COLOMBO – Remnants of Sri Lanka’s defeated Tamil rebels are undergoing military training in India in a bid to revive their separatist campaign at home, the island’s prime minister said Thursday. DM. Jayaratne said an unknown number of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fighters were based at secret camps in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu. “We have intelligence reports of three clandestine training centres operated by the LTTE in Tamil Nadu,” the prime minister said in a statement on Thursday. Jayaratne said the rebels, who were defeated by Sri Lankan government troops in May 2009, were hoping to relaunch their decades-long fight for an independent homeland. “Their next target is to create small-scale attacks,” Jayaratne said. “The entire nation must be ready to face this threat.” The Indian government immediately rejected the claims. “There are no camps of the LTTE in India as far as we are aware. The LTTE is still a banned organisation and wherever we find their cadres we will arrest them,” India’s Home Secretary Gopal Pillai told reporters. “If they have any information, the Sri Lankan government can pass it on to us and we will follow it up.” “We categorically deny existence of any LTTE camps in India,” foreign ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said on Twitter. “We urge Sri Lanka to desist from reacting to speculative and uncorroborated reports.” Sri Lanka has suffered no rebel attacks since the Tigers were wiped out, but Jayaratne told parliament on Wednesday that the country needed to maintain tough emergency laws to deal with their possible resurgence.