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Sri Lanka
LTTE recruiting child soldiers: UN
2009-02-18
Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers have stepped up conscription of child soldiers, the United Nations agency for children said on Tuesday, as the rebels prepare to face a final onslaught by the military.

"We have clear indications that the LTTE has intensified forcible recruitment of civilians and that children as young as 14 years old are now being targeted," Philippe Duamelle, UNICEF's chief in Sri Lanka, said. The Tigers, who are encircled in a small patch of jungle, have a long record of using child soldiers, and have recruited more than 6,000 since 2002 according to UNICEF. "With a growing number of children being recruited by the LTTE and scores of children being killed or injured in fighting, UNICEF today expressed its gravest concerns," the agency said.

The rebels did not immediately react to UNICEF's claims, though they did lash out after being accused on Monday of shooting civilians who try to escape the bloody conflict. The United Nations said "a growing number of people trying to leave have been shot and sometimes killed" as they sought safety by fleeing rebel territory to government-controlled areas. A front organisation for the Tigers countered those allegations by saying the UN had failed in its duty to protect innocent people.

The UN was "withdrawing even the remaining few local staff from the conflict zone (and) completely shedding its responsibility of caring for the civilians trapped here," said the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO).
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Sri Lanka
Tigers reject Sri Lanka peace talks
2006-02-06
Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers have rejected government proposed peace talks in Geneva after reports of abductions of pro-Tiger aid workers. The government said on Friday talks were due to start in Switzerland on 15 February and were necessary to stop recent violence from escalating and reviving a two-decade-old war. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) demand that any talks should focus on implementation of a ceasefire agreed in 2002, and, in particular, a clause that stipulates that the state must disarm paramilitaries the rebels say are attacking them. They also warn that talks are doomed if the government tries to amend the terms. An anonymous rebel source said: "15 February is completely out. The Tigers are keen to go to Geneva for talks; but the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO) abductions have affected the atmosphere."

"The Tamil people are in a panic and are very upset, so the Tigers cannot meet the government's 15 February talks deadline, and are instead aiming for talks at the end of February," he added, referring to the reported abduction of 10 TRO aid workers that some officials fear is a Tiger propaganda stunt.
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Sri Lanka
LTTE smuggling in boom materials under the guise of tsunami relief
2005-02-08
Port authorities found thousands of small steel balls hidden in water pots in a shipping container that consigned to the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation, the army reported. Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels, who fought a two decade civil war against the government, are known for loading suicide bombs with metal balls to cause maximum damage. The rebels control a large area in the ethnic Tamil-majority north and have authorised the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation to co-ordinate tsunami relief work there. The military website said the balls "could be used for production of bombs or explosives." The report said the pots, believed to have been shipped from Britain, are being held for investigation. A spokesman for the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation said it would comment only after seeing the military's report.
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Southeast Asia
British Tsunami Relief Contained Bomb Materials Claims Sri Lankan Army
2005-02-07
The Sri Lankan military accused a relief group today of trying to smuggle bomb-making materials hidden in goods — probably sent from Britain — intended for tsunami survivors in areas controlled by Tamil Tiger rebels. Port authorities found thousands of small steel balls hidden in water pots in a shipping container that consigned to the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation, the army reported. Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels, who fought a two decade civil war against the government, are known for loading suicide bombs with metal balls to cause maximum damage.

The rebels control a large area in the ethnic Tamil-majority north and have authorised the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation to co-ordinate tsunami relief work there. The military website said the balls "could be used for production of bombs or explosives." The report said the pots, believed to have been shipped from Britain, are being held for investigation. A spokesman for the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation said it would comment only after seeing the military's report.

More than 65,000 people have been killed since Tamil Tigers began an armed insurrection in 1983 to carve out a separate state for ethnic minority Tamils, claiming discrimination by the majority Sinhalese. Fighting ended with a Norway-brokered cease-fire signed in February 2002. Peace talks however, broke down a year later when the rebels withdrew, demanding more autonomy in the north-east.

The Boxing Day 26 Asian tsunami killed more than 30,000 people in Sri Lanka and left nearly 4,700 missing.
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