Sri Lankan troops overran a Tamil Tiger-held town and the air force destroyed rebel boats in an intensifying battle for the separatists' last redoubt on the strategic Jaffna Peninsula, the military said today.
In the second major attack on the media this week, a gunman on a motorcycle shot the editor of a newspaper critical of the government.
Lasantha Wickramatunga, chief editor of the Sunday Leadernewspaper, was in his car at the time. He is in a critical condition with head injuries.
Troops are sandwiching the Tigers from the north and south on the 6-km wide neck of the northern peninsula that connects it to the rest of the Indian Ocean island. They have pounded the rebels from both directions since Tuesday.
"Troops captured Pallai today, going forward from yesterday's positions, and are getting closer to Elephant Pass," military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said. "There are small pockets of fighting and the terrorists are withdrawing."
Pallai is a village on the northern front being attacked by two divisions, about 8 km north of Elephant Pass.
Elephant Pass is a strategic former army base at the entry to Jaffna that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) captured in 2000 in a stinging defeat for the army.
No casualties have been reported so far, Nanayakkara said.
War planes early today blew up two large boats in the Chundikulam lagoon to the east of Elephant Pass, and earlier yesterday attacked reinforcements constructing defences nearby, air force spokesman Wing Commander Janaka Nanayakkara said.
Chundikulam is on the other very narrow isthmus linking Jaffna to the main island, located on the east coast.
Reuters