Sri Lanka Muslims hacked to death; police blamed

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By Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi

POTTUVIL, Sri Lanka (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s military on Monday accused Tamil Tiger rebels of hacking 10 Muslim labourers to death in the island’s east, but angry local residents blamed security forces.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) denied any involvement in the killings, which took place near the island’s Yala National Park on Sunday, instead blaming the military for the latest in a string of mass killings and abuses.

The killings near the town of Panama in the tsunami-battered eastern district of Ampara — which has so far escaped the worst of recent fighting — came just days after the government and rebels agreed to meet for talks to halt violence that has killed hundreds of people since late July.

“(Police) Special Task Force (STF) troops killed these people,” said Muslim M.S. Mohedeen, as around 2,000 people, including women and children, gathered around a mosque in the eastern town of Pottuvil where the bodies were laid out and incense burned to mask the stench of death.

“We don’t blame anyone else,” he added. “The LTTE can’t come into this area. It is completely controlled by the STF. Without the STF’s knowledge, no one can come into this area.”

The army said one person had survived the attack and had been taken to Ampara hospital.

A military spokesman said the labourers had gone missing at the weekend when they had gone to renovate a sluice gate, and were found hacked to pieces. He blamed the Tigers.

Nordic truce monitors were on the way to the scene.

“The LTTE notes that this is a Sri Lankan government controlled area and a Sri Lankan military camp is stationed near the location of the massacre,” the rebels’ Peace Secretariat said in a statement.

“The Sri Lankan military is adopting its long tradition of blaming the LTTE for the atrocities it commits,” it added, pointing to the massacre of 17 aid workers in August which the Nordic Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission blamed on government troops.

EXCHANGE OF FIRE

The latest killings also came as the navy exchanged fire on Sunday with the rebels’ feared naval wing, the Sea Tigers, and said it, along with the air force, sank a large vessel carrying rebel weapons and ammunition.

The navy did not say how it knew there were weapons on board the vessel.

The were no reports of violence on Monday.

Peace broker Norway announced last week that the government and the Tigers had agreed to meet for talks for the first time since the rebels pulled out of negotiations in April, and is aiming to arrange a meeting in Oslo next month.

However both sides have imposed conditions few expect either to honour. Petty squabbling has sunk previous talks, and some analysts fear renewed fighting could escalate.

“It’s certainly not clear what talks are going to lead to,” said Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu of the Centre for Policy Alternatives. “They both at the end of the day would prefer to be in positions of strength as far as the ground situation is concerned before they engage in serious negotiations.”

The Tigers insist the army must end offensive operations and give back captured territory on the southern lip of the strategic northeastern harbour of Trincomalee.

The government wants a written guarantee from the Tigers that they will halt attacks, and have also urged them to lay down arms.

Analysts and diplomats say none of the demands are likely to be met, and that talks will yield little aside from a breather in the fighting until both sides sit down and address the central issue: the Tigers’ demands for a separate homeland for ethnic Tamils.

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