Sri Lankan civilians flee rebel-held areas for second day
April 21st, 2009 - 1:03 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Colombo, April 21 (DPA) Civilians fled Tamil rebel-held areas in north-eastern Sri Lanka for a second consecutive day Tuesday, military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.
He said the exact number of civilians who arrived from the rebel-held areas in Puthumathalan, 390 km north-east of Colombo were not known but people were continuing to arrive in military-controlled areas.
On Monday, a record 39,081 civilians fled the rebel-held area using land and sea routes, he said.
The military facilitated their escape by breaking through earthworks put up by the separatist rebels to prevent security forces from entering.
The civilians continued to come in from what the government said is the last remaining rebel-held territory in Sri Lanka as a government deadline for rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and his cadres to surrender ends at noon.
Nanayakkara said irrespective of the deadline, troops were continuing operations to rescue civilians and clear the area of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) as soon as possible.
He said that according to available intelligence reports, Prabhakaran and his intelligence chief, Pottu Amman, were still in the area.
Rebels are now confined to less than 12 sq km on the coast of the Mullaitivu district, which includes the Putumathalan area, a government-demarcated safe zone, officials said.
Before Monday’s mass exodus, about 68,000 civilians had fled the rebel-held areas since January and were placed in welfare centres.
The government has described the operation to get the civilians out of the rebel-held area as one of the biggest “hostage rescue operations” in the world because it accuses the rebels of preventing the civilians from fleeing.
It said three women suicide bombers Monday blew themselves up in the Puthumathalan area, killing 17 civilians and injuring 200, while people trying to escape claimed they were fired upon by the rebels to prevent them from leaving.
The LTTE, however, has accused the government of firing on civilians in the safe zone and forcing them into government territory.
Independent verification of these claims were not possible because the government has blocked journalists from the war zone.
The military said it is in the last phase of a drive to crush the LTTE, which has been fighting for more than 25 years for a separate state for the Tamil ethnic minority in the northern and eastern parts of majority-Sinhalese Sri Lanka.
Troops launched the operations to recapture rebel-held areas in August 2006, first recapturing all rebel territory in the east last year before concentrating their operations in the north.
- Sri Lankan rebels claim 1,000 civilians killed this week (Second Lead) - Apr 21, 2009
- Ban welcomes escape of Sri Lankans from conflict zone - Apr 21, 2009
- Thousands more flee Sri Lanka war zone, no trace of LTTE chief (Roundup) - Apr 21, 2009
- Over 13,000 civilians flee LTTE-held areas, 17 die in blast (Second Lead) - Apr 20, 2009
- Civilians flee last LTTE-held area in Sri Lanka (Third Lead) - May 16, 2009
- More civilians flee Tamil rebel zone in Sri Lanka - Apr 22, 2009
- Two LTTE leaders surrender, over 95,000 flee war zone (Second Lead) - Apr 22, 2009
- LTTE fails to meet Sri Lanka's ultimatum to surrender (Lead) - Apr 21, 2009
- LTTE chief in shrunken war zone as 95,000 civilians flee (Roundup) - Apr 22, 2009
- 30,000 civilians flee LTTE-held areas, 17 killed in blasts (Third Lead) - Apr 20, 2009
- Over 49,000 flee LTTE-held area as deadline to surrender ends (Third Lead) - Apr 21, 2009
- Rebel attack foiled, president returns claiming victory - May 17, 2009
- Tamil rebels say they are silencing their guns (Third Lead) - May 17, 2009
- Sri Lanka claims rebels defeated; fighting continues (Roundup) - May 17, 2009
- 52,000 flee rebel-held area as LTTE ignores surrender deadline (Fourth Lead) - Apr 21, 2009
Tags: eastern sri lanka, exact number, government deadline, hostage rescue operations, intelligence chief, intelligence reports, liberation tigers of tamil eelam, liberation tigers of tamil eelam ltte, mass exodus, military spokesman, mullaitivu district, nanayakkara, prabhakaran, rebel leader, safe zone, sea routes, separatist rebels, udaya, welfare centres, women suicide bombers