Tigers support peace drive, doubts over European monitors

June 20, 2006 (AFP) - Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels Tuesday reaffirmed their commitment to a truce despite surging violence, but said the future of ceasefire monitors from Denmark, Finland and Sweden is still in the balance.
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The rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) said they would discuss the issue of ceasefire observers from European Union member states at a meeting Wednesday with peace broker Norway.
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The EU outlawed the Tigers last month in a move that cut off funding and was apparently aimed in part at forcing the rebels back the negotiating table they left in April 2003.

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"This is a matter that will be discussed tomorrow with the (Norwegian) facilitator," LTTE's peace secretariat chief S.

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Puleedevan told AFP when contacted via satellite phone at the rebels' political headquarters of Kilinochchi.
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"We don't want to say anything right now."

The LTTE in talks with Norwegian envoys earlier this month said they did not want nationals from Finland, Sweden and Denmark in the 60-member Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM).

Norway and Iceland, two non-European Union member states, also provide monitors to the SLMM to observe a shaky ceasefire that has been in place since February 2002 but is under pressure

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