Sri Lankan air forces bombed rebel positions in the north of the island on
Monday, while troops killed 49 Tamil Tiger rebels in fighting, military officials
said, Reuters reports.
The air raids began a
day after a suspected rebel suicide bomber murdered a cabinet minister, Jeyaraj
Fernandopulle, 55, and 13 other people on Sunday. According to the police, 83
people were injured due to the bombing near the capital, Colombo, including 16 who were in critical condition.
Currently, helicopter gunships were deployed against rebel bunkers.
The Tamil Tigers fought for their independent homeland in
northern Sri Lanka
for more than two decades, in a civil war that caused the deaths of nearly
70,000 people. The bombing in Colombo
was the latest assault since the government’s January backdown from a truce with
rebels.
The attack on Sunday happened as the Highways Minister was
participating at a New Year celebration in the city of Weliveriya,
18 miles outside Colombo.
He is the second minister to have been assassinated, as the minister for nation
building, D.M. Dassanayake, was also killed in a blast on 8 January, within a
few days after the government’s withdrawal from an armistice with the Tamil
Tigers.
The European Union (E.U.) expressed its strong disapproval
over the suicide attack that caused Fernandopulle’s death and demanded for a stop
to all forms of violence and terrorism against civilians. According to E.U., there
is no military solution to the conflict in Sri Lanka, only a negotiated one.
According to the latest toll, the number of rebels believed
to have been killed by security forces this year climbed at 2,700. The number
of security staff murdered during the same period is 156. The Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) did not comment over the latest attacks and air raids.