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“On Nov. 15, government forces seized
Pooneryn, giving Colombo full control over
its western seaboard for the first time in
over a decade…..and the LTTE’s de facto
capital, Kilinochchi, is encircled by troops
approaching on three fronts,” states the
international magazine TIME in its Nov 20
issue reporting on Sri Lanka.
“Since a cease-fire disintegrated in 2005,
steady government advances first pushed out
the L.T.T.E. from their positions in the
island nation's east, then cut off most of
the maritime smuggling networks supplying
the insurgency in its northern stronghold.
The LTTE's de facto capital, Kilinochchi, is
encircled by troops approaching on three
fronts,” TIME states
The report by Ishan Tharoor states: “Fifteen
years ago, Tamil rebels overran a marshy
strip along Sri Lanka's northwest coast.
Pooneryn became a headache for Colombo: a
strategic redoubt, shored up with artillery,
that shielded the base of operations of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), one
of the world's most dogged insurgent groups.
But on Nov. 15, government forces seized
Pooneryn, giving Colombo full control over
its western seaboard for the first time in
over a decade. The government called for a
week of celebrations.
Sri Lanka's bitter, 25-year-old civil war —
Asia's longest-running conflict — has never
been closer to a military solution. Since a
cease-fire disintegrated in 2005, steady
government advances first pushed out the
LTTE from their positions in the island
nation's east, then cut off most of the
maritime smuggling networks supplying the
insurgency in its northern stronghold. The
LTTE's de facto capital, Kilinochchi, is
encircled by troops approaching on three
fronts.
A final reckoning looms. Despite Sri Lankan
President Mahinda Rajapaksa's offer of
talks, stubborn resistance is expected from
the cornered LTTE — a group which, in its
struggle for an independent Tamil homeland,
pioneered suicide bombing and taught
fighters to imbibe cyanide pills rather than
surrender.
An estimated 70,000 people have died since
hostilities began, and both the government
and the rebels stand accused of a catalogue
of crimes. Many Tamils say they face
discrimination from official policies, and
recent security measures throughout the
country have heightened the sense of a
minority under siege in the majority
Sinhalese state. Upwards of 300,000 people
may be displaced by the latest combat,
though no journalists can enter the conflict
zone to confirm this. Whatever the outcome
of this campaign, the work of accounting for
both sides' misdeeds and of repatching Sri
Lanka's tattered society must begin. There,
as elsewhere, peace cannot be won by
military bravado alone.
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