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Sri Lanka rebel head 'surrounded' | Sri Lanka rebel head 'surrounded' |
(30 minutes later) | |
The leader of the Tamil Tiger rebels, Velupillai Prabhakaran, is surrounded by government troops in a tiny patch of jungle, Sri Lanka's military has said. | |
Unconfirmed reports on Western news agencies quoted unnamed defence officials as saying he had been killed. | |
Prabhakaran was being guarded by about 200 rebels, a military spokesman said on television. | |
Sri Lankan forces have routed the rebels in the past few weeks, bringing a 26-year war to its conclusion. | Sri Lankan forces have routed the rebels in the past few weeks, bringing a 26-year war to its conclusion. |
Earlier, three senior rebel leaders were killed in the fighting, the army said. | |
Initial reports had put the number at four, saying they included the head of the Tigers' political wing, Balasingham Nadesan, the head of rebels' peace secretariat Seevaratnam Puleedevan, and a military leader known as Ramesh. | |
See a map of the conflict region | See a map of the conflict region |
The army also said it had found the body of Prabhakaran's eldest son, Charles Anthony. | |
The news agencies said Prabhakaran himself was ambushed and shot dead while trying to flee the area in an ambulance. | |
The latest claims cannot be verified as reporters are barred from the war zone. | The latest claims cannot be verified as reporters are barred from the war zone. |
'No escape' | 'No escape' |
Sri Lanka's army says the last Tamil Tiger (LTTE) fighters have been penned into a 1.5 square kilometre (0.6 sq mile) patch of jungle. | Sri Lanka's army says the last Tamil Tiger (LTTE) fighters have been penned into a 1.5 square kilometre (0.6 sq mile) patch of jungle. |
VELUPILLAI PRABHAKARAN Born November, 19541972: Founded Tamil New Tigers (TNT), forerunner of LTTEWanted in Sri Lanka and India Profile: Velupillai Prabhakaran Protest over UK role in Sri Lanka | VELUPILLAI PRABHAKARAN Born November, 19541972: Founded Tamil New Tigers (TNT), forerunner of LTTEWanted in Sri Lanka and India Profile: Velupillai Prabhakaran Protest over UK role in Sri Lanka |
The military spokesman said he could not predict exactly what would happen next but added: "We won't allow him [Prabhakaran] to escape." | The military spokesman said he could not predict exactly what would happen next but added: "We won't allow him [Prabhakaran] to escape." |
The television also showed what it said were Tamil Tiger (LTTE) ammunition dumps and heavy weapons burning after the rebels set fire to them. | The television also showed what it said were Tamil Tiger (LTTE) ammunition dumps and heavy weapons burning after the rebels set fire to them. |
As the offensive continued, more than 1,000 Sri Lankans protested outside the British High Commission in the capital, Colombo. | As the offensive continued, more than 1,000 Sri Lankans protested outside the British High Commission in the capital, Colombo. |
The demonstrators, accusing Britain of siding with the Tigers, threw stones and burnt an effigy of UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband. | The demonstrators, accusing Britain of siding with the Tigers, threw stones and burnt an effigy of UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband. |
A High Commission spokesman said it was "an outrage" that the Sri Lankan authorities let the demonstration become so violent. | A High Commission spokesman said it was "an outrage" that the Sri Lankan authorities let the demonstration become so violent. |
'Bitter end' | 'Bitter end' |
The latest developments came a day after the rebels declared a ceasefire, saying the battle had "reached its bitter end". | The latest developments came a day after the rebels declared a ceasefire, saying the battle had "reached its bitter end". |
Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the Tigers' chief of international relations, said in a statement on the pro-rebel TamilNet website that the LTTE was "prepared to silence its guns if that is what needed by the international community to save the life and dignity of the Tamil people". | Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the Tigers' chief of international relations, said in a statement on the pro-rebel TamilNet website that the LTTE was "prepared to silence its guns if that is what needed by the international community to save the life and dignity of the Tamil people". |
The government has consistently refused to call a halt to the fighting, vowing to wipe the rebels out. | |
Sources in the UN say significant numbers of civilians are still in the combat zone but the Sri Lankan government says all civilians have left. | Sources in the UN say significant numbers of civilians are still in the combat zone but the Sri Lankan government says all civilians have left. |
The Tigers have been fighting for a separate state for Tamils in the north and east of Sri Lanka since the 1970s. | The Tigers have been fighting for a separate state for Tamils in the north and east of Sri Lanka since the 1970s. |
More than 70,000 people have been killed in the conflict and thousands displaced. | |
Click here to return | Click here to return |