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Sri Lanka's Tamil separatist conflict far from over: analysts

Sri Lanka troops take strategic pass from Tiger rebels: army
Sri Lankan troops battling Tamil rebels on Monday captured a part of the highly strategic Elephant Pass, a causeway linking the northern Jaffna peninsula to the mainland, the military said. Military spokesman Udaya Nanayakkara said the southern part of the causeway fell to government troops advancing northwards from Kilinochchi, the political headquarters of the Tamil Tigers, which was captured by the army on Friday. "Troops are now consolidating in the southern part of Elephant Pass," he said. Tamil Tiger rebels had held the Elephant Pass since April 2000. There was no immediate comment from the ethnic rebels, who have seen their northern fiefdom crumble in recent months in the face of a massive government onslaught. The Sri Lankan army's advance to the causeway, if confirmed, would deal another serious blow to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The fall of the Elephant Pass would enable government troops from the south to link up with government forces in Jaffna who have been cut off from the rest of the island by LTTE positions. The advance also further isolates Tamil Tiger rebels in a section of northeastern coastal jungle around Mullaittivu, the last remaining town in the hands of the LTTE.
by Staff Writers
Colombo (AFP) Jan 4, 2009
Sri Lankans celebrated the fall of the Tamil Tigers' de facto capital with street parties, but military observers say bloodier battles may still lie ahead as the rebels take refuge in the jungles.

The guerrillas, fighting for an independent homeland for Tamils, suffered a massive blow on Friday when they lost Kilinochchi, their political headquarters, in a concerted government offensive that lasted nearly two years.

But that does not mean the rebellion is dead, experts say.

"The fighting is far from over," said Susantha Seneviratne, a defence analyst for the Lankadeepa newspaper. "The bigger battles may yet to be fought. The Tigers can return to classic guerrilla counter-offensives."

Seneviratne said the Tigers, or Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), may have already prepared their defences in the northern jungle district of Mullaittivu, their final bastion.

"The thick green canopy favours the Tigers and they know the area better than anyone else," Seneviratne said, adding that the military's long-range weapons and air cover may be less effective in the Mullaittivu jungles.

The defence ministry on Saturday announced that troops were already heading to Mullaittivu, where the Tigers have shifted their political offices after the fall of Kilinochchi.

Tamil militant-turned-politician Dharmalingam Sithadthan agreed the capture of Kilinochchi was not the end of the island's drawn-out separatist conflict, but said it did mark a decisive phase in the military campaign.

"This is certainly not the end of the war," Sithadthan said. "We can say this is the beginning of the end of the LTTE if the military can repeat their Kilinochchi success in Mullaittivu too."

Sithadthan said it would be difficult for the Tigers to win back the military balance of power, but they could still carry out trademark suicide bombings to keep security forces -- and the wider population -- on edge.

Sri Lanka's army chief, Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka, said the Tigers may still have up to 1,900 fighters.

"It won't take a year to finish them off, to eliminate them," Fonseka said after President Mahinda Rajapakse announced the capture of Kilinochchi on Friday.

Fonseka said taking Kilinochchi was the culmination of a major military offensive that began in March 2007, although the brutal separatist conflict erupted in 1972 and has since claimed tens of thousands of lives.

The Tigers were once regarded one of the world's most ruthlessly efficient guerrilla outfits, with its own naval and air wings, but their units appeared to collapse in Kilinochchi in the face of the superior military onslaught.

Rajapakse Friday acknowledged that the Tigers were a formidable foe, however, describing them as "accepted internationally as the most powerful terrorist organisation in the world".

And despite the loss of their political base -- arguably the biggest blow to the Tigers since the fall of their Jaffna peninsula stronghold in December 1995 -- the guerrillas have previously shown they can bounce back.

They initially lost Kilinochchi in 1996, but re-took the area two years later and controlled it until they were driven out on Friday.

Barely six months after government troops captured the northern Jaffna peninsula in 1995, the Tigers overran a military base in Mullaittivu, killing more than 1,200 soldiers.

The guerrillas also reversed military gains of 19 months in a matter of five days in November 1999, going on to dislodge the military from their Elephant Pass base at the entrance to Jaffna.

The government spent an estimated 1.6 billion dollars on defence last year and plans to spend slightly more in 2009, underscoring concerns that the conflict may be far from over.

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Israeli tanks and troops fight Hamas in Gaza
Gaza City (AFP) Jan 3, 2009
Israeli tanks rolled into Gaza on Saturday and engaged in night-time battles with Hamas forces after more than a week of air strikes that left hundreds of Palestinians dead and widespread destruction.







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