Special Report: Ceasefire over in Sri
Lanka
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An explosives laden truck driven by a
LTTE suicide squad member hit buses transporting Sri Lankan Navy sailors
Monday. The death toll in the attack has risen to 99 with 116 others
injured. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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COLOMBO,
Oct. 16 (Xinhua) -- The death toll in the attack against Sri Lankan Navy
personnel blamed on the Tamil Tiger rebels has risen to 99 with 116 others
injured, a government minister said.
Keheliya Rambukwella, the minister of Policy Planning
and the government's defense spokesman, said that several injured sailors were
in critical condition.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels
were blamed for the suicide bomb attack at Habarana, North Central Province
around 1:45 p.m. local time (0815 GMT) Monday.
An explosives laden truck driven by a LTTE suicide
squad member caused the blast, which hit buses transporting sailors between the
capital Colombo and the eastern port town of Trincomalee.
"This is a brutal and a cowardly terror attack by the
LTTE," Rambukwella said.
The minister said the government peace secretariat
had informed him that peace talks scheduled for Oct. 28 and 29 this month in
Switzerland would go ahead as planned despite the rebel attack on the Navy
personnel.
"They (talks) were arranged prior to the incident so
they will go ahead. The government will show its commitment to a negotiated
settlement," Rambukwella added.
He said after the blast the government had ordered
air strike against identified rebel targets in the Eastern Province.
However, the LTTE's defense spokesman Rasiah
Ilanthirayan said the air force had bombed villages in the Northern Province,
causing injuries to civilians.
The LTTE spokesman would neither deny nor accept
responsibility to the suicide attack against the Navy.
"When air force continue to bomb and the Army keep on
attacking (the rebels), how could the LTTE refrain from attacking military?"
Ilanthirayan commented without accepting direct responsibility.
Defense officials said one air craft, an
Israeli-built Kfir, had crashed into a lagoon off the west coast when it was
returning after a bombing mission in the rebel held territory.
The violence continue despite pressure from the international backers of the Norwegian peace process on both sides to return to the negotiating process. Enditem