Kurd rebels hit Turkish mining firm, violence rises

Turkey, May 30 (Reuters) – Kurdish rebels attacked the offices of a mining company in Turkey’s southeast province of Hatay late on Saturday, killing a security guard and wounding two more, security forces said.

Violence between the Turkish armed forces and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas has escalated in recent weeks as warmer weather reaches mountains in southeast Turkey and northern Iraq where the militants are active.

The attack on the chrome mine near Kisecik village, in which a PKK rebel was killed in a firefight, follows two other clashes over the weekend which left two soldiers and three village guards working for Turkish security forces dead.

Thousands of Turkish soldiers are engaged in large-scale operations in the provinces of Hakkari, Siirt, Tunceli, Diyarbakir and Bingol, security sources said.

Just over a week ago Turkish warplanes bombed some 50 PKK targets in northern Iraq.

Militants said in March they could renew fighting against Turkish forces after the spring thaw because a political settlement seemed more remote since the ban of Turkey’s main Kurdish party and because of Turkey’s military action.

The PKK took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984 with the aim of creating an independent homeland in the mainly Kurdish southeast of the country.

More than 40,000 people, mainly Kurds, have died in the conflict, which decreased in intensity since the capture and jailing of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan in 1999. (Writing by Alexandra Hudson; editing by Myra MacDonald)

Security beefed up in Assam following ULFA threat

Guwahati, Apr 30 (ANI): Police have beefed up preventive security measures in Guwahati following an intelligence alert over a possible strike by the rebel United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA).

“There are intelligence inputs that ULFA may try to do some subversive activities in Guwahati, so our police is taking care of,” said Himanta Biswa Sarma, Health Minister of Assam.

However, he dispelled panic over the warning as he said that the might of the rebel group has waned after the arrest of some top ULFA leaders, including its Chairman, Arabinda Rajkhowa.

“I think now police has developed its network very well and we are confident that ULFA is no longer such a force to be scared of any more,” Sharma added.

The ULFA is one among the two dozens of armed ultra factions operating in the northeastern region, either fighting for independent homeland, or more political autonomy.

They accuse New Delhi of plundering the region”s mineral and forest resources, neglecting local economy and giving them back nothing in return.

State Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi has reiterated that the government is ready to hold dialogue with the ULFA leaders on all issues within the ambit of Indian Constitution.

He is reported to have said that he would not ”wait indefinitely” for the elusive ULFA commander-in-chief, Paresh Baruah, to come forth for the dialogue. (ANI)

Army claims DNA match in ID’ing body believed to be rebel leader’s

Army claims DNA match in ID'ing body believed to be rebel leader'sColombo – DNA tests carried out on the bodies believed to be of Tamil rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and his son have matched, a military spokesman said Thursday.

Army medical experts carried out the tests on the bodies of the two men killed last week in north-eastern Sri Lanka, Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.

They died as the government wrapped up its military offensive against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and announced it had defeated the guerillas after a more than 25-year conflict.

The tests were carried out amid claims of the rebel leader’s death and counterclaims of his continuing existence.

However, the LTTE’s international affairs spokesman, Selvarasa Pathmanathan, confirmed Prabhakaran’s death after his body was found by the army on May 18.

It was not clear whether the army would invite an independent group to carry out further DNA tests.

The bodies believed to be of Prabhkaran and his son Charles Anthony have been cremated, but the government said samples had been retained for testing.

In a related development, Prabhkaran’s parents were located in a refugee camp Thursday in northern Sri Lanka. They had escaped along with civilians during the final days of fighting between the government and LTTE, which had been struggling for an independent homeland for minority Tamils. (dpa)

Brit, Canadian Tamils vow to sustain Ealam struggle

London/Ottawa, May 22 (ANI): Large Tamil communities in Britain and Canada have vowed to continue the struggle for Tamil self-determination rights in Sri Lanka following the death of LTTE chief Vellupillai Prabhakaran.

Holding portraits of Prabhakaran, who was killed by Sri Lankan army soldiers earlier this week, the Tamil diaspora in these two countries are mobilizing to play a part in what leaders describe as a new phase in their struggle for an independent homeland.

According to The Telegraph, following the military defeat of the Tamil Tigers, the talk now is of employing democratic means to address Tamil concerns.

The paper says this goal could be tested, however, by a growing number of young expatriate Tamils who have become radicalized by the oppression of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Like others around the world, British Tamils say their priority is the welfare of tens of thousands of refugees.

British Tamils have always donated generously to Tamil charities, but not without controversy.

Suren Surendiran, a spokesman for the British Tamils Forum, an umbrella organization, says that in the longer term, the events of recent weeks have radicalized the younger generation of Tamils abroad.

“The first phase of the fight for freedom, from 1948 to 1983, was about political negotiations,” he said.

“Then, the armed struggle from 1983 until last week ensured that the oppression and discrimination of Tamil people was highlighted on an international stage, Surendiran said, adding that in the third phase, Tamil diaspora will pursue their goal through political and democratic channels, the ultimate goal being a Tamil homeland in some form.
Young second-generation Tamils have been the driving force behind a largely peaceful occupation of Parliament Square, in front of the House of Commons, although protesters have clashed with police when hundreds of demonstrators attempted to block traffic during peaks in the recent fighting in Sri Lanka.

Across the Atlantic in Canada, home to the world’s largest Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora, community leaders are holding up Quebec as a path for resolving Sri Lanka’s ethnic problem.

“This model of autonomy could work for us,” says Ramani Balendra, an ethnic Tamil from Sri Lanka who is a member of the Tamil Action Committee that has been organizing protests in recent weeks.

Sympathy for the Sri Lankan Tamil struggle has in fact been highest among Quebec’s nationalist intellectuals, according to Narendra Balasubramanian, an associate professor of political science at McGill University who has been studying the conflict.

“The Quebec nationalists feel an affinity with Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism,” he says.

Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon earlier this week said Canada was prepared to assist Sri Lankan efforts to “find political reconciliation and a lasting peace.”

Professor Balasubramanian, however, says Canada’s role will be limited to humanitarian assistance, and perhaps monitoring. (ANI)

US, Britain concerned over Sri Lankan situation

Washington, May 13 (Xinhua) The US and Britain have urged the Sri Lankan government as well as the Tamil Tiger rebels to take urgent steps to avoid civilian casualties in the ongoing conflict.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and British Foreign Secretary David Miliband Tuesday expressed ‘alarm at the large number of reported civilian causalities over the past several days’ in northern Sri Lanka.

The Sri Lankan Army has recently intensified its operations against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), vowing to eliminate terrorism from the country.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa said, ‘victory is near’, although the fighting has drawn international criticism due to the large number of civilian deaths.

In a joint statement here, Clinton and Miliband called on both sides to end hostilities immediately and allow for the safe evacuation of tens of thousands of civilians trapped in the conflict zone.

The LTTE ‘must lay down their arms and allow civilians free passage out of the conflict zone’, the statement said. The Sri Lankan government ‘must abide by its commitment of April 27 to end major combat operations and the use of heavy weapons’, it said.

The government has blamed the LTTE for holding civilians as human shields, while the rebels accused the security forces of indiscriminately firing at Tamil civilians.

The two officials called on the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE to allow a UN humanitarian team to visit the conflict zone to facilitate the safe evacuation of civilians.

The LTTE has been fighting the government troops for decades to establish an independent homeland for the minority Tamils. The US and Britain have declared the LTTE a foreign terrorist organisation. More than 70,000 people have died in the conflict since it started in 1983.

UN humanitarian chief arrives in Sri Lanka

Colombo – UN Humanitarian Affairs chief Sir John Holmes arrived in Sri Lanka to assess the needs of tens of thousands of civilians who fled rebel-held areas or remain trapped in the fighting, officials said Sunday.

Holmes planned to visit refugee camps in Vavuniya, 254 kilometres north of the capital, populated by more than 150,000 civilians who fled the north-eastern conflict zones.

His two-day visit came in the wake of military operations aimed at rescuing civilians trapped in an 8-kilometer narrow coastal area in the Mullaitivu district, 395 kilometres north-east of the capital.

Fighting continued overnight between troops and rebels in the area while the number of civilians leaving the area had dwindled over the past two days.

A medical doctor in the rebel-held area said Saturday that the area was facing an acute food and medicine shortage.

The government estimates that the number of civilians in the area at around 20,000, but other sources said the figure could be around 40,000.

Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe told Holmes the government hoped to discuss UN involvement in the post-conflict phase of rehabilitation of civilians and re-integration of ex-combatants into society, The Sunday Times reported.

“The displaced people will have to be rehabilitated, and ex combatants reintegrated to society. We also need to resettle the displaced people and provide them a livelihood with essential infrastructure facilities. In all these areas we believe the UN can be our partner,” Samarasinghe said.

The military says it is in the final phase of a major military operation to crush the Tamil rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam who have been fighting for an independent homeland for minority Tamils in the north and east of the country for the last 25 years. (dpa)

Seven killed in ambush by militants in Assam

Guwahati, April 20 (IANS) At least seven people, including five paramilitary troopers, were killed in an ambush by tribal separatists in Assam Monday, police said.

Heavily armed militants belonging to the outlawed Dima Haolam Daoga (DHD), popularly known as the Black Widow group, attacked a convoy of trucks carrying cement near Doyangmukh village in North Cachar Hills district, about 340 km from Assam’s main city Guwahati.

‘The militants fired indiscriminately with automatic weapons from a hilltop and took the convoy by surprise. A security vehicle escorting the convoy bore the brunt of the attack in which five security personnel and two civilians were killed,’ a police official told IANS on condition of anonymity.

The official said the militants later decamped with four AK 47 assault rifles and another weapon from the five dead troopers.

‘A hunt has since been launched in the area to nab the militants,’ the official said.

The Black Widow claimed responsibility for the attack with a rebel leader telephoning local journalists in the district.

The DHD is fighting for an independent homeland for the Dimasa tribe in southern Assam.

Five militants gunned down in Assam

Guwahati, April 20 (IANS) Five separatist guerrillas were killed in a gunbattle with army soldiers in Assam early Monday. A large quantity of weapons and explosives were recovered from the militants, a defence spokesperson said.

The gunbattle began Sunday midnight and continued for about three hours near Akabasti village near Tezpur town, about 185 km north of Assam’s main city of Guwahati.

‘A group of about five militants were camping in a house in the village with a specific mission to kidnap a well-known businessman for ransom,’ defence spokesperson R. Kalia told IANS.

Security forces got wind of the plan and laid an ambush.

‘There was a firefight for about three hours in which five militants were killed,’ the official said.

Three of the dead rebels belonged to the outlawed National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB), while the other two were from the Muslim United Liberation Tigers of Asom (MULTA).

‘It was a collective plan by the NDFB and the MULTA to kidnap the businessman,’ Kalia said.

The NDFB is a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland for the Bodo tribe in Assam although the group is now operating a ceasefire with New Delhi, while the MULTA is a rag-tag Islamist separatist group active in certain pockets of Assam since 1996.

‘Five kilograms of explosives, 10 detonators and some other arms and ammunition were recovered from the dead militants,’ the army official said.
Indo Asian News Service

Search operation in Sri Lanka after rebels kill eight civilians

Colombo – The Sri Lankan army, backed by police commandos, mounted a search operation in the south of the country Monday after eight civilians were massacred by suspected Tamil rebels overnight, a military spokesman said. Rebels stormed the village of Mahagodayaya in the Buttala area, 340 kilometres south-east of Colombo, Sunday night and opened fire at the residents, he said.

A one-and-a-half-year-old toddler, an 11-year-old boy and three women were among those killed.

Small groups of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels are known to be operating in the south-eastern part of the country and have been carrying out sporadic attacks on villagers as well as security guards in the area.

However, the military said there are no large camps or substantive numbers of rebels in the area.

The attack came as President Mahinda Rajapaksa ordered troops to halt fighting in the northern part of the country for the Sri Lankan New Year observed Monday and Tuesday by the minority Hindu Tamils and the majority Sinhala Buddhists, allowing civilians to flee the conflict zone.

Rajapaksa has called on the rebels to allow civilians to leave the last rebel-held area of less 20 square kilometers, which has been surrounded by the military.

At least 50,000 civilians have been trapped in the area, with the military claiming that the rebels are preventing them from leaving.

The military says they are about to crush the LTTE, who have been fighting for an independent homeland for minority Tamils in the northern and eastern parts of the country for decades. (dpa)

Troops in northern Sri Lanka asked to limit operations for new year

Colombo – Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Sunday ordered security forces engaged in military operations in the northern part of the country to restrict offensive operations to enable civilians in rebel held areas to mark the traditional new year. The directive came a day before the traditional new year, which is celebrated by the minority Hindu Tamils as well as the majority Sinhala Buddhist community.

It would, however, apply only to those troops that have encircled the last rebel held area of less than 20 square kilometres located in the Mullaitivu district, 395 kilometres north east of the capital Colombo.

Some 50,000 civilians are believed to be trapped in the area under the control of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels.

A statement from the president’s office said Rajapaksa was deeply conscious of the need to give the civilian population the opportunity to celebrate festivities.

Armed Forces to restrict their operations to keep restict operations to those of a defensive nature.

Sri Lanka’s military has said it is in the final phase of crushing the rebels who have been fighting for an independent homeland for minority Tamils in north and eastern parts of the country for the last 26 years.

The military operations to recapture rebel held areas in these areas were launched in August 2006. Security forces have since recaptured vast areas.

More than 65,000 civilians have moved from rebel held to government controlled areas since January.

Tamil rebels claim more than 3,000 civilians have been killed in the attempt by the government to recapture rebel held areas, but the government denies that civilian casualty figures are high. (dpa)

Fears grow for hunger strike pair

Fears are growing for two London protesters who have gone on hunger strike to draw attention to the plight of Tamils living in Sri Lanka. Skip related content
Related photos / videos
Tamils, Sivatharshan Sivakumar and Parameshwwaran Subramaniyan maintain a hunger strike …

The men, who are refusing to take even liquids, have been on hunger strike since Monday.

They are Sivatharsan Sivakumaraval, 21, and Prarameswaran Subramaniam, 28, both students from Mitcham in south London.

They were joined by 400 Tamil protesters who continued their occupation of London’s Parliament Square as the Tamil rally entered its third day. The group want the UK government to take action to help protect the Tamils in their homeland.

The Sri Lankan government has rejected international calls for a ceasefire, claiming it is on the verge of defeating the Tamil Tigers, a rebel group which is fighting for an independent homeland.

Concerns for the two hunger protesters will mount as the length of their enforced starvation continues. Dr Jayendran Namasivayam, a radiologist at Whipps Cross Hospital in Leytonstone, east London, has been helping to look after the men.

They have signed statements proclaiming they are on “hunger strike until the last breath with full heart” and will not stop until their demands are met.

The demands include a ceasefire and that food and medical aid be allowed to reach civilians.

On Thursday night Mr Sivakumaraval woke briefly. Asked how long he was willing to continue his hunger strike, he said: “Until we get our requests.” Pressed on whether he was willing to die for his cause, he said: “Yes, for sure.”

The 21-year-old has reportedly been on hunger strike since Monday evening while his fellow hunger striker has had no food or water since Monday at 6am.

Third Day Of Tamil Protests In Westminster

Third Day Of Tamil Protests In Westminster Protesters are occupying London’s Parliament Square for the third day in protest at the Sri Lanka government.Police arrested seven people on Tuesday in a protest against the Sri Lanka government’s offensive on Tamil Tiger rebels and alleged human rights abuses.

Two men jumped into the River Thames as police tried to persuade the crowd to disperse.

Up to 5,000 people – including women and babies – forced the closure of nearby Westminster Bridge on Monday night by staging a sit-in.

The Sri Lankan government has rejected international calls for a ceasefire.

Replay: Protests in Parliament Square
[flv]http://static1.sky.com/feeds/skynews/latest/flash/protests_070409_gvs.flv[/flv]
t claims it is on the verge of defeating the Tamil Tigers, a rebel group which is fighting for an independent homeland.

The protesters say the lives of thousands of civilians are in danger and want the UK government to take action.Vijay Mahalingam, 28, of Harrow, said: “We are here to call on the British Government and other governments of the world to wake up to the problems in our homeland, Sri Lanka.

“Last week, the most powerful men in the world were here in London but there was no mention of the struggle lots of our people have to face on a daily basis.”

The United Nations says up to 150,000 people are trapped in the war zone in the north of Sri Lanka.
Leicester East MP Keith Vaz is expected to deliver a letter to Downing Street calling for the UN Security Council to debate the issue.

Foreign Secretary David Miliband has insisted the Government is “very concerned” about civilians caught up in fighting in Sri Lanka.

“As I said in the House of Commons last week, it is vital that civilians are able to move away from danger to safety,” he said.

He said both sides must fulfil their obligations under international law.

Tamil protesters continue to block London’s Parliament Square over Lanka offensive

London, Apr.8 (ANI): Protests by Tamils based in Britain are continuing for the third day in and around London’s Parliament Square.

Police arrested seven people on Tuesday as a crowd protested against the Sri Lankan government’s offensive against Tamil Tiger rebels and alleged human rights abuses.

Up to 5,000 people – including women and babies – forced the closure of nearby Westminster Bridge by staging a sit-in on Monday night, reports the Daily Express.

The bridge was reopened to traffic at around 9 a.m. on Tuesday.

The Sri Lankan government has rejected international calls for a ceasefire, claiming it is on the verge of defeating the Tamil Tigers, a rebel group which is fighting for an independent homeland.

The protesters say the lives of thousands of civilians are in danger and want the UK government to take action.

Leicester East MP Keith Vaz is expected to deliver a letter to Downing Street calling for the situation in Sri Lanka to be debated by the UN Security Council. (ANI)

Four blasts in Assam kill 8 before PM visit

Four bomb blasts killed eight people in Assam on Monday, a day before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was due to visit the region, police said.

Police said the state’s main separatist group, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), was behind the attacks.

Singh’s visit to the state would go ahead as scheduled amid tight security, a spokesman for the ruling Congress party said.

The first bomb exploded in a crowded parking area in front of a restaurant in Guwahati, killing seven on the 30th anniversary of the founding of ULFA, police said.

“Seven people have died in the blast,” P.C. Saloi, a senior police officer in the city, told Reuters by phone.

At least 32 people were injured and several of them are in a critical condition. The death toll is likely to rise further, officials said. Several vehicles and buildings caught fire after the blast.

A second bomb went off two hours later opposite a hospital in the town of Dhekiajuli, 150 km north of Guwahati. Police said the device was planted on a bicycle. Six people were injured, three of them critically.

The third blast occurred at Jengpha, in Assam’s Karbi Anglong district, but no one was injured.

Rebels also threw grenades at a police station at Mankachar town in Dhubri district, near the border with neighbouring Bangladesh, killing one and wounding five people.

Accusing the police of not providing adequate security, hundreds of angry protesters blocked Guwahati’s main street, shouting slogans and clashing with the police.

Political parties have started campaigning in the state ahead of an April-May general election.

Last week a bomb blast killed one person in Guwahati, close to where Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee had been due to address an election rally. The rally was subsequently cancelled.

The ULFA is among more than two dozen armed groups in India’s northeast which are either fighting for an independent homeland or more political autonomy.

They accuse New Delhi of plundering the region’s mineral and forest resources, neglecting the local economy and giving them back nothing in return.

Bomb blasts kill 7 in Assam ahead of PM visit

Two bomb blasts killed seven people in Assam on Monday, only a day before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was due to visit the region, police said.

Police suspect the state’s main separatist group, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), was behind the attacks.

The first bomb exploded in a crowded parking area in front of a restaurant in Guwahati, on the 30th anniversary of the founding of ULFA, police said.

“Seven people have died in the blast,” P.C. Saloi, a senior police officer in the city, told Reuters by phone. At least 32 people were injured and several of them are in a critical condition.

The death toll is likely to rise. Several vehicles and buildings caught fire after the blast.

A second bomb went off two hours later opposite a hospital in the town of Dhekiajuli, 150 km north of Guwahati. Police said the device was planted on a bicycle. Six people were injured, three of them critically.

Accusing police of not providing adequate security, hundreds of angry protesters blocked Guwahati’s main street, shouting slogans against police.

Political parties have started campaigning in the state ahead of an April-May general election. Manmohan Singh of the ruling Congress party was set to campaign in Assam on Tuesday.

Last week a bomb blast killed one person in Guwahati, close to where Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee had been due to address an election rally. The rally was subsequently cancelled.

The ULFA is among more than two dozen armed groups in India’s northeast which are either fighting for an independent homeland or more political autonomy.

They accuse New Delhi of plundering the region’s mineral and forest resources, neglecting the local economy and giving them back nothing in return.

Bomb blast kills 4 in Assam ahead of PM visit

A powerful bomb blast in a crowded parking area killed four people in Assam on Monday, only a day before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was due to visit the region, police said.

Police suspect the state’s main separatist group, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), was behind the blast.

The blast took place in Assam’s main city, Guwahati, on the 30th anniversary of the founding of ULFA.

“Four people were killed in the blast and dozens wounded. Of them three are in critical condition,” a senior police officer, who did not want to give his name, told Reuters.

“The bomb was placed in a parking area on the roadside in front of a restaurant, but we are not sure whether it’s a car bomb or it was placed on the footpath.”

Police say the death toll is likely to rise.

Accusing police of not providing adequate security, hundreds of angry protesters blocked the city’s main street, shouting slogans against police.

Several vehicles caught fire after the blast.

Political parties have started campaigning in the state ahead of an April-May general election. Manmohan Singh of the ruling Congress party was set to campaign in Assam on Tuesday.

Last week a bomb blast killed one person in Guwahati, close to where Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee had been due to address an election rally. The rally was subsequently cancelled.

The ULFA is among more than two dozen armed groups in India’s northeast which are either fighting for an independent homeland or more political autonomy.

They accuse New Delhi of plundering the region’s mineral and forest resources, neglecting the local economy and giving them back nothing in return.

Sri Lankan troops move to rescue trapped civilians in north

Colombo – Government troops are moving to rescue civilians trapped in what has been described as a “no fire zone” in northern Sri Lanka, after capturing some of the last rebel strongholds in the area, military officials said Monday.

The military said that the next move was to rescue civilians who remain in an area of 17 square kilometers in a coastal area of Mullaitivu district, 395 kilometres north-east of the capital.

The Defence Ministry in its official website said that security forces “have launched a decisive tactical maneuver to free over hundreds of civilians held hostage by the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.”

According to government estimates, some 50,000 civilians are trapped in the area, which has limited drinking water facilities.

The Defence Ministry said rebels on Sunday lost their longstanding military presence in the Pudukudirrippu area, west of the “no fire zone.”

The military claimed the rebels lost as many as 420 fighting cadres, including more than a dozen “high rankers” during four days of pitched fighting.

Meanwhile, Minister of Human Rights and Disaster Management Mahinda Samarasinghe said he was expecting a large number of displaced persons to turn up in government controlled areas.

A total of 2,127 civilians, including 919 children, on Sunday left the rebel-controlled areas and entered the government-controlled areas, the Defence Ministry said.

Government forces have been fighting to recapture rebel-held areas in the northern and eastern parts of Sri Lanka since August 2006. Military officials say they are now in the final phase of a long battle to defeat the rebels.

The whereabouts of the rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran has not been determined so far, but officials say they believe he still remains in the area.

The Tamil rebels have been fighting for an independent homeland for minority Tamils in the northern and eastern parts of the country for the past 26 years.

Four killed in blast in India’s Assam state

New Delhi – At least four people were killed by a car-bomb in India’s north-eastern state of Assam Monday, news reports said.

More than 20 people were wounded in the explosion that occurred in the crowded market area in the Maligaon suburb of state capital Guwahati, the NDTV network reported.

Several cars and shops caught fire following the bombing and fire tenders were rushed to the area to douse the blaze, the report said.

Authorities said they suspected Assam’s biggest separatist outfit, United Liberation Front of Asom.

The ULFA which has been fighting for an independent homeland since 1979, marks its 30th Raising Day on Tuesday.

India’s north-east, which shares borders with China, Myanmar and Bangladesh, is a volatile region where nearly 40 separatist, tribal or leftist groups are active in five states.

More than 15,000 people have lost their lives to insurgency in the region in the past decade.

Suspected rebels in Manipur kidnap three officials, bodies recovered

Senapati (Manipur), Feb 18 (ANI): The bodies of three state officials who were allegedly kidnapped by suspected rebels were recovered in Manipur.

The victims were found blind folded with their hands tied and faces severely injured. The incident took place in Senapati district.

Relatives of the victims blamed the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isaac-Muivah — NSCN (IM) — cadres for the killings.

“The family members of the sub-divisional officer went to Ukhrul and they informed us that they are safe and sound in the custody of NSCN-IM who have abducted them. We were told there was nothing to worry about as they were safe, so we got relaxed,” said Ronibala Devi, widow of A. Rajen Sharma, one of the three killed.

NSCN (IM) officials were not available for comment.

The police have recovered a bloodstained spade and a stone from the spot. The three other officials who accompanied them are still missing.

The officials had left Imphal for Awang Kasom of Ukhrul district to have a meeting with the Deputy Commissioner of Ukhrul.

The three officials included Kishan Singh, A. Rajen Sharma and Y. Token Singh Mandol. All the three officials were posted at Awang Kasom State Development Office (SDO)

The NSCN has been fighting for an independent homeland for the country’s three million Naga people, spread across the remote northeast, for more than four decades. (ANI)