Tiger rebels are 'near extinction’
Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger guerrillas are "near extinction" as troops press home their initiative after capturing the rebels' political capital, the defence ministry said yesterday.
Government forces have advanced towards the final remaining strongholds of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) since the Tigers' headquarters at Kilinochchi fell on Friday.
Troops were also close to taking a key land route to the northern peninsula of Jaffna, and have made progress in securing the strategic Elephant Pass, the ministry said.
Sri Lanka's government meanwhile has decided to formally ban its warring partner, the Tamil Tiger rebels, in a symbolic move that signals closing the prospect of early peace talks, an official said.
The government was bringing back the proscription as security forces moved to dismantle the remnants of a de facto rebel state in the north of the island after capturing the Tiger political capital on Friday, the official said.
"The government is bringing back the ban," the official said declining to be named. "Tigers failed to respond to a December 31 (2008) ultimatum to allow civilians the freedom to leave areas under their control."
The Tamil Tigers have vowed to hit back after suffering a series of major defeats in their vicious 37-year battle for a separate homeland.
The ministry said troops recovered three rebel bodies while “scores" were killed during heavy fighting around the Muhamalai defence line in the Jaffna peninsula on Tuesday.
"Security forces... are now gaining rapid tactical advantage leaving LTTE near to extinction," the ministry said, adding that intense ground battles had left "well-fortified LTTE defences crumbling and its leadership stunned."
The LTTE did not comment on the military statements, but pro-rebel website Tamilnet.com said the guerrillas would fight back.
Rebel political chief B Nadesan dismissed the fall of Kilinochchi as "an insignificant setback" in an interview published on the website.
"With the resolute backing of our people and the moral support base of the global Tamil community, we are determined to overcome the current challenges," he said.
The government was "waging a genocidal war with cowardly and indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians," he added.
Reports on the frontline cannot be independently verified as the government bars reporters and aid workers from travelling to the war zones.
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