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Sri Lankan Supreme Court Blocks Plan to Share Control of Tsunami Aid
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With Tamil Rebels
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=E3516E:3919ACA

Decision comes as violence between both sides is already on increase,
threatening fragile truce





A top leader of the Marxist People's Liberation Front Wimal Weerawansa
(l) and lawyer H.L. Silva (r) walk out from the Supreme Court in
ColomboSri Lanka's supreme court has struck down as illegal a
negotiated deal between the government and the Tamil Tiger rebels to
share some of the billions of dollars in aid money for survivors of
December's tsunami. The decision, which is likely to anger the rebels,
comes as violence between the two sides is already on the increase,
threatening a fragile truce.

The Supreme Court ruled Friday that the government couldn't legally
share financial assistance with the Tamil Tigers - because a proposed
aid distribution headquarters is based in rebel territory.

Norwegian mediators - who have been trying to save an unraveling 2002
cease-fire - brokered the proposed aid deal. They said they hoped that
some of the billions of dollars in assistance pouring into Sri Lanka
following December's tsunami would serve to bring the government and
the rebels together amid stalled peace talks.

Jehan Perera, director of the National Peace Council advocacy group in
Colombo, says the Supreme Court ruling does not mean an end to plans
to share the aid.

"The Supreme Court decision, while it creates some difficulties, it is
not something that is an insuperable obstacle," said Jehan Perera. "So
I think it is a problem that the government can overcome."

He says the government and rebels could simply agree to relocate the
aid distribution out of Kilinochchi, the Tamil Tiger stronghold where
it had been proposed.

President Chandrika Kumaratunga took a political gamble last month
when she approved the Norwegian aid deal to give the Tamil Tigers a
role in distributing international funds in areas under their control.

That prompted the Marxist People's Liberation Front to pull out of the
ruling coalition in protest, leaving the president with a minority
government. It then took the matter to the courts.

For now, the aid distribution deal is suspended.

The Supreme Court also ruled that the proposed fund through which
donors would channel international assistance lacks transparency. The
court plans to address four other legal challenges to the aid plan in
September.

The court's decision comes amid scattered but growing violence between
government forces and rebels in Tamil areas in the north and east of
Sri Lanka.

Hundreds of police reinforcements have been dispatched after a recent
series of tit-for-tat killings.

The rebels have also given the government a two-week deadline to
improve security, or they will use their own soldiers to escort senior
officials during trips to government territory.

That would constitute a violation of the 2002 cease-fire.

Mr. Perera says despite the rhetoric, neither side wants a return to
fighting - at least not on land. But he says a confrontation at sea
could be likely between the government and the rebels - who are also
called the LTTE.

"The likely course of action the LTTE is going to take is to use armed
escorts in the sea to transport their cadre from one part of the
country to another part, because the sea has been disputed territory
and it can set the stage up for a confrontation with the Sri Lankan
Navy," he said.

More than 60,000 people were killed in 20 years as the rebels fought
government forces for greater rights for the ethnic Tamil minority.
More than 30,000 died in the tsunami, which pounded the shores of 12
Indian Ocean countries on December 26.