Wed, 21:40 23 Jan 2008 GMT17

 

Sri Lanka rebels bomb army bus, 4 dead-officials
02 Jan 2008 13:28:29 GMT
Source: Reuters

(Adds air raids, opposition leader comment)

By Ranga Sirilal

COLOMBO, Jan 2 (Reuters) - Tamil Tiger rebels bombed an army bus in the Sri Lankan capital on Wednesday killing four people and wounding 24, military and hospital officials said, the latest in a series of attacks as renewed civil war deepens.

Separately, air force jets bombed a suspected rebel sea wing base and a logistics base in the island's north, which the military said killed two senior insurgents.

The rebels set off a roadside bomb outside a modest hotel as a bus carrying sick and wounded soldiers to hospital was passing by, the military said.

One soldier and three civilians, including two children aged 14 and 16, were killed. Ten soldiers and 14 civilians were wounded.

"There was a Claymore (mine) attack targeting an army bus carrying troops," a military official at the scene told Reuters, asking not to be named in line with policy.

"It's definitely an LTTE Claymore," he added, referring to the type of explosive device military analysts say are a hallmark of attacks by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

He said there were "about 11 soldiers" on board the bus at the time of the attack, which happened in an area of Colombo where the army and air force headquarters are both located. Police cordoned off the area.

The Tigers, who are seeking to carve out an independent state in north and east Sri Lanka, denied involvement in the attack with a routine disclaimer.

"We have nothing to do with that," rebel military spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiraiyan said by telephone from the Tigers' northern stronghold of Kilinochchi. "It is up to the government to find out who did it."

TIGERS "SEE MORE CLASHES"

Ilanthiraiyan said the Tigers had noted a military build up on the government side of heavily-defended forward defence lines that separate state from rebel-held territory in the north.

"What can I say? We can see more clashes in the future," he said.

The blast is the latest in a series of attacks on military installations and buses carrying troops blamed on the rebels in recent months, and comes as the state and Tigers fight near daily land and sea clashes mainly in the north of the island.

The attack came a day after a prominent opposition Tamil parliamentarian was shot dead at a Hindu temple in the capital, a killing the opposition blamed on the government for failing to ensure his security.

Opposition leader Ranil Wickremesinghe on Wednesday called on the government to increase security for lawmakers.

"The government should be held responsible for the killing of Mr. T. Maheshweran," Wickremesinghe told a news conference.

"We do not want any more stories. There was a threat, we told them and they have not followed the guidelines. Give them security."

Well over 5,000 people have been killed in fighting between the foes since early 2006, taking the death toll since the war erupted in 1983 to around 70,000.

While the military has captured vast swathes of territory from the rebel in the island's east, analysts say there is no clear winner on the horizon and fear the war could grind on for years. (Additional reporting by Shihar Aneez; Writing by Simon Gardner; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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