NP Rank:
Sri Lanka troops take more territory from Tigers in Jaffna
by Sanjay Jha | January 7, 2009 at 11:35 pm
116 views | 12 Recommendations | 1 comment
After capturing Tamil Rebels political capital Kilinochchi, Sri Lankan army is slowly inching forward and taking control of more rebel held areas. Government forces have manged to control strategically important Elephant pass and fortified these areas.
In the meantime Sri Lankan government on Wednesday night decided to formally ban the LTTE, a move signalling end of prospects of peace talks with the Tamil Tigers against whom the security forces have launched a major offensive.
Sri Lankan troops captured more territory from Tamil Tiger rebels in the northern Jaffna peninsula Thursday, a day after the government reimposed a formal ban on the guerrillas, officials said.
Troops moved their front lines further south to Pallai, a key Tiger position on the peninsula after heavy fighting, military officials said.
"Soldiers have moved down from their original defence lines in Muhamalai and now taken Pallai," a military spokesman said, adding that troops had moved about five kilometres from their original positions.
Military officials said government forces were moving to open a key land access to the Jaffna peninsula following the capture of the Tamil Tiger political capital of Kilinochchi last week.
The latest thrust came as war planes bombed two boats anchored in the Chundikulam lagoon to supply Tamil Tiger guerrillas in the Jaffna peninsula, the spokesman said.
There were no immediate reports of casualties and the guerrillas made no comment.
The attacks came barely a day after the government brought back the ban on the Tigers that was originally lifted in September 2002 to clear the way for Norwegian-brokered peace talks with the guerrillas.
Crowd Power
First Flagged at 9:29 PM, Jan 8, 2009 by Paschen
These members have powered this story:-
Sanjay Jha
New Delhi, India -
Sri Lanka Army news
Colombo, Western, Sri Lanka -
mashget
Shanghai, Shanghai, China














Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 21:29 on January 8th, 2009
They seem to be still successful and may win this after all.