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INTERVIEW-Sri Lanka says no plan for major north offensive
30 Aug 2007 05:23:55 GMT
Source: Reuters
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka has no plans for a major offensive on rebel-held territory in the country's north, Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said on Thursday.

Government forces have recaptured strategic parts of the island nation's east from separatist Tamil Tiger guerrillas in the past year, fanning talk that they might soon attempt to drive the Tigers out of their main stronghold in the north.

"There's no plan for a major offensive in the north," Bogollagama told Reuters in an interview during a visit to Malaysia, insisting the government's main priority was to look instead for a political solution to the 24-year-old conflict.

"We want the LTTE (Tamil Tigers) to return to the negotiating table."

Sri Lanka's defence secretary, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, vowed in January to attack and destroy all Tamil Tiger military assets, including those in the northern stronghold they control under the terms of a tattered 2002 truce.

Tamil Tiger rebels have been fighting for an independent state in the north and east since 1983. Nearly 70,000 people have been killed in the conflict, around 4,500 in the last year alone.
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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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