Sri Lankan rebels ambush army bus: military
COLOMBO (Reuters) – Tamil Tiger rebels ambushed an army bus
in Sri Lanka’s northern Jaffna peninsula on Wednesday, wounding
nine servicemen, the military said.
The attack comes after the suspected Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam rebels killed three people and wounded 23 others on
Monday and Tuesday in two similar attacks in the island’s north
and east.
“An army bus was hit by a Claymore mine on the Jaffna
peninsula,” said military spokesman Brigadier Prasad
Samarasinghe. Army sources said seven soldiers and two officers
were injured in the attack.
The attacks are the latest in a surge of violence that has
killed more than 700 people so far this year and which many
fear could rupture a strained 2002 ceasefire and rekindle a
two-decade civil war.
Many Tamil Jaffna residents resent what they see as an army
occupation by the majority Sinhalese south, which has fenced
off large swathes of agricultural land as high-security zones
– preventing thousands of displaced people returning home.
But while hundreds of thousands fled the peninsula to avoid
fighting in the 1990s, many people say they are sick and tired
of being displaced by a protracted conflict that has killed
more than 65,000 people since 1983 and refuse to move again,
even if it costs them their lives.
