2006年VOA标准英语-Sri Lanka Battle Rages Despite Cease-Fire(在线收听) |
By Patricia Nunan
--------- The Tamil Tigers say they overran four military outposts in the eastern district of Trincomalee in heavy fighting. Sri Lankan military officials confirm exchanges of artillery and mortar fire around those bases, but they say the rebels have made no territorial gains. Analysts say the fighting threatens to destroy what little remains of a tattered cease-fire signed by the government and the rebels in 2002. Palitha Kohona, the secretary-general of the government's Peace Secretariat, disagrees. "I would not say that this is war," he said. "The situation is tense. But we all hope that the two sides will return to the negotiating table and comply with the cease-fire agreement." The government began launching air strikes on the eastern region last week, when officials say local rebel commanders refused to reopen a waterway that provides irrigation for government-held land. Kohona says the government had to act for humanitarian reasons. "The current tensions arose when the eastern [rebel] leaders took steps to cut off the water supply to 30,000 acres of paddy land," he said. "These 30,000 acres also support a community of 50,000 people. As you very well know, without water, rice paddies die." At least 850 people have died this year in sporadic clashes, as a cease-fire meant to bring an end to two decades of fighting has steadily unraveled. The rebels are fighting for a separate homeland for the minority Tamils, who, they say, are oppressed by the Sinhalese majority. A senior envoy from Norway, which mediated the cease-fire agreement, is expected in Sri Lanka later this week to try to reopen the peace talks. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/8/33809.html |