|
Post-Kilinochchi, President Mahinda
Rajapaksa expects the Sri Lankan armed
forces to make rapid advances and capture
Elephant Pass, which controls access to the
Jaffna Peninsula, and other key targets in a
short while. He is confident that, in the
near future, the fighting cadres of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam will have
nowhere to go outside the jungles of
Mullaithivu district in northern Sri Lanka,
reports N. Ram, Editor of The Hindu of
January 5, 2009.
The report adds: "Speaking to me over the
telephone from Colombo on Sunday evening,
Mr. Rajapaksa expressed satisfaction that
his ‘Zero Civilian Casualty Policy’ was
implemented perfectly by the armed forces
during the operations to liberate
Kilinochchi, the administrative hub and de
facto ‘capital’ of the LTTE. They would
continue to implement this policy in all
their operations.
“See what is happening in Palestine!
Horrible,” the Sri Lankan President said. “I
spoke to the Palestinian President [Mahmoud
Abbas] to find out the real situation
there.”
Mr. Rajapaksa expressed concern over the
LTTE not releasing the tens of thousands of
Tamil civilians it holds “virtually as
prisoners.” He has warned the organisation
that it would face a ban if it continued to
deny Tamil civilians their freedom and human
rights. It is understood that the ban could
come within a week. Paradoxically, the LTTE,
which has been banned or designated as a
terrorist entity in some 30 countries,
including India, is yet to be proscribed in
Sri Lanka.
“We have to give the highest priority to
looking after these civilians,” Mr.
Rajapaksa told me in the telephonic
conversation. “We want their safety. That is
why I am insisting strongly on their
release.”
“We are sending them food,” the Sri
Lankan President added. “We are feeding the
LTTE. We won’t keep them hungry even after
the civilians come over!”
Mr. Rajapaksa said some of the LTTE
cadres were surrendering to the armed
forces. His government was aware that there
was a possibility of some suicide bombers
trying to come out as refugees. The
government was doing its best to apprehend
and neutralise the LTTE’s suicide bombers,
possibly 15 to 20 of them, who are believed
to have infiltrated into Colombo and its
environs.
|