Sri Lanka conflict
Last reviewed: 18-06-2009
ASIA'S LONGEST MODERN WAR

A soldier searches a Tamil family's house in Jaffna, 2006.
REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi
REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi
TROOPS SEIZE TIGER TERRITORY
The Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States and the election of a new Sri Lankan prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, provided the impetus for peace talks. The Tigers were keen to shed the "terrorist" label given to them by members of the international community. A ceasefire was agreed in 2002 and the rebels dropped their demand for an independent state, settling for regional autonomy. But they withdrew from Norwegian-brokered peace talks a year later, saying not enough was being done to improve conditions for Tamils. The island started sliding back into civil war at the end of 2005. The Tigers' strongholds began to fall in 2007 when government troops captured the east of the country. The government formally scrapped the truce in January 2008, accusing the rebels of using it to re-arm. Fighting escalated that year, with the government capturing swathes of Tiger territory in the north before seizing Kilinochchi in early 2009. By February, troops had cornered the Tigers in a small patch of land in the northeast, along with an estimated 250,000 civilians. The majority escaped before the end of the war and are now housed in government-run camps. But tens of thousands were still trapped in the last weeks of fighting. More than 6,000 civilians have been killed and around 14,000 injured since the end of January, according to figures cited by the United Nations, but no one knows for sure because few outside observers were allowed in the war zone. The Tigers were accused of forcing trapped civilians to fight, using them as human shields and shooting people who tried to escape - allegations they denied. The U.N. Security Council also voiced grave concern over reports of heavy military shelling. Sri Lanka insisted its troops were only using small arms.
PEACE DEADLOCK

Rebels stand guard on the road connecting Jaffna to the rest of the country, May 2006.
REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi
REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi
UPROOTED BY WAR

Tamil villagers flee to a safe area in Kilinochchi, May 2006.
REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi
REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi
CHILD SOLDIERS
The Tamil Tigers relied heavily on child soldiers during the war, using some as young as nine. The United Nations children's agency (UNICEF) says Karuna's faction and the government also used child soldiers. Human Rights Watch says the Tigers used children as fighters, spies and even suicide bombers. Around a third of underage recruits in 2006 were girls, according to UNICEF. The Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers says the Tigers are known to have recruited well over 6,000 children between January 2002 and September 2007. But UNICEF estimates the real figure is much higher. Rights groups also accused Karuna's fighters of abducting many children to boost their strength after they split from the Tamil Tigers in 2004. One girl recruited by the Tigers when she was 14 told Human Rights Watch how rebels would sometimes kill those who tried to escape. "If you do it twice, they shoot you. In my wing, if someone escaped the whole group was lined up to watch them get beaten. If the person dies, they don't tell you, but we know it happens," she said. Children were recruited at temple festivals, at school and on the way to school. Some were abducted but others signed up themselves, sometimes to escape poverty. Another 13-year-old girl told Human Rights Watch: "We did target shooting. If we didn't shoot at the correct target, then we were punished. We had training on war tactics: if there is an army camp, how to approach, kill, plan the attack." Sri Lanka made recruitment of under-18s an offence in early 2006.
LANDMINES
After a quarter century of conflict, landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) pose a serious impediment to resettling families and rebuilding their shattered villages. Thousands of people have been killed or injured by the mines which are planted on jungle tracks and around plantations, wells, highways and villages in the north and east. Government officials estimate both sides laid 1.5 million mines between them. The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) puts the figure at 1 million. Only a fraction have been cleared. Some mines are homemade devices fashioned by the Tigers, but most are commercially purchased mines made in Pakistan, China or Italy. Sri Lanka has not joined the international Mine Ban Treaty. Reports of casualties dropped dramatically in 2007. There were 34 casualties down from 64 in 2006 - six killed and 28 injured, according to the Landmine Monitor report on Sri Lanka. But it says casualties are probably under-reported because of a lack of access to mine-affected areas. And the figures do not include casualties from claymore mines or improvised explosive devices set off by remote control. The Tigers have been blamed for claymore mine attacks on troops since late 2005, but deny responsibility. Claymores are blocks of plastic explosive which send ball bearings and shrapnel flying out when set off. Another type of device is the bounding fragmentation mine, which springs out of the ground when stepped on before exploding mid-air. After the tsunami, some land previously classified as low priority for demining, especially on the northern Jaffna peninsula, was reclassified as high priority because of the urgent need to rehouse survivors. International aid agencies such as Norwegian People's Aid and Mines Advisory Group employ farmers and ex-fighters as local deminers who earn relatively good wages for the region.
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