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Monday, 13 March, 2000, 10:46 GMT
More arrests after Sri Lanka attack
Troops in flat
Troops search a flat where four rebels blew themselves up
Sri Lankan police have made more arrests in connection with a botched attempt to ambush a ministerial motorcade last Friday in which at least 23 people died.

Conflict in Sri Lanka
  • An unwinnable war?
  • Timeline of conflict
  • Leading the Tigers
  • The ethnic divide
  • Another 12 people have been taken in for questioning following the arrest of six suspects at the weekend.

    Officials said they were also trying to establish where weapons used in the attack, which took place in the centre of Colombo, had been stored.

    The six who were detained soon after the attack had travelled to the capital from the war-torn north.

    Police took them in after recovering documents from suspected Tamil Tiger suicide bombers involved in the attack.

    Special team

    Investigations are being conducted by a special police team, which is looking into how security was breached on a route that leads to the heavily-guarded parliament building.

    Officials said the guerrillas had apparently intended to ambush a motorcade of government ministers and senior officials - including Deputy Defence Minister Anuruddha Ratwatte - on Friday after they left parliament.

    Crowd inspects attack site
    The attack took place in the centre of Colombo
    But one guerrilla blew himself up after being spotted in a Colombo street before the motorcade set out.

    Twenty-three people, including 14 civilians, died as police and rebels engaged in a gun battle in crowded streets. Some 80 people were injured.

    Peace efforts

    The following day, four of the attackers blew themselves up as commandos raided a block of flats in eastern Colombo, and security forces killed a fifth rebel during the raid.

    President Kumaratunga
    President Kumaratunga: Still willing to talk
    The latest attack came amid efforts to organise peace talks between the government and Tamil Tiger rebels, with Norwegian mediation.

    The guerrillas are fighting for a separate homeland for minority Tamils in Sri Lanka's north and east.

    President Kumaratunga said she was still willing to talk to the Tamil Tigers to find a political solution to the long-running conflict, which has claimed over 55,000 lives in the past two decades.

    The president herself narrowly escaped assassination in a December suicide bomb attack, which killed 26 people.

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    See also:

    10 Mar 00 | South Asia
    Rebel attack in Sri Lanka
    18 Dec 99 | South Asia
    Analysis: Fifteen years of bloodshed
    23 Feb 00 | South Asia
    What chance peace in Sri Lanka?
    21 Feb 00 | South Asia
    Sri Lanka peace meeting hits snag
    28 Feb 00 | South Asia
    Tigers release four captives
    15 Feb 00 | South Asia
    Fighting overshadows peace mission
    01 Jan 00 | South Asia
    Fighting escalates in Sri Lanka
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