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International News Updates |
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20 May 2009 Sri Lankan state television has
broadcast video footage of what the army says is the
body of Velupillai Prabhakaran, the leader of the
Tamil Tigers.
The military said the body was found in a lagoon on
Tuesday morning, contradicting claims by senior Tamil
officials that Prabhakaran was alive in a safe
location.
The images also showed what appeared to be
Prabhakaran's LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam)
identity card.
Hours before the images were released, the LTTE
dismissed the claims that Prabhakaran was dead and
vowed that the Tamil struggle for a homeland would
continue.
Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the international spokesman
for the group, admitted that many senior members had
either "given up their lives or have been
treacherously killed", but insisted that Prabhakaran
was "alive and well".
"Our beloved leader is alive and safe. He will
continue to lead the quest for dignity and freedom for
the Tamil people," Pathmanathan said in a statement on
the pro-LTTE website TamilNet.
Sri Lankan military sources had earlier said that
Prabhakaran's body had been found in an ambulance
destroyed by troops as it sped out of the war zone.
But Tuesday's official account contradicted those
claims.
Victory speech
The developments came amid a parliamentary address by
Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka's president, officially
declared victory over the LTTE, saying the country had
been "liberated from terrorism".
He said the government controlled "every inch" of Sri
Lanka for the first time after more than 25 years of
civil war.
Delivering his speech partly in the Tamil language,
Rajapaksa said the war was not waged against the
country's Tamil minority.
"Our intention was to save the Tamil people from the
cruel grip of the LTTE. We all must now live as equals
in this free country," he said.
Rajapaksa congratulated his military commanders on
Monday and promised a power-sharing deal with the
Tamils.
Jehan Perera, executive director of the National Peace
Council of Sri Lanka, said that the country is now in
a position to move forward.
"The president has a lot of credibility. He is trusted
by the Sinhalese people so he has a great opportunity
to make the compromises and accommodations necessary
to reach out to Tamils and satisfy their long-standing
demands," he told Al Jazeera.
"There's a sense among Tamils that there's no one to
speak for them, that they have lost everything and
gained nothing. I think the government has to make
some symbolic gesture towards the Tamils and change
things on the ground."
'Neglecting Tamils'
The Tamil Tigers had been fighting with the stated aim
of carving out a separate homeland for ethnic Tamils
in the country's north and east.
They accused the Sinhalese-dominated government in
Colombo of neglecting Tamils.
The LTTE once controlled nearly a fifth of the
country, running a shadow state that had courts,
police and a tax system along with an army, navy and
even a nascent air force.
But on Sunday, the group said it would "silence [its]
guns", declaring that its battle with the government
had come to a "bitter end".
The Rajapaksa government faces scepticism that it will
be genuinely inclusive now that it has defeated the
LTTE.
It also faces a looming humanitarian crisis, with the
UN estimating that 8,000 people were killed and about
250,000 displaced in just the last four months of the
conflict.
The government and the Tamil Tigers alike were
criticised for not allowing civilians to leave the
conflict zone and firing on them.
UN officials say Ban Ki-moon, the secretary-general,
is expected to visit Sri Lanka this week, where he
will focus on trying to help the displaced, pressing
for their speedy return home. -- Al Jazeera and
agencies
EsinIslam.Com
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