Bomb squad officers defused explosives strapped to a bicycle in
a market in Sri Lanka's capital Tuesday, just hours after officials
in the US said they had arrested suspected rebel arms buyers.
The bomb squad said suspected Tamil Tiger rebels had packed 15
kilograms of explosives around a Claymore fragmentation mine, a
weapon often used against the military in recent months.
The device was found during a random check in Borella market in
eastern Colombo, overlooking a busy road.
The find comes after two bomb attacks and an assassination in
Colombo this month and after a suspected Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) front threatened to bomb civilian targets.
Sporadic violence continues in the Tamil-dominated north and
east.
Meanwhile, US officials said overnight that more than a dozen
people have been arrested on suspicion of procuring surface-to-air
missiles and raising funds for the Tigers.
Analysts say the Tigers who have been banned as a terrorist
organization by countries including the United States, India,
Britain and the European Union have used the past four years of
ceasefire to smuggle a lethal arsenal into the country.
New York arms sting
Several people who had agreed to pay more than US$900,000 for
hundreds of AK-47 rifles and 50 to 100 Russian-made surface-to-air
missiles have been arrested in a New York sting operation,
according to US court documents.
In Jaffna, capital of Sri Lanka's Northern Province, thousands
of families have fled their homes, since the fighting broke
out.
Aid workers say more than 160,000 have been displaced in the
north and east because of fighting all sides estimate has killed
hundreds.
Shortages are also rising fast in the rebel-held heartland south
of Jaffna, cut off for most of the last two weeks after the army
closed checkpoints. Some aid worker compounds have been raided for
food around the northern rebel base of Kilinochchi.
The Tigers and the military accuse each other of being the
aggressor, but both maintain they are honoring the ceasefire.
Diplomats say both sides are flouting it, and see no push for an
end to a two-decade war that has killed over 65,000 people.
Reporters Without Borders joined a chorus of rights groups in
condemning the killing of a former minority Tamil politician and
newspaper director gunned down in Jaffna at the weekend.
"All parties, especially the pro-government Tamil
paramilitaries, must stop targeting civilians, journalists and
humanitarian workers," the group said in a statement. "The press is
again the victim of Sri Lanka's dirty war, and the government is
partly to blame for this hellish cycle of violence."
Nordic truce monitors said on Monday they were temporarily
withdrawing to Colombo to regroup ahead of a September 1 ultimatum
the Tigers gave European Union staff to quit the island, which
leaves them with too few staff to do their job properly.
A return to peace talks is a dim and distant prospect and
diplomats say it will likely be years at best before the Tigers are
removed from any terror lists.
(China Daily August 23, 2006)