under the guise of rebuilding the Tamil areas regardless of any ethnic battles. 

The international community such as India and the U.S. would also benefit from the establishment of these councils.  It would serve as an example to Indians, who will be going to polling stations next year to elect their representatives for Lok Sabha (Lower House).  New Delhi does not want to antagonize regional political parties such as DMK, PMK, MDMK and VCK as well as the national political parties such as the CPI and BJP, because these parties are waiting to claim that the Congress party did not have good foreign policy towards immediate neighbouring countries.  The regional political parties want immediate peace in Sri Lanka, and believe this can be done – even if in appearance only – through the setting up of the provincial council.  This will definitely boost New Delhi. 

As for the U.S., the U.S. does not want any heavy fighting taking place in Sri Lanka between the GoSL and LTTE.  They want temporary peace for various reasons.  Democrat presidential candidate, Hilary Clinton, remarked few months ago to the effect that she would not paint the freedom fighters of the LTTE with the same brush as the Al Qaeda.

High-powered visits to the North?

The LTTE-controlled areas are ten times larger than the areas controlled by the GoSL in the North, and begs the question whether the President’s Task Force Committee for Northern Development could visit the areas controlled by the LTTE. It is also worth wondering how the LTTE would welcome these high-powered men.  Would they roll out the red carpet or direct the Tamil Eelam judicial department to regard these three men as trespassers into the de jure State of ‘Tamil Eelam’ and deal with them accordingly.

If this is, instead, an effort by the Sri Lankan president to capture all LTTE-controlled areas in the North, will the LTTE launch surprise military operations into the Jaffna peninsula which is now under the control of the Sri Lankan armed forces?  In the past, once the GoSL took control of LTTE areas, the LTTE would take control of the GoSL areas because there would be insufficient government forces left behind to maintain stability.  The LTTE fighters will have two choices if Rajapaksa’s claims materialize: One, the LTTE fighters will commit suicide; or, two, they will have to leave the country and set up military bases in southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu or Kerala.  The question is whether India would allow this to happen? 

Whatever plans are devised for wiping out the LTTE from Sri Lanka they will not be fruitful.  The LTTE and the GoSL will maintain the balance of military power by capturing each other’s controlled areas.  The plans to develop North and East without granting the autonomy demanded by the LTTE will be another unsuccessful attempt at peace, and it will, instead inflict heavy economic and political damage to the Tamils in particular and all Sri Lankans in general.

_____________

* Satheesan Kumaaran holds B.Sc. (Biology), Honours BA (Political Science) and MA in Integrated Studies  with the specialization in International Law and International Relations. This was first published in The Tamil Mirror. E-Mail: satheesan_kumaaran@yahoo.com

LTTE: Rising Desperation


Ajit Kumar Singh
Research Assistant, Institute for Conflict Management

 

Two light aircrafts of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) carried out an air attack on the security forces (SFs) forward positions in Welioya, 280-kilometre northeast of Colombo in the morning of April 27, 2008, but no injuries or damages were caused in the ‘air raid’, military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara disclosed, adding, "The LTTE planes have returned safely to their hideouts in the Wanni after dropping three bombs."

 

Earlier, the LTTE took control of the Madhu Catholic Church and asked the priests to remove the famous statue, known as ‘Our Lady of Madhu', from the shrine, leading to the vacation of the church for the first time in 400 years – on April 3, 2008. However, the Tigers left the Church Premises on April 24, after realising that they had been surrounded by the SFs. The Church was finally handed over to the Mannar Bishop on April 26.

 

The capture of the Church failed to yield desired result – as a base to launch attacks on troops as well as to defame the Government if it attacked and damaged the Church in its bid to throw out the militants – since the LTTE had to evacuate it. But, with the failed air raid, these remained symbolic of the sheer desperation that is creeping into the rebel leadership because of the SFs continuous advances into the LTTE-controlled areas of North, the loss of public support in the East and the global onslaught targeting the organisation’s fund raising and arms procurement agenda and infrastructure across the globe.

 

The SFs, which gained effective control of the Eastern Province in July 2007, have now been pushing the LTTE further north in their endeavour to completely wipe out the rebellion. The Army has made substantial gains in the battle fields of Mannar, Jaffna and Vavuniya. Some of the major gains of the troops in 2008 include the following:

  • April 30: The troops captured the LTTE’s ‘18 Base’ in the Veppankulam and Kallikulam areas of Mannar District killing at least 40 LTTE militants, including a leader.

  • April 23: The SFs captured about 400 to 500-metres of LTTE area in the Muhamalai region of Jaffna District. 169 militants and 82 soldiers were killed in the fierce gun-battle.

  • April 21: In a pre-dawn attack the troops captured the LTTE’s main operation base in Mannar, codenamed ‘Lima-3’, located east of Kathankulam. A stretch of about 1,300 metres also came under the troops’ control while seven militants were killed in the operation.

  • April 12: The troops extended their defence line in the areas north of Giant Tank, north Kathankulam, south east of Adampan and Periyakulam in the Mannar District after fierce clashes with the LTTE. At least 66 militants were killed while over 50 others sustained injuries in the clashes. 10 soldiers were also killed and 20 others were injured in the incident.

  • March 25: Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara disclosed that the SFs have been successful in capturing 31 square kilometres of territory south of the A-14 road in Mannar.

  • March 4: The troops took under control Pallikuli east and a LTTE cross-loading point on the Uyilankulam-Andankulam road in Mannar District (a total of about 2.5 square kilometres).

  • February 8: The Army captured a one-square kilometre area to the south of Adampan Tank in the Mannar District after clashes with the LTTE militants. 12 militants and two soldiers were killed during the clashes.

  • January 30: The SFs captured the Muhamalai, Nagarkovil and Kilali FDLs of the LTTE in the Jaffna District destroying 35 rebel bunkers. 30 militants were killed and an unspecified number injured during the operations, in which seven soldiers also sustained injuries.

  • January 29: The last village, Vaiyttankulam, in Adampan under LTTE control fell to the SFs following heavy fighting in Mannar. The SFs destroyed 10 bunkers and killed 10 militants during the operation.

  • January 25: Troops captured a one-kilometre stretch of land in the Karpiththanmoddai area on the Uyilankulam–Adampan road in Mannar District and killed nine LTTE militants.

  • January 9: At least 19 LTTE militants were killed and over 30 injured during clashes between troops and the militants in the Parappakandal area of Mannar District where troops further consolidated their positions capturing an area of about one kilometre covering the north of Parappakandal.

The troops’ advance on the Northern Front has resulted in high casualties among the LTTE ranks. More than 3000 LTTE militants have been killed in the first four months of 2008, as compared to 570 in the corresponding period of 2007, and a total of 3,352 for the entire year 2007. The dead include many senior leaders, prominent among them being the Chief of the ‘Liberation Tigers Military Intelligence’, self-styled ‘Colonel’ Charles aka. Shanmuganathan Ravishankar – deputy to Pottu Amman, the chief of the LTTE’s intelligence wing – who was killed in a ‘random claymore attack’ by the Sri Lanka Army’s Deep Penetration Unit at Pallamadu in the Mannar District on January 5, along with three LTTE ‘lieutenants’. Further on January 9, the outfit’s Eastern leader, Shanker, was killed by the troops in the Shaukade area of Batticaloa District.

 

The loss of huge numbers of cadre has dealt a body blow to the Tigers fighting force. Corroborating the fact, the Army Chief Sarath Fonseka stated, on April 29, that the LTTE was reluctant to use its best fighting cadres after the fall of the East and was encountering a severe manpower shortage with cadres deployed in the Wanni fronts composed mainly of conscripted young people, Sea Tigers (the Sea Wing of the LTTE) and those recruited for the LTTE police force. Media reports also indicate that women are being forced to join the LTTE, according to letters purportedly recovered from slain woman militants in Sri Lanka. "Every LTTE cadre is anxious to see his or her parents and I will come home for Pongal (harvest festival – January 14) though I do not know what my fate will be," said one letter recovered by security forces from a slain woman militant. "Amma, what can I do? When all those at home in the area were taken away, I too had to go with them (LTTE)," said another, which was released by the Media Centre for National Security.

 

Apart from losing cadres in large numbers in battle against the Army’s ground forces, the LTTE has suffered severe material damage inflicted by more than 50 air raids carried out by the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) in 2008, which targeted the outfit’s communication centres, training centres, and military bases often visited by senior leaders in the LTTE’s last citadels in the Mullaitivu and Kilinochchi Districts. In one such incident the SLAF on February 22 bombed an inland Sea Tiger base in the Kiranchi area of Kilinochchi District, killing self-styled ‘Lt. Colonel’ Kalai Arasi’, ‘Major’ Thuwarika and ‘Lt.’ Senthamani.

 

The LTTE is also worried about the loss of public support for its cause – the creation of a ‘Tamil Eelam’. The successful completion of the Batticaloa elections – though the installation of the Tamileela Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP), a political party formed by the breakaway ‘Karuna’ faction of the LTTE, now led by Sivanesathurai Chandrakanttan aka Pilliyan is a source of worry – despite an LTTE boycott, has given the Tigers a great deal to ponder on. The subsequent announcement of the Eastern Provincial Elections scheduled to be held on May 10 has almost assured the fact that the LTTE will have no more say in the Eastern swathe of land where people, at one time, used to swear in the name of the rebel group.

 

These developments have made the Tigers frantic. It has been a pattern on part of the LTTE to attempt to raise the stakes by carrying out terrorist attacks targeting civilians and political leaders whenever it faces reverses on the battle field. The LTTE has, consequently, unleashed a wave of terrorist attacks since the Government’s January 3, 2008, unilateral decision to abrogate the Cease-Fire Agreement (CFA) and the subsequent formal annulment of the CFA on January 16. The major terrorist attacks since then, include:

  • April 25: 26 civilians, including seven women, were killed and 40 others injured when the LTTE detonated a bomb inside a Ceylon Transport Board bus parked at the public bus stand in Piliyandala suburb of Colombo.

  • April 6: The Highway Minister and Chief Government Whip, Jeyaraj Fernandopulle, and 13 others, including National Athletic coach Lakshman De Alwis and Olympic marathon runner and national record holder K.A. Karunaratnawere, were killed in a suicide attack carried out by the LTTE at a sporting event in the Weliweriya area, about 25 kilometres north of capital Colombo, in Gampaha District. Over 90 people, including Gampaha Division Senior Superintendent of Police Hector Darmasiri, were injured in the blast.

  • February 4: At least 13 persons were killed and 17 others inured when LTTE militants detonated a claymore mine targeting a civilian bus, plying from Parakaramapura to Janakapura, at Kobbekaduwa Junction in Welioya, 200-metres away from the 223 Brigade Headquarters. The dead include five soldiers and two women.

  • February 3: At least 12 persons were killed and around 100 injured, 10 of them critically, when an LTTE female suicide bomber blew herself up inside the Colombo Fort Railway Station.

  • February 2: At least 20 passengers aboard a bus were killed and 50 others injured when the LTTE militants detonated an explosive device at Dambulla bus stand in the Matale District.

  • January 29: 17 civilians, including 11 children, were killed in a claymore mine attack on a school bus in the Mannar District.

  • January 24: Police recovered the dead bodies of 16 youth hacked to death by suspected LTTE militants from a swamp at Kiriketuwewa on the Horoupathana-Kebithigollawa Road in the Anuradhapura District.

  • January 17: At least 10 civilians, including two home guards, were shot dead by LTTE militants at Hambegamuwa in the Thanamalwila area of Moneragala District.

  • January 16: At least 26 civilians, including some school children and women, aboard a Central Transport Bus proceeding to Buttala Town in Moneragala District, were killed and 67 others injured in a claymore mine explosion triggered by the LTTE in the Helagama area near Ella Road. The bus was simultaneously fired upon by the militants immediately after the claymore mine explosion.

  • January 8: Suspected militants of the LTTE killed Sri Lankan non-Cabinet Minister for Nation Building, D.M. Dissanayake, in a claymore mine blast near Rukmani Devi Junction at Ja-ela, while he was proceeding towards Colombo to attend the Parliament session. A personal bodyguard of the Minister, identified as K.P. Rathnayaka, also succumbed to his injuries in hospital. According to the Police, 13 people, including seven civilians, were injured in the incident.

Such acts of terror are at least partly intended to boost the morale of the desertion-prone LTTE cadres, as well as to draw the attention of the international community to apply pressure on the Sri Lankan Government to abandon its military operation in the North. The LTTE’s gameplan is based on the thesis that the war for ‘Tamil Eelam’ can not be carried forward without popular Tamil support and such support can only be generated and sustained through persistent acts of terror against the Sinhalese and the Sinhalese Government.

 

The Government in Colombo, on the other hand, appears to be unrelenting. Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake, on April 30, stated that isolated bomb explosions carried out by the LTTE to disrupt civilian life in the south would not deter the Government from achieving their ‘final objective’ of wiping out terrorism from the country before long. He warned that the LTTE chief Vellupillai Prabhakaran would not be able to carry out such barbaric acts endlessly because "our war heroes are in pursuit of him and his days are numbered". Similarly, the Army Chief Sarath Fonseka on February 9 declared, "LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran should realize that he cannot go ahead with his military campaign. They have no option other than to give up their struggle and enter the political mainstream."

 

Nevertheless, the LTTE demonstrates little inclination to accept defeat as yet, and the war in the North promises to be longer than Colombo’s projections. The LTTE retains capacities to hold a receding line for some time to come, and to continue its terrorist campaigns in the South. The prospects of peace in Sri Lanka remain far from imminent.      

News Briefs

146 LTTE militants and 22 civilians among 190 persons killed during the week: 146 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) militants, 22 soldiers and 22 civilians were among 190 persons killed in separate incidents between May 18 and May 24, 2008. At least 26 LTTE militants and five soldiers were killed as the troops foiled two attempts by the militants to capture the Security Forces’ (SFs) defence line at Nedunkandal in the Mannar District on May 18. Elsewhere, the SFs captured a LTTE bunker line at Kurukkandai killing seven militants. Four soldiers were also killed in the clash while three others sustained injuries in the incident. Another three soldiers went missing during the clash. On the same day, the troops killed 10 militants during clashes in the Navakkulam, Marudhakulam, Palamoddai, Mundipurippu and Kallikulam areas of Vavuniya District. 14 LTTE militants were killed and five others injured during an encounter with the troops in the Periyamadu area of Vavuniya District on May 20. On May 21, 17 LTTE militants were killed and 26 others injured during clashes with the troops in the areas north of Janakapura and Kiriibbanwewa in the Vavuniya District. On May 22, 11 LTTE militants were killed during clashes with the troops in the Janakapura, Kokkuthuduvai, Kiriibbanwewa and surrounding areas of Welioya in the Vavuniya District. 16 civilians, including six children, were killed in a Sri Lanka Army (SLA) Deep Penetration Unit (DPU)-triggered claymore mine explosion targeting a Hiace van returning from Muzhangkaavil Hospital to Kilinochchi on the Murikandi – Akkaraayan Road at around 2:15pm on May 23, claimed pro-LTTE Website Tamil Net. Earlier, the Assistant Director of Fisheries in Mannar, J.G.Jujin, and another civilian were killed when a DPU triggered claymore mine explosion targeted an ambulance of the Kilinochchi hospital at Muzhangkaavil at around at 8:00 am. The SLA, however, denied its involvement and stated that the areas where the attack allegedly occurred lay about 100 kilometres away from the northern-most Omanthai Entry/Exit point and defence lines under the Government control in Vavuniya. Sri Lanka Army; Daily News; Colombo Page, May 19-26, 2008.

141 LTTE militants and 18 soldiers among 165 persons killed during the week: 141 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) militants, 18 soldiers and six civilians were among 165 persons killed in separate incidents between May 10 and May 18, 2008. 10 militants were killed during clashes with the troops in the Palamoddai, Palampiddi and Periyamadu areas of Vavuniya District on May 11. Approximately 14 LTTE cadres were killed during clashes in the areas north of Janakapura, Kiriibbanwewa and Welioya in Vavuniya District on May 14. 18 militants were killed by the troops in the Vairapuliyankulam, Vilakkavatti Kulam, Palampiddi, Periyamadu and Palamoddai areas of Vavuniya District on May 15. One soldier was also killed in these clashes. Further, on May 16, 13 persons, including nine solders, were killed and 95 others were injured as a LTTE suicide bomber on a motorcycle laden with explosives rammed into a bus carrying police officers around 12.05 pm at the Colombo Fort. Also, the troops captured Palampiddi junction in the Mannar District on May 17 and have so far recovered the dead bodies of 13 militants from the area. The Palampiddi junction, is a strategically important connection between Vedithalthivu in the northwest, Madhu in the south, Mullikulam in the southeast and Nedunkandal in the northeast. Sri Lanka Army; Daily News; Colombo Page, May 12-18, 2008.

Pillayan appointed the first Eastern Province Chief Minister: President Mahinda Rajapakse, on May 16, 2008, appointed S. Chandrakanthan a.k.a. Pillayan as the first Chief Minister of the Eastern Provincial Council (EPC). Pillayan and other elected members of the EPC took oath at the Presidential Secretariat in Colombo. The new Chief Minister, who is also leader of the Thamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP) – the political wing of the Liberation of Tamil Tigers Eelam (LTTE) breakaway faction founded by ‘Colonel’ Karuna, won the most preferential votes from the Batticaloa District in the EPC election held on May 10, 2008. The TMVP contested the election under the ruling United People's Freedom Alliance, which secured a majority in the provincial council. During his election campaign, Pillayan had highlighted that it was the Tamil people that suffered most in the decades-old conflict and it would consequently be favourable for them to have a Tamil Chief Minister who understood their problems better. He also requested social acceptance and support for his party to remain in mainstream politics, to which he said they had resorted in good faith, renouncing terrorism. Colombo Page, May 17, 2008.

211 LTTE militants and 15 civilians among 238 persons killed during the week: 211 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) militants, 15 civilians and 12 soldiers were among 238 persons killed in separate incidents between May 4 and May 11, 2008. 10 LTTE militants, including two area leaders, were killed by the Security Forces (SFs) in an encounter at the Muhamalai Forward Defence Line (FDL) of Jaffna District on May 5. Two soldiers were also killed and 14 others wounded in the LTTE attack. On May 7, the SFs killed 12 LTTE militants during intermittent clashes in the areas north of Parappakandal, Kathankulam, Alankulam, Chalampaikkulam, Nedunkandal and Adampampekkulam in the Mannar District. Further, 10 LTTE militants were killed as the Army captured a two square kilometre stretch of land in the LTTE-held territory, about 5-6 km south of Adampan town in the Mannar District on May 8. One soldier was also killed while another was wounded in the incident. On the same day, clashes erupted between the two sides in the Manipullkulam, Nedunkandal and Mantota areas of Mannar District in which 11 militants were killed. On May 9, 14 LTTE militants were killed during an encounter in the area under Government control in Vavuniya District. 11 persons were killed and 29 others injured in a bomb blast at the City Cafe Hotel near the Ampara Clock tower in Ampara town in the evening of May 9. The troops also captured the strategic Adampan town in Mannar District in the morning of May 9, killing at least 15 militants. Two soldiers were killed and seven others injured in the incident. The SFs captured a one square kilometre area in Alankulam on in the afternoon of May 9, killing 33 militants and injuring 40 others. One soldier was killed and five others wounded in the clashes. Further, on May 10, the troops attacked several LTTE hideouts and killed at least 18 militants in the areas north of Palampiddi, Vedamakilam, Kurukkandai, north of Janakapura and Kiriibbanwewa. Sri Lanka Army; Daily News; Colombo Page, May 5-11, 2008.

UPFA wins Eastern Provincial Election: The United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) won the first ever Provincial Council Election in the East, securing 20 (18 + 02 bonus seats) out of 37 seats on offer, while polling 52.21 per cent of the total votes. The United National Party (UNP) which obtained 42.38 per cent of the total valid votes got 15 seats while the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna and the Tamil Democratic National Alliance secured one seat each. The UPFA won two out of the three Districts – Batticaloa and Ampara – while the Trincomalee District was won by the UNP. A total number of 591,676 (65.78 per cent) voters exercised their franchise out of a total of 982,721. However, the number of rejected votes was quite high with 54,780 (8.47 per cent) declared annulled. Meanwhile, the election monitoring body People's Action for Free and Fair Elections which deployed over 2,500 election observers, including foreigners, said that, despite some scattered incidents, the election was conducted in a free and fair manner. While observing that there had been 83 recorded incidents on the Election Day (May 10), it said these cases, on the whole, could not be viewed as ones which would affect the overall result. However, the main opposition UNP and the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress rejected the results saying the poll was marred by violence. Daily News; Colombo Page, May 12, 2008.

241 LTTE militants and 19 soldiers among 261 persons killed during the week: 241 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) militants, 19 soldiers and a civilian were among 261 persons killed in separate incidents between April 27 and May 3, 2008. At least 14 LTTE militants were killed and several others injured during clashes at several places in the Vavuniya and Mannar Districts on April 27. Two soldiers were also killed while four of them sustained injuries. Separately, 40 LTTE militants were killed as the troops captured the outfit’s ‘18 Base’ in the Veppankulam and Kallikulam areas of Mannar District on April 30. On the same day, 11 militants were killed and 21 soldiers were injured in fighting in the LTTE-held areas of Periyakulam, Karukkakulam and Kathankulam in the Mannar District. Advancing troops, on May 1, captured the LTTE-held Karukkakulam town (1.6 kilometres) in the Mannar District, killing 15 militants. One soldier was also killed in the clashes. Also on May 1, the security forces neutralised four LTTE bunkers and killed 11 militants in the Navathkulama, Muttiramadittakulam and Palampiddi areas of Vavuniya District. Further, on May 3, during encounters with LTTE militants in the Palampiddi, Adampan and Nedunkandal areas of Mannar and Vavuniya Districts, troops killed 12 rebel cadres. One soldier was also killed while six others sustained injuries in the clashes. The troops captured an area of about 1.5 square kilometres in the Periyakulam area of Mannar District, killing 10 militants. Sri Lanka Army; Colombo Page, April 28- May 4, 2008.

[Source: South Asian Intelligence Review]


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