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Sri Lanka jets bomb Tiger area, civilians said hurt
20 Sep 2007 10:48:18 GMT
Source: Reuters
COLOMBO, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Sri Lankan fighter jets bombed a Tamil Tiger weapons store in the rebel-held far northeast sending fireballs into the sky, the military said on Thursday, but the guerrillas said the bombs damaged homes and wounded 6 civilians.

The raid near the town of Puthukkudiyiruppu in the northeastern district of Mullaittivu is the latest in a rash of aerial bombings amid a new chapter in a two-decade civil war marked by near daily land and sea battles and ambushes.

"Pilots have seen fireballs. It was an armaments as well as explosives dump which they have taken after doing long surveillance, and only once it was confirmed have they taken this (target)," military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam meanwhile said on their Web site www.ltteps.org that the raid had damaged several homes, destroying one entirely and wounding the six people inside it.

Nanayakkara dismissed the LTTE's account of the incident as propaganda.

There was no independent confirmation of what was hit or who was wounded in the air strike. Nordic truce monitors had no immediate details.

Fighting is now focused in the island's north after the military captured swathes of territory from the rebels in the east earlier this year.

While the Tigers have carried out bombings, assassinations and suicide attacks, troops have gone on offensive forays across forward defence lines into rebel territory part of a strategy to defeat the insurgents militarily.

The island's main opposition party has distanced itself from a political bid to forge cross-party consensus on a devolution package aimed at ending a war that has killed more

And while the rebels have lost control of a significant slice of territory in recent months, analysts warn they still retain their strike capability and few see a clear winner on the horizon, instead predicting the conflict will likely grind on for years.

Around 70,000 people have been killed since the war erupted in 1983.
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Sri Lankan soldiers arrive at the site of a military helicopter gunship crash following a dawn attack in Anuradhapura October 22, 2007. The Tamil Tigers' air wing bombed a north Sri Lanka air force base before dawn on Monday, the military said, while the Tigers said suicide fighters mounted their biggest ground assault since the two-decade civil war began. The rebel air strike in the north-central district of Anuradhapura comes months after the Tigers' first ever air attacks using light aircraft smuggled into the country in pieces, and as near daily land, air and sea clashes occur. REUTERS/Stringer (SRI LANKA)



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