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Sri Lanka assassination endangers peace
(AP )
Updated: 2005-08-14 10:29

Hagrup Haukland, chief of a European truce monitoring team, called the killing a "barbaric act."

"Such brutal violence creates fear, distrust and insecurity within society, and therefore represents a serious threat to the cease-fire," Haukland said.

The slain minister, an Oxford-educated lawyer, had led an international campaign against the Tigers, who remain on terrorist lists in five countries, including the United States and Britain.

A Web site sympathetic to the guerrillas said the minister had obstructed the rebels' cause. "In short Kadirgamar was responsible for our stagnated campaign in the international scene," the pro-rebel Nitharsanam Web site said.

Rebel attacks against Sri Lankan political leaders were once common, and Kumaratunga was gravely wounded in a 1999 assassination attempt blamed on Tamil rebels.

Such high-level attacks stopped after the February 2002 cease-fire, but tensions have recently increased between the government and the rebels. There has been a surge of attacks in the volatile eastern region, occasionally spilling into Colombo.

Kadirgamar was appointed foreign minister in April 2004. He also held the position from 1994 to 2001.


On the Web:

Pro-rebel site: http://www.nitharsanam.com


Page: 123



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