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Published 28 Nov, 2004 12:00am

LTTE threatens to resume attacks

COLOMBO, Nov 27: Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger guerillas on Saturday declared they will renew armed struggle unless the Colombo government immediately agrees to revive peace talks based on a rebel blueprint for self-rule.

Tiger supremo Velupillai Prabhakaran, in a speech broadcast over rebel radio, said he had "reached the limits of patience" and wanted Colombo to end the 19-month deadlock in Norwegian-backed peace talks.

"If the Government of Sri Lanka rejects our urgent appeal and adopts delaying tactics, perpetuating the suffering of our people, we have no alternative other than to advance the freedom struggle of our nation," he said.

In his speech, widely regarded as the annual policy statement of the rebels who have been observing an Oslo-brokered truce since February 2002, Prabhakaran urged the majority Sinhalese population to take a collective stand on peace talks.

"We are living in a political void, without war, without a stable peace, without the conditions of normalcy, without an interim or permanent solution to the ethnic conflict," he said.

"Our liberation struggle will be seriously undermined if this political vacuum continues indefinitely," he said while asking President Chandrika Kumaratunga's coalition partners to declare their public stand on talks.

Kumaratunga's junior coalition partner, the Marxist JVP, or People's Liberation Front, has been against any concessions to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and opposes resumption of peace talks based on the rebels' plan for self rule.

The president herself has rejected the LTTE's Interim Self Governing Authority proposal unveiled over a year ago as a stepping stone for a separate state.

In a hard-hitting speech, Prabhakaran said observing a truce for nearly three years and holding peace talks at foreign venues had brought little benefits for the island's Tamil minority.

"You are fully aware that during this period of ceasefire we have been making every endeavour, with sincerity and commitment, to seek a negotiated settlement to the Tamil national question through peaceful means.

"In various capitals of foreign nations, with Norway as facilitators, we engaged in peace talks with the government. The six sessions of negotiations, held over the duration of six months, turned out to be futile and meaningless."

However, the president in a recent television interview told the Tigers they had until the end of November to make up their minds about returning to talks to politically end a conflict which has claimed over 60,000 lives since 1972.-AFP

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