LESSON LEARNED - TAMIL TIGERS!!! - Sajha Mobile
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LESSON LEARNED - TAMIL TIGERS!!!
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snowfed_river
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Sri Lanka rebels offer to lay down arms 








  •   In this handout photo provided by the Sri Lanka Army, Sri Lankan army soldiers AP â€“ In this handout photo provided by the Sri Lanka Army, Sri Lankan army soldiers receive internally displaced â€¦




COLOMBO, Sri Lanka – The Tamil Tiger rebels admitted defeat in their 25-year-old war with the Sri Lankan government Sunday, offering to lay down their guns as government forces swept across their last strongholds in the northeast.


The government rejected the last-ditch call for a cease-fire, saying the thousands of civilians trapped in the war zone all have escaped to safety and there was no longer any reason to stop the battle. The military said the remaining guerrillas were still fighting.


With a war that has killed well over 70,000 people nearing its end, Sri Lankans poured into the streets in spontaneous celebration. President Mahinda Rajapaksa scheduled a nationally televised news conference for Tuesday morning at Parliament, where he was expected to tell the nation the war was over.


The fate of the Tamil Tigers' top commanders remained unclear, including the whereabouts of the reclusive rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran.


A senior military official said troops found the bodies of several rebel fighters who had committed suicide Sunday when troops surrounded them. The bodies were suspected of being Prabhakaran and his deputies, but the military was still trying to confirm their identities, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.


The rebels, who once controlled a wide swath of the north, have been routed by government forces in recent months. On Sunday, Tamil Tiger suicide bombers targeted troops clearing out the last pockets of rebel resistance in the war zone and troops killed at least 70 rebels trying to flee by boat, the military said.


On Sunday afternoon, the tattered and nearly defeated rebel group offered to lay down its arms, saying it was acting to protect the wounded in the war zone.


"This battle has reached its bitter end," rebel official Selvarasa Pathmanathan said in a statement. "It is our people who are dying now from bombs, shells, illness and hunger. We cannot permit any more harm to befall them. We remain with one last choice — to remove the last weak excuse of the enemy for killing our people. We have decided to silence our guns."


Pathmanathan said the bodies of thousands of dead and wounded civilians lay on the battlefield.


Media Minister Anura Yapa dismissed the appeal, saying government forces had rescued all the civilians.


"We are looking after those people. We want to free this country from the terrorist LTTE," he said, referring to the group by its formal name, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.


Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said the rebels had not laid down their weapons. "Fighting is still going on in small pockets," he said.


With most journalists and aid workers barred from the war zone, it was not possible to verify the accounts of either side.


Troops on Sunday killed at least 70 rebels trying to escape the 0.4-square mile (one-square kilometer) patch of land that government troops have surrounded, the military said.


Thousands of Sri Lankans danced, set off celebratory fireworks and beat on drums in celebration Sunday after Rajapaksa made an initial declaration of victory.


"We are celebrating a victory against terrorism," said Sujeewa Anthonis, a 32-year-old street hawker.


As the fighting raged on in recent days, concerns mounted for the fate of the tens of thousands of civilians trapped in the war zone amid heavy shelling and intense fighting.


But 63,000 civilians fled the area over the past 72 hours, clearing the way for the government to finish off the rebels, Nanayakkara said Sunday.

"We're relieved to hear that all civilians have come out of the combat zone," U.N. spokesman Gordon Weiss said. More than 250,000 civilians have fled the fighting in recent months.

Rights groups have accused the rebels of holding the civilians as human shields, which the rebels have denied.

The U.N. says 7,000 civilians were killed and 16,700 wounded from Jan. 20 through May 7. Health officials say more than 1,000 have been killed since then in heavy shelling that rights groups and foreign governments have blamed on Sri Lankan forces. The government denied shelling the area.

The war zone was wracked by chaos Sunday, as troops sought to mop up the final pockets of resistance, Nanayakkara said. At least one suicide bomber attacked troops in the morning, the latest in a wave of rebel attacks on the advancing forces in recent days, he said. He declined to say what damage the attack caused.

Rajapaksa raced home from a visit to Jordan after declaring victory in the war. Upon his arrival early Sunday, ministers and well-wishers cheered as he descended from his plane and Buddhist, Catholic, Hindu and Muslim clerics blessed him.

Many of those celebrating in the streets said the war had badly damaged the country for three decades.

"This victory will ensure a better future for the coming generations," said Prasanna Jayawardena, 38, who was lighting firecrackers in the streets of Colombo.

The rebels, who once controlled a de facto state across much of the north, have been fighting since 1983 for a separate state for minority Tamils after decades of marginalization by the Sinhalese majority. Responsible for hundreds of suicide attacks — including the 1991 assassination of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi — the Tamil Tigers have been branded terrorists by the U.S., EU and India and shunned internationally.

The rebels also controlled a conventional army, with artillery units, a significant navy and even a tiny air force.

After repeated stalemates on the battlefield, the military broke through the rebel lines last year and forced the insurgents into a broad retreat, capturing their administrative capital at Kilinochchi in January and vowing to retake control over the rest of the country.

The rebels have insisted that if defeated in conventional battle, they will return to their guerrilla roots.

snowfed_river
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WHY CANNOT NEPAL DO SIMILAR WITH ~ 4-8 GRAND MAOISTS??????????????


CHHAKKA GOVT....................

jhapaliketo
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This is why i was always opposed to pace treaties and negotiations. The maoists should had a similar fate. The world history tells never to bow in front of rebels(terrorists). The peace treaty gives the biggest advantage to rebels.


So, I believe that army should take over nepal and root out  all the rodents.


 

Peter Bagdas
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Snofed river - the reason these Maoists weren't wiped out is because of that invisible Maoist Chief that was running Nepal at the time, Gyane. Didn't both gain the most from palace massacre? Maoist got the power and Gyane got the money. Now both will have their come uppance.
i_my
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Why war?
Why violence?
Why all the killings?
Why all the sufferings?
Why?
why when we all feel the pain?
when we all have tendency to shed tears over others' sufferings?
.
.


sYaKuuRiolAKU_nchImb
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peace wins against terrorism
i am sure that will happen to nepal oneday and we will also be celebrating the victory



191karma
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2 good things happened:

1. LTTE is wiped out or very close to defeat.
2. Commies lost in Indian Election.

I think these events will benefit Nepal. I just hope UML led gov't will serve nepali better. We had enough of strikes, shortage of basic necessities and unlawful acitivities. It is time to rebuild basic infrastructures.
Peter Bagdas
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May 09 has been an incredible month. To add to the two excellent pieces of news posted by 191karma above, don't forget Terrorist Pukada was forced to quit the government. Now let's press home the advantage and sanitise these Maoist scum.
sidster
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The fate of LTTE means almost nothing for Maoists but the lowered number of cummunists seats in India is not good for Maoists. I see chance of new non - mao government forming in Nepal soon. Mao were probably hoping for communists to joing the government so that they could keep staying in the Government  in nepal.

Sid
snowfed_river
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NEPAL will not benefit from any existing parties. be it congress, be it mao etc. we already have the bitter experience of 50 - 60 years and recent stupid game of PKD.  how he duped and made nepalese look like they are just a bunch of toys (but with emotions) and can fall prey to any stupid so-called leaders. they played with our innocence, our soul, our emotions and above all with our nation. we still follow the age old political system mainly copied from BIHAR type govt and the blue print is made in DELHI.


From what I have seen, read and experienced, the ONLY solution for NEPAL is a complete makeover of the current system.


BTW, PUKADA AKA is still a force without a kursi and people still follow hom either by fear or by arrogance or ignorance. 

snowfed_river
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NOW SRI LANKA will develop leaps and bounds as the biggest obstable "LTTE" are wiped out.


WHEN will NEPAL experience the same victory aganist maowadi, chutiya politicians and heave a sigh of relief??

snowfed_river
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LTTE chief 'dead'; 25-yr long civil war is over


The chief of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), Velupillai Prabhakaran, has been killed in an offensive by the Sri Lankan military, reports say.










Velupillai Prabhakaran

Velupillai Prabhakaran
(Photo Source: bbc.co.uk)

The announcement on Sri Lanka's state television came shortly after the military said it had surrounded Prabhakaran in a tiny patch of jungle in the north-east, the BBC reported.


The head of the Sri Lankan army Lt Gen Sarath Fonseka said the military had defeated the rebels and "liberated the entire country".


"Today we finished the work handed to us by the president to liberate the country from the LTTE," Gen Fonseka said in the broadcast. He said troops were working to identify Prabhakaran's body from among the dead.


The broadcast quoted military officials as saying Prabhakaran, 54, was killed along with two of his deputies.


It said Prabhakaran, his intelligence chief Pottu Amman and Soosai, the head of the rebels' naval wing, were shot dead in an ambush in the Mullivaikal district while trying to escape the war zone in an ambulance.


Earlier, at least three senior rebel leaders were killed, including Prabhakaran's eldest son, Charles Anthony, the military said.


Sri Lankan military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara confirmed Prabhakaran's death, saying 250 Tamil Tigers were also killed overnight.


The government's information department also sent news of Prabhakaran's death by text message to mobile phones across the country, according to the BBC report, adding that the death of the Tiger supremo could not be confirmed independently as reporters have been barred from going to the area.


More than 70,000 people have been killed and hundreds of thousands displaced in the brutal insurgency lasting for 25 years

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