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Sri Lankan army captures key Tiger stronghold of Pooneryn
Sri Lanka's military on Saturday said it had seized the country's western coast, capturing the Pooneryn area where Tamil Tiger artillery had kept soldiers at bay.
- Eastern Province Chief Minister and former Tamil rebel Pillayan (centre) is escorted by army commandos as he visits the site of a shootout in Athurugiriya on Friday.
- Image Credit: Reuters
Colombo: Sri Lanka's military said troops seized the entire western coast of the Indian Ocean island yesterday, capturing the key Pooneryn area where Tamil Tiger rebel artillery had kept soldiers at bay since 1993.
With the military controlling Pooneryn, a strategic piece of land that runs parallel to the neck of the northern Jaffna Peninsula across a narrow lagoon, it will be in a position to strike the rebel capital of Kilinochchi from three sides.
In one of Asia's longest-running insurgencies, at least 70,000 people have been killed in Sri Lanka since 1983.
"We have completely taken over Pooneryn. We have gone up to the town and control the roads from Pooneryn to Paranthan," military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.
The Defence Ministry said troops had encountered stiff resistance as they fought through marshlands south of Pooneryn and across the Paranthan junction overnight.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had no immediate comment. Previously, the LTTE had used heavy artillery to prevent two army divisions garrisoned on Jaffna, in army hands since 1995, from moving south to Kilinochchi.
"We didn't find any artillery, because they must have taken those pieces away or hidden them," Nanayakkara said. Saturday's seizure after months of heavy fighting on the west coast.
The announcement also coincided with the second reading of President Mahinda Rajapakse's proposed 2009 budget in parliament, which includes a record defence spending of Rs 177.06 billion (Dh5.89 billion).
Control of Pooneryn means that, for the first time since 1993, the government controls a land route all the way to a ferry that can easily bring supplies to Jaffna.
It will also ease military supply lines while cutting off the Tigers, Colombo-based defence analyst Iqbal Athas said.
"From their secret bases in Tamil Nadu, the Tigers will not be able to bring war material into the western coast," Athas said, referring to the nearby Tamil-majority state across the Palk Strait in India.
Athas said it foreshadowed a brutal battle for Kilinochchi.
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