Sri Lankan troops will stay in the
Tamil-dominated former war zone of North and look after the minority community, a senior army officer has said, virtually rejecting Northern Province Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran's demand of withdrawal of military.
"We are here to look after you, we will attend to all your
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He said that his job as the security forces commander in
the north is to prevent a recurrence of conflict by looking after the Tamil community, he told reporters in Jaffna yesterday.
Senanayake said that there will never ever be a separatist
war in Sri Lanka's north.
His comments came as Wigneswaran last week demanded the
withdrawal of the military from the north.
"Even after seven years of ending the war, the military is
remaining here. We want the police to do the job and not the military," Wigneswaran said.
The government stationed a large number of troops in the
north and east since the LTTE began their separatist campaign for a separate Tamil state in the mid 1980s.
Despite international calls for down-sizing the military
presence, the government has been reluctant for large scale withdrawal of troops citing national security concerns.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) battled Sri
Lankan forces for a separate Tamil homeland. A brutal military crackdown ended the 37-year conflict in 2009. Rights groups claim government forces killed nearly 40,000 civilians in the final months of the brutal ethnic conflict.