The fighting escalated at 5.30 am, as the LTTE was still holding ground at the A 32 Road towards Pooneryn. An eight man team of the Delta Company of the 11th Sri Lanka Light Infantry at the Task Force 1, led by Captain Lalantha Kollurage was taking their maximum effort to capture the LTTE bunkers at Paddaruyal Villu between the 10th and 11th mile posts which is three and half km East of the Ponneryn - Mannar main road. After hours long heavy fighting using RPG attacks, the team managed to gain control of the location in the wee hours of November 1, killing 17 LTTE cadres.
While recovering dead bodies of the LTTE, soldiers found a female cadre left with serious injuries and heavily bleeding. The field medics gave her fist aid. After regaining consciousness she pleaded the soldiers to give her some water. Later she asked something to eat saying they were left without food for days. Honouring the moral values, the soldiers did not let her die and they treated her as one of their colleagues and was given saline. She was then brought to the nearest medical dressing station where she was treated.
This girl who was found lying unconsciously among the other dead bodies was in a trench. She was a cadre at the 'Yal-Selvam Paddai' and later attached to the 'Malathi' regiment. She was a resident at Mulankavil before being abducted by the LTTE. Trained in Jaffna, the 18 year old girl was brought down to Paddaruyal Villu from Muhamalai forcibly. She was blindfolded along-with few other female cadres and just dropped at the battle fronts and forced to fight with the advancing security forces.
The girl with her norm de guerilla 'Priya' was abducted by the LTTE few months ago and was given a crash training on weapon handling and basic battle training. Knowing nothing about the strength or the fighting capacity of the Security Forces, the teenage girls and boys were shown heroic pictures of the LTTE cadres and further misled by saying that the LTTE would confront any battle against the Security Forces. The young cadres were given an assurance that the LTTE would win the battle and they are on a winning path. The LTTE, in the verge of extinction is still continuing forcible child recruitment unabated also sowing seeds of hatred and separatism within the Wanni Tamil community who are denied all possible communication links to know the truth about the battle. The LTTE still maintains the human shield, according to information, and is using cruel punishments against those who try to flee the non-liberated areas. The outfit does not spare even 10 year olds and the sources said the LTTE terrorists are now abducting even small children for military fatigue while the other cadres are being sent to battle fronts.
According to the sources, the LTTE is using the tactic of deploying new recruits along the frontlines who were brought blindfolded with less acquaintance of the terrain and left with no other option except to fight for their survival against the advancing security forces. This tactic of the senior LTTE cadres using 'sacrifice of junior numbers' as an instrument to sustain their own demise, has brought much controversy triggering frustration and disgust among its grass-root ranks.
Priya had grenades and she did not bite the cyanide as she wanted to live. Priya's story will be the best example to show the difference between a professional army and a terrorist organisation.
During the Thoppigala operation, Sergeant K.G. Priyantha Pathirana was found with serious injuries and was taken by the LTTE as a POW. The LTTE terrorists, including female cadres, treated him in an inhumane way before his neck was cut while he was struggling for life. Later his head was displayed at the Illupadichenai junction. But, the fate of Priya turned a new leaf in her life and she will live to tell the difference.
The mission to rescue another 'human' at the battle front was a success due to immediate actions by the TF-1 troops and division Commander Brigadier Shavendra Silva. The teenager was given a new lease of life. It will be a show piece to tell the world that Sri Lanka is carrying a humanitarian operation and not a battle against those misled by the LTTE. Not only Priya but many LTTE carders who crossed to liberated areas with serious injuries, were given medical treatment alike the soldiers wounded in the battle fronts.
The highly disciplined soldiers carried Priya, more than a kilo meter from the point that they were fighting, simply to save a life of another human being. They did not disregard the international humanitarian laws and even the soldiers at the front lines are well aware about those values - not to kill even an enemy who is fighting for life.
Already, suffering from internal hemorrhage, Priya was carried by a stretcher to the nearest Medical Dressing Station (MDS) where she was given immediate treatment.
Then she was transported in an ambulance for over eight km to the main MDS where the military doctors of the TF-1 gave her treatment for the abdominal injuries.
Giving top priority, the teenage female cadre was airlifted to the Anuradhapura General Hospital for further treatment as she was badly injured. She was later transferred to the National Hospital - Colombo, for further treatments. Priya now awaits a new begin of freedom and life with the same 'foe' she was earlier forced to fight with. Destiny has pronounced well as Priya was saved and given a new hope of life by the same people whom she was taught (by LTTE) 'cruel' and 'aggressive' to her community.
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