Sri Lanka Army “Attacks” Church, 5 Killed
(BosNewsLife) 6/18/2006– Sri Lankan forces on Sunday, June 18, stormed and than indiscriminately shot inside a Catholic church in a northwestern fishing village, where hundreds of Tamils were taking shelter, survivors and witnesses told reporters.
The attack in Pesalai reportedly came after men, women and children ran from their homes and morning meals to Our Lady of Victory Roman Catholic Church, as Sri Lankan troops planned to invade the village.
Churches are often used as refuges in this part of Sri Lanka , where clashes are frequent between government forces and Tamil Tiger rebels seeking to create an independent homeland for ethnic Tamils, The Associated Press (AP) reported.
The government denied killing civilians, and blamed the Tigers for the attack. But AP quoted witnesses and an international aid worker as saying Sri Lankan forces were responsible for the deaths.
PEOPLE FLEE
“All the people now are only in a mood to flee at the sight of uniforms,” said a fisherman who identified himself as Raja, the only person in the village willing to give his name.
“Although there has been big fighting in the past nothing of this kind has happened in this church,” Raja added. The reported attack came as the island nation appeared to stumble closer toward all-out war after the worst violence since an often-violated cease-fire signed in 2002 by the government and the Tamil Tigers, a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland.
The rebels, formally called the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, have been fighting for more than two decades to create a homeland for the countrys 3.2 million predominantly Hindu Tamils, a minority that some say has faced decades of discrimination by the largely Buddhist Sinhalese majority.
MANY KILLED
The civil war killed more than 65,000 people before the cease-fire, and as talks to build on the truce have faltered, sporadic shootings and bombings in and around Tiger strongholds have escalated into near-daily violence.
Sri Lanka s military unleashed retaliatory strikes on rebel positions for a bus bombing last week that killed 64 people, including children, last week. The government blamed the Tigers for the bombing, but rebels denied involvement.
Christians are increasingly in the crossfire in Sri Lanka , where there have been also attacks against churches by militant Buddhist, objecting to the spread of Christianity in the country, BosNewsLife established.