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Tigers
Triumphant
The assault has put Kumaratunga, too, in a dangerous spot. Last week, in the dead of night, her government announced new wartime measures and civic restrictions. When Sri Lankans awakened the next morning, they found that it was illegal to criticize the government or hold rallies, that censorship of the local press had been extended to foreign correspondents and that all "nonessential" development spending was to be immediately redirected to the military. Kumaratunga begged for weapons and ammunition from abroad, and arms dealers from China, Israel, Iran, Russia and Ukraine flew into Colombo, the country's capital, to strike deals. At mid-week, Sri Lanka also begged neighbor India to provide military aid, including ships to evacuate troops from Jaffna and fighter planes to provide air cover. The last time India got involved in the Sri Lankan war the results proved catastrophic for both sides. Between 1987 and 1990, 70,000 Indian soldiers controlled a third of the country in an unsuccessful attempt to force a solution to the war. India lost 1,000 troops in the peacekeeping operation, and a Marxist terrorist group, exploiting public opposition to the foreign presence, nearly overthrew the Sri Lankan government. The Indian troops were ordered out when a new President was elected. A year later, India's former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by a Tiger suicide bomber for his role in dispatching the force. Not surprisingly, India this time has flatly refused to help evacuate the Sri Lankan soldiers. Domestic political considerations make it almost impossible for Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee to provide any other military aid. He governs in a coalition, and some of his partners are Tamil parties from southern India that sympathize with their ethnic brethren and not with Sri Lanka's majority Sinhalese population. But New Delhi is also worried that both Pakistan and China have responded more warmly to Sri Lankan overtures, which could increase their influence in the Indian Ocean region. Kumaratunga lost the use of her right eye in a bomb blast almost certainly masterminded by the LTTE last December, a few days before she was reelected to a second term as President. Now she may lose Jaffna and much else besides. The army seems inept and almost certainly unable to win the war. The LTTE, having overrun so many military bases, is now considered better armed than the government. Thanks to Kumaratunga's press censorship, the majority of Sri Lankans didn't even know of the three-week battle at Elephant Pass until the rout was complete. Now they're scared. "I am wondering whether we can ever get over this," says a security guard working in Colombo. Tiger supremo Velupillai Prabhakaran told his faithful last November that 2000 would be the "year of war." He has kept his promise. Reported by Waruna Karunatilake/Colombo and Meenakshi Ganguly/New Delhi Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com TIME Asia home Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN
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