Sri Lanka bus blast kills dozens

At least 61 people have been killed after a civilian bus was struck by a mine in northern Sri Lanka, police say.

Another 45 people were wounded in the explosion in Anuradhapura district, 200km (125 miles) north of Colombo. The government says the Tamil Tigers were responsible for what is the worst incident involving civilians since a 2002 ceasefire came into force. The Tigers deny responsibility. The government has responded with air strikes on Tamil Tiger positions. The Tigers say the attack may be the work of a paramilitary group linked to the government. Violence has risen in Sri Lanka since early April when talks between the rebels and the government broke down.

Schoolchildren dead

Thursday's bus attack was in an area with an ethnic Sinhalese majority. Correspondents say the Tamil Tigers have in the past attacked the main military barracks in the area. The bus was packed with villagers travelling to work and school when it was hit by a claymore mine. Army officials said the bus overturned and hurtled 25 metres down a road after it hit the mine. A doctor at the local hospital said at least 15 children were among the dead.

'Barbaric'

"This is the most barbaric attack of the Tigers," government spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella said.

The Tigers immediately issued a statement denying responsibility saying that "directly targeting civilians... cannot be justified under any circumstances."

Claymore mines are widely used by the Tamil Tigers. But a Tamil Tiger (LTTE) spokesman, S Puleedevan, told the BBC's World Update programme that the attack may have been the work of a paramilitary group linked to the government.

"The Sri Lankan armed forces are using various paramilitary groups. They are engaged in a lot of claymore attacks, penetrative attacks, against the LTTE, against the Tamil civilians, in the north-east," Mr Puleedevan said.

Talks failure

Shortly after news of the attack emerged, the Sri Lankan military launched air strikes in rebel-held areas of Sampur and Kilinochchi.

The pro-Tiger TamilNet website said two air force bombers had begun bombing rebel-controlled Mullaitivu and its suburbs.

It is not clear what impact the air attacks have had.

Suspected attacks by Tamil Tigers on security forces and killings of Tamils blamed on the army and others have soared in recent months.

Earlier this month talks the rebels refused to meet the Sri Lankan government side in talks in Oslo mediated by Norway.

At the end of May the European Union added the Tigers to its list of banned terrorist organisations.

The Tamil Tigers want a separate homeland for minority Tamils in the north and east of Sri Lanka. More than 60,000 people have died during two decades of conflict.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/5082026.stm

Published: 2006/06/15 09:21:13 GMT

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