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: Sri
Lanka
Attack on major Sri Lankan airforce base as civil war continues
to escalate
By Sarath Kumara
27 March 2007
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Three Sri Lankan airforce personnel were killed and 16 wounded
in an attack by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in
the early hours of Monday morning on the main airforce base at
Katunayake, north of Colombo. The LTTE used light aircraft for
the first time in more than two decades of civil war to drop several
bombs on the base, which is adjacent to the countrys only
international airport.
While the LTTE caught the Sri Lankan military by surprise,
the attack failed to disable or destroy the airforces jet
fighters and helicopters. Airforce spokesman Ajantha Silva said
the damage had been minor and that the bombs hit engineering facilities.
Other defence sources indicated that two parked military helicopters
may have been damaged.
An attack on the same facilities in July 2001 was far more
devastating. LTTE fighters managed to penetrate the heavy security
surrounding the international airport and airforce base to destroy
parked military and civilian aircraft. The assault had a serious
impact on the tourist industry and the countrys national
airline, which lost half its fleet.
Following Mondays attack, the government issued a jingoistic
statement demanding an end to all opposition to its renewed war
against the LTTE. It called on all parties to rise above
narrow political differences and to refrain from discrediting
the security forces and strengthening the LTTE terrorists.
The statement declared: The nation is supreme and no political
ambitions should supercede the sovereignty and territorial integrity
of Sri Lanka.
Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse also issued an appeal
for international support to eliminate what he called a sinister
new trend. Absurdly he declared that the LTTEs rudimentary
air attack posed a global threat which would encourage
other international terrorist organisations to follow
suit. The airforce retaliated by striking LTTE areas in the northern
district of Mannar.
In Colombo, the security forces used the air raid as a pretext
to conduct an arbitrary cordon-and-search operation in parts of
the capital and detain 40 suspects. None of the detainees
had anything to do with the air raidthey were Tamils from
plantation areas who could not prove their identity. The purpose
of such sweeps is to intimidate and terrorise the countrys
Tamil minority.
On the part of the LTTE, the air raid was an act of desperation,
designed to bolster the flagging morale of its fighters. Since
President Mahinda Rajapakse ordered the army onto the offensive
last July, the LTTE has suffered a series of defeats, losing the
eastern areas of Mavilaru, Sampur and Vaharai. The US and other
major powers, in which the LTTE had placed so much faith, have
tacitly supported the governments actions, which are in
clear breach of the 2002 ceasefire.
The LTTE has triumphantly displayed photographs of its Tamileelam
Air Force (TAF). The aircraft are believed to be light, single-engine
planes that have been smuggled into Sri Lanka in parts and reassembled.
The photos show small, improvised bombs fitted to the underside
of the fuselage. LTTE military spokesman Rasiah Ilanthirayan announced
that the mission was undertaken to reduce the air capability
of the Sri Lankan air force and warned of more air attacks.
LTTE political wing leader S.P. Thamilchelvan tried to allay
concerns expressed in India. He said the LTTEs air capability
was not in any way a threat to any other country in general,
particularly India but was aimed at protecting our
people.
The TAF is in no position to challenge the Sri Lankan airforce,
which is equipped with Israeli-built Kfir fighters and Ukrainian
MiG-27 jets. Over the past year, the military has frequently used
these warplanes to strafe and bomb LTTE-held areas, inflicting
casualties on civilians and LTTE fighters alike. These air attacks
have been a serious military setback to the LTTE and contributed
to the panic that has created a wave of refugees from LTTE-held
areas.
Eastern offensive
The military is continuing to escalate its offensive operations.
A major army push has been underway since March 6 to seize
one of the LTTEs last major strongholds in the east of the
island. Thoppigala, 40 kilometres south-west of the town of Batticaloa,
is an extensive, mainly jungle-covered area between the districts
of Trincomalee and Ampara. The military believes that many LTTE
fighters fled there after losing the eastern town of Vaharai in
January.
The offensive, named Operation Human Shield 2, is another breach
of the 2002 ceasefire. President Rajapakse and his government
claim that the army is liberating Tamils and preventing
the LTTE using civilians as human shields. In fact,
the military is deliberately using indiscriminate aerial bombing
and artillery shelling to stampede the local population and isolate
the LTTE.
The latest operation is part of a broad strategy of driving
the LTTE out of the east, before focussing on its strongholds
in the north. President Rajapakse told a delegation from the Sinhala
extremist Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) last week that the military
intends to control the entire east by the New Year (Sinhala-Tamil)
in mid-April.
Tens of thousands of refugees have poured into Batticaloa since
the offensive began. On March 19, the World Food Program (WFP)
reported that 60,000 civilians fled to Batticaloa during the earlier
operations. Now another 95,000 men, women and children have arrived
in the area. WFP official Tony Banbury warned: Unless we
receive new funding very soon, we will run out of food supplies
by the end of April.
According to Reliefweb, schools have been turned into
makeshift refugee camps. Many refugees are living in the open
or under the trees. There are shortages of food, water, sanitation
and other basic facilities. According to UNICEF, refugees looking
for accommodation have been forced to move from camp to camp.
Human Rights Watch and the Amnesty International have accused
the government of pressuring displaced persons back to Vaharai
to make way for the new influx.
Even though the main focus of the militarys operations
has been in the east, fighting has also taken place in several
northern areas over the past fortnight. Five soldiers were killed
and 23 injured in clashes on March 16 at Omanthai on the edge
of the LTTE-controlled Wanni area. Last Friday another clash in
the same area resulted in the deaths of nine soldiers. Once again,
the military took the offensive in what it described as a pre-emptive
strike.
Fighting has also taken place in the north-western district
of Mannar. According to the LTTE, about 300 soldiers entered its
territory last Thursday and tried to use local civilians as human
shields during fierce artillery and mortar exchanges. Military
spokesman Brigadier Prasad Samarasinghe denied the claims but
did admit that the army was trying to neutralise the terrorists
artillery and mortar positions in the area.
President Rajapakse continues to maintain the fraud that his
government abides by the 2002 ceasefire agreement even as the
military attacks new areas. Earlier this month, a top Sri Lankan
defence source told the AFP news agency that the war
would continue for the next two to three years. According
to the Sunday Leader, the source was the presidents
brotherDefence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse.
The Rajapakse government is heavily dependent on the support
of the Bush administration, which nominally supports the so-called
international peace process but has been tacitly backing the new
war. Close relations between the two countries led to the signing
of an Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA) in early
March, which provides the US military with extensive logistical
support in Sri Lanka. Washington has been pressing for some time
for such a deal with Sri Lanka, which is a strategic access point
to the Middle East, as well as South Asia.
Two days after the deal was signed, US Deputy Assistant Secretary
Steve Mann visited Sri Lanka and met Rajapakse and other Sri Lankan
officials. He repeated Washingtons stock phrases about protecting
human rights and the need for a political solution.
At a press conference in Colombo, however, Mann also expressed
his support for Rajapakses war against terrorism
and declared there was a strong military element within
the LTTE that should be defeated.
After narrowly winning the presidential election in November
2005, Rajapakse allowed the military to wage a dirty covert war
to undermine and provoke the LTTE, then ordered a military offensive
last July. Since the end of 2005, more than 4,000 people have
diedmilitary personnel, LTTE fighters and civiliansand
200,000 have been displaced. Hundreds of people, many of them
young Tamils, have been abducted or killed by military-backed
death squads. These terrible tolls will continue to rise as the
government pursues its communalist war.
See Also:
Sri Lankan SEP demands urgent inquiry
into disappearance of party member
[26 March 2007]
Sri Lankan defence ministry extends police
state moves
[19 March 2007]
Detention of three leftists by Sri Lankan
government signals new round of state repression
[12 March 2007]
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