Sri Lanka confirms Tamil Tiger leader is dead

COLOMBO, (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s military said on  Tuesday Tamil Tiger rebel leader Vellupillai Prabhakaran’s body  had been found, and President Mahinda Rajapaksa urged Tamils to  join in rebuilding a nation split by a 25-year separatist war. 
 
Footage broadcast on Sri Lankan TV showed what appeared to  be the corpse of the man who plunged the Indian Ocean island  nation into one of the world’s most intractable wars, his eyes  open, face bloated and the top of his head blown off.
  
The military declared total victory over the Liberation  Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) after a climactic gunbattle on  Monday, putting Sri Lanka completely back under government rule  for the first time since the war erupted in 1983.  
State TV showed victorious soldiers — some clearly too  young to have been born when the war started in 1983 — firing  their AK-47s in the air as an officer motioned for them to  cease fire.
  
With a war long viewed as unwinnable now over, Rajapaksa  gave a speech in parliament promising major development in the  formerly Tiger-controlled areas in northern Sri Lanka and  pledging to protect the rights of Tamils. 
 
“It is necessary that the political solutions they need  should be brought to them,” he said. “However, it cannot be an  imported solution .. it is necessary that we find a solution  that is our very own, of our own nation.”
  
He pledged rapid resettlement of the more than 250,000  Tamils now in internment camps and urged international  investors to come to Sri Lanka and invest in its rebuilding.  

“This is our country, this is our motherland. We should  live in this country as children of one mother. No differences  of race, caste and religion should prevail here,” Rajapaksa,  who is Sinhalese, said in Tamil.
  
Tamils complain of marginalisation by successive  governments led by the Sinhalese ethnic majority, which came to  power at independence in 1948 and took the favoured position  the minority Tamils had enjoyed under the British colonial  government.  

The LTTE sprang up in the 1970s to fight for a separate  nation for Tamils. After destroying rival groups, it later grew  into one of the world’s best-armed irregular forces with a  place on more than 30 nations’ lists of terrorist groups.  

Army commander General Sarath Fonseka for the first time  gave official confirmation of Prabhakaran’s death shortly after  a pro-rebel website said he was “alive and safe”.