Lankan air raid kills 43 school kids
Lankan air raid kills 43 school kids
The schoolgirls were there at the children's home in the Mullaitivu district to take a first aid course.

Colombo: At least 43 schoolgirls were among 58 killed when the Sri Lankan airforce bombed an orphanage in Mullaitivu district on Monday, the pro-rebel TamilNet website reported.

The schoolgirls were there at the children's home in the Mullaitivu district of country's northeast to take a first aid course.

An additional 60 girls were wounded in the morning air raid on the home, which lies deep inside territory controlled by the Tamil Tigers, the Web site reported, citing rebel officials.

Government officials were not immediately available to comment on the report, which could not be independently verified.

Meanwhile the Tamil Tiger rebels ruled out peace talks as battles raged in Sri Lanka's north and east, and a pro-rebel Web site on Monday accused government forces of killing 58 people in separate strikes on a church and a children's home.

A military spokesman, denying the Web site account of the attack on the church, said rebels fired artillery when government commandos sought to flush out insurgents hiding in the building.

With hopes fading for a quick end to the latest round of clashes, soldiers and rebels backed by artillery and mortars clashed in eastern Sri Lanka and the northern Jaffna Peninsula, the heartland of the country's Tamil minority in whose name the insurgents claim to fight.

The reported attack came nearly 24 hours after the fighting around the St. Philip Neri Church in Allaipiddy, a predominantly Tamil village located on an island just west of the Jaffna Peninsula. The island is held by the government.

TamilNet said civilians had taken refuge from weekend fighting in the church, and at least 15 people were killed and another 34 wounded, 20 of them seriously, when it was hit on Sunday by rocket and artillery fire from a government position on the peninsula.

But military spokesman Major Upali Rajapakse denied government forces hit the church, saying instead that guerrillas fired on troops as they tried to enter the building to flush out Tamil rebels hiding among the civilians inside.

''The Tigers are firing artillery at the commandos and the civilians are suffering,'' Rajapakse told The Associated Press.

TamilNet stopped short of saying government forces intentionally targeted the church. But the site alleged that no help was sent to the wounded for hours after the attack.

A 2002 cease-fire was intended to halt more than two decades of bloodshed between the government, dominated by Sri Lanka's 14 million Sinhalese, and the rebels, who have been fighting since 1983 for an independent homeland for the country's 3.2 million Tamils.

The cease-fire remains officially in effect, but months of shootings and bombings already had left it in tatters before the latest round of clashes.

Attempts to restart peace talks and end the fighting have so far failed, with both sides blaming each other for the clashes.

''The Sri Lankan government's offensive attacks make peace talks and the implementation of the cease-fire agreement impossible,'' Seevarathnam Puleedevan, a senior rebel official, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from rebel territory.

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His comments came in response to a statement by the chief of the Sri Lankan government's peace secretariat, Palitha Kohona, who said earlier Sunday that the rebels recently told a Nordic cease-fire monitoring mission that they wanted to renew talks.

The spokesman for the Nordic mission, Thorfinnur Omarsson, confirmed that Puleedevan made a verbal request for renewed talks and said the Tigers would follow up with a formal, written offer.

But Puleedevan denied making any overtures, and told the AP he only talked to the monitors about the ''Sri Lankan government's duplicity after they undermined our goodwill gestures.''

The latest round of fighting began in late July over a rebel-controlled water supply near the eastern port of Trincomalee, and has in recent days spread to other parts of the east and the Jaffna Peninsula, the scene of intense fighting during Sri Lanka's two decade-long civil war.

Government and rebel estimates of the death toll in the fighting since July vary wildly, but scores have been killed, including 17 Sri Lankans working for the Paris-based aid group Action Against Hunger. All but one of the aid workers was Tamil.

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