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Sri Lanka rebels kill 3 in 1st airstrike

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - Tamil rebels launched their first airstrike in the nearly quarter-decade conflict with Sri Lanka's government, using at least one small plane to bomb an air base outside the capital Monday and killing three airmen, officials said.

Monday, Mar 26, 2007 | 227 Views | Comments [View/Post]

Tamil Tiger rebels said the overnight raid, which also injured 16 personnel at the base about 20 miles northwest of Colombo, was aimed at halting what they called "indiscriminate" aerial bombing of Tamil areas and warned of more attacks.

The Tigers said two aircraft carried out the raid, though it was not immediately clear what kind of planes they used or where they obtained them. Air force spokesman Group Capt. Ajantha Silva said the attack involved a single light aircraft, and that it was the first airstrike by the Tigers.

Several witnesses reported gunfire and flashes at the base.

"There has been no major damage to our aircraft or the installation," Silva said.

The attack took place just before 1 a.m. with a single light aircraft dropping two bombs near the base's engineering section, the Defense Ministry said in a statement. No aircraft on the ground were damaged, but three airmen were killed and 16 injured, it said.

Rebel spokesman Rasiah Ilanthirayan, speaking to The Associated Press by telephone from the northern rebel stronghold of Kilinochchi, said the "two attack aircraft" returned safely after bombing the Sri Lankan air force base, calling it the "the first major aerial attack by the Tigers."

"The attack is not only pre-emptive but also to safeguard our people from indiscriminate bombing by the (Sri Lanka Air Force)," Ilanthirayan said, adding that air force attacks in northern Sri Lanka had killed and wounded civilians and damaged their property.

"Other Sri Lanka military installations will also be targets of our future attacks," he said, but did not elaborate.

The adjacent international airport was not hit, but it closed briefly before resuming operations, said a duty officer at the airport.

The rebels, formally known as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, staged a devastating attack on the same air base in July 2001 and destroyed six civilian jets and over a dozen military planes. About 18 Tiger suicide fighters were involved in the ground attack, which also killed half a dozen security personnel.

The Tigers launched their fight in 1983 to create an independent homeland for the country's 3.1 million minority Tamils after decades of discrimination by the majority Sinhalese. A Norway-brokered cease-fire signed in 2002 slowed the violence, but hostilities spiked again in late 2005, with more than 4,000 fighters and civilians killed in the last 15 months, according to European cease-fire monitors.

An estimated 65,000 people were killed in fighting before the cease-fire. While both sides have not officially withdrawn from the cease-fire, soaring violence has rendered the agreement valid only on paper.



Sri Lankan air force soldiers stand guard at the arrival's terminal of the Katunaike international airport, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) north of Capital Colombo, Sri Lanka, Monday, March 26, 2007. Tamil Tiger rebels in two light planes dropped bombs on Sri Lanka's main air force base on the outskirts of the capital early Monday, killing two officers, officials said.(AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)

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