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Aircraft wreckage salvaged

Investigators salvaged parts of two light aircraft commandeered by Tamil rebels and shot down by the Sri Lankan Air Force, military officials in Colombo said.

Updated on: Feb 22, 2009, 01:14:29 IST
DPA | By , Colombo
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Investigators on Saturday salvaged parts of two light aircraft commandeered by Tamil rebels and shot down by the Sri Lankan Air Force, military officials here said.

HT Image
HT Image

Two people died and at least 53 were wounded in an air attack by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels on Colombo late on Friday. Military officials and hospital authorities said the planes dropped bombs close to the Air Force headquarters in the heart of the Lankan capital.

The wreckage of one plane shot down near an air base in Katunayaka, 30 km north of Colombo, and the second that crashed into a government building, were found, an air force spokesman said.

The two aircraft, which had taken off from a LTTE-held area in northern Sri Lanka, flew to the northwestern side of the country and travelled along the western coast to reach the capital, the spokesman said.

Two bombs were dropped on a building close to the air force headquarters. The military confirmed the target appeared to be the headquarters, which was less than 150 mt from the bombed building.

The attacks came as the government said that Tamil rebels had been cornered into a 100 sq km area in the northeast.
In March 2007, the rebels attacked Sri Lankan Army positions and an air base close to the international airport in Colombo, killing three soldiers and wounding 17.

A month later, the LTTE carried out air attacks on an army base in the north and two oil depots in the capital.
During recent operations, however, the military captured at least five air strips used by rebels in the north.

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