VOL NO REGD NO DA 1589

Friday, December 30, 2005

HEADLINE

POLITICS & POLICIES

METRO & COUNTRY

VIEWS & REVIEWS

EDITORIAL

LETTER TO EDITOR

COMPANY & FINANCE

BUSINESS & FINANCE

TRADE/ECONOMY

LEISURE & ENTERTAINMENT

MARKET & COMMODITIES

SPORTS

WORLD

 

FE Specials

FE Education

Urban Property

Monthly Roundup

Saturday Feature

Asia/South Asia

 

Feature

13th SAARC SUMMIT DHAKA-2005

WOMEN & ECONOMY

57th Republic Day of India

US TRADE SHOW

 

 

 

Archive

Site Search

 

HOME

WORLD
 
Truce monitors warn of war in Sri Lanka
12/30/2005
 

          COLOMBO, Dec 29 (AFP): Norwegian-led truce monitors warned Thursday that war "may not be far away" in Sri Lanka and urged an immediate end to spiralling violence as officials said two more rebels were shot dead.
Troops killed two suspected Tamil Tigers as they lobbed two grenades at soldiers in the restive northern peninsula of Jaffna, military officials said.
The men were killed at Kadduwan near the town of Jaffna Wednesday evening, officials said, adding that the soldiers were unhurt.
Security forces also found a landmine set up along a key highway in the northwestern region Thursday. Two soldiers were injured Thursday when they were attacked by a grenade at Nallur in Jaffna, military officials said.
The Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM), comprising members from five Nordic countries, said they themselves were under threat and could not operate in an insecure environment.
At least 83 people have been killed this month alone in violence linked to the decades-old Tamil separatist conflict despite a Norwegian-arranged truce that has been in place since February 23, 2002.
Haukland said the "volatile situation" had made the mission's own monitoring work difficult and they were also threatened by unidentified elements.
He said only a dialogue between the government and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) could bring peace to Sri Lanka where more than 60,000 people have been killed in three decades of violence.
On Wednesday peace broker Norway urged Colombo and the Tigers immediately to resume talks to save their faltering truce.
Norway's International Development Minister Erik Solheim said in a statement that Oslo was "deeply concerned" about the latest turn of events.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse has been in neighbouring India since Tuesday to hold talks in a bid to secure New Delhi's increased involvement in the island's peace process.

 

 
  More Headline
Suicide attackers kill Israeli soldier
Israel army chief rules out early strike on Iran
Suicide bomber kills four policemen in Baghdad
China accuses Japan of smear campaign over suicide of diplomat
Truce monitors warn of war in Sri Lanka
Herpes in pregnancy may raise HIV risk for baby
Scientific fat hits fire over best-selling diet book
Harry Potter can prevent broken bones
news digest
 

Print this page | Mail this page | Save this page | Make this page my home page

About us  |  Contact us  |  Editor's panel  |  Career opportunity | Web Mail

 

 

 

 

Copy right @ financialexpress.com