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  UN says many civilians killed in Sri Lanka clashes
Last updated: 2009-01-26


UN says many civilians killed in Sri Lanka clashes
2009-01-26

Category
Rebellion
United Nations
Nations
Sri Lanka
City
Colombo
Category
Regions
Regions
Asia
Source
(AP)

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - The United Nations said Monday that "many" civilians have been killed in recent fighting in Sri Lanka's civil war and called the situation for thousands of displaced people trapped in the northern conflict zone a crisis.

In recent weeks, government troops pushed the Tamil Tigers out of the de facto state they ran in the north, forced the rebels into a broad retreat and boxed them into a small patch of jungle along with hundreds of thousands of civilians.

The military captured the rebels' final stronghold of Mullaittivu on Sunday and fought heavy battles with the separatists in the jungles throughout Monday.

With the war zone shrinking and a huge population of civilians in the area, the situation has grown desperate in recent days, U.N. resident coordinator Neil Buhne told The Associated Press on Monday.

"There have been many civilians killed over the last two days," he said. "It's really a crisis now."

Buhne said until recently both sides in the fighting worked hard to avoid civilian casualties.

"But in the current phase, with such a level of fighting and with so many people around, unless there is very, very close attention to it, it's almost inevitable," he said.

Human rights groups and diplomats have expressed growing concerns about the safety of the civilians in the north in recent days. Many have accused the Tamil Tigers of preventing civilians from fleeing the war zone, while the government has said the rebels hoped to use the civilians as human shields.

One diplomat said the use of heavy artillery in such a confined area so densely populated with civilians was extremely dangerous and could result in more civilian deaths than if the government relied solely on ground troops.

The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of antagonizing the Sri Lankan government. International aid workers also refused to speak publicly, fearing the government will brand them rebel sympathizers and expel them.

The government unilaterally declared a "safe zone" in a small section of rebel-held territory last week and called on all the civilians to move into that area, where they would be protected.

But there have been several reports of artillery fire in that region and Buhne said there was regular fighting in the "safe zone" in recent days.

"It's hard for us to assign responsibility, but there's definitely been fighting," he said.

The military has repeatedly denied fighting in that area.

"We are not targeting this safe zone," military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said. "(The rebels) have moved their weapons to the safe zone and are firing from the safe zone but we don't engage them."

Rebel officials could not be reached for comment because communications to the northern war zone have been cut. Independent accounts of the fighting are not available because most journalists are barred from the war zone.

The Tamil Tigers have fought since 1983 to create a separate state in the north and east for minority Tamils, who have suffered decades of marginalization at the hands of successive governments controlled by the Sinhalese majority. More than 70,000 people have been killed in the violence.

The government has vowed to crush the group and has squeezed the rebels into a 115-square-mile (300-square-kilometer) area in the jungle.

Troops were consolidating their control of Mullaittivu on Monday while other forces pushed into the jungles in the Vishwamadu area and fought pitched battles with the rebels there, Nanayakkara said.

Army commander Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka said Sunday the war was "95 percent" over but analysts warn it is simply shifting from a conventional fight between two armies to a guerrilla war.

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