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Sri Lankan war in endgame, 95,000 escape rebel zone
Wed Apr 22, 2009 9:50am EDT
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By C. Bryson Hull and Ranga Sirilal
COLOMBO (Reuters) - Thousands more civilians surged out of Sri Lanka's war zone on Wednesday, while soldiers and Tamil Tiger rebels fought the apparent endgame of Asia's longest-running war despite calls to protect those still trapped.
In the third day since troops blasted through a massive earthen wall built by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and unleashed the exodus, the military said 81,420 people had been registered for onward transit to refugee camps.
The massive civilian presence in a 17 square km (6.5 sq mile) area had been the last crucial defense for the Tigers, who have refused repeated calls from the United Nations, Western governments and neighboring India to release them.
Sri Lanka's government has meanwhile rejected LTTE and international calls for a truce, saying it cannot allow a group designated as a terrorist organization by more than 30 countries to use the time to rearm, as it has done in the past.
By Wednesday morning, troops had captured about a third of the remaining Tiger-held area, which had been an army-declared no-fire zone until soldiers marched in and turned it into the conflict's final conventional battlefield after people fled.
"Confrontations are taking place. Whenever we come across LTTE cadres, we are fighting them. The rescue operation is continuing," military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.
Defense spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella later told a media briefing troops had taken control of about a third of the area, after seizing the center of the north-south strip of coast and dividing the remaining rebel fighters into two pockets.
Nanayakkara said 153,000 civilians have fled LTTE areas so far this year.
UN CONFIRMS EXODUS
The United Nations confirmed this week's outflow.
"It is 60,000 plus and counting, and we have heard various reports of up to 110,000 coming out," said U.N. spokesman in Colombo, Gordon Weiss. He cautioned the reports were preliminary and not confirmed.
So far, only 7,500 had reached refugee centers away from the front in Jaffna and Vavuniya towns, while the rest were in transit, he said.
Aid agencies have warned refugee camp conditions could quickly turn bad with the populations doubling, but Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has ordered extra food and reliefs supplies to be sent.
On Tuesday, the International Committee of the Red Cross had said the war zone situation was "catastrophic," with several hundred killed since Monday and at least 50,000 more remaining at risk with limited food, water and medical care.
The United Nations and others have accused the LTTE of forcing people to stay in the war zone or making them fight, and the government of shelling civilian areas. Both deny the accusations. Continued...
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