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: Sri
Lanka
Police raid exposes a secret Sri Lankan army assassination
squad
By W.A. Sunil
24 January 2002
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A police raid on an army safe house in Colombo
on January 2 has provided a revealing glimpse into the dirty operations
of the Sri Lankan military. The luxury home situated in the Millennium
City housing complex on the outskirts of the capital was the base
for a secret army hit squad ostensibly to carry out attacks behind
the lines on the leadership of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE).
Police acting on a tip off arrested an army captain, four soldiers
and a former LTTE member and seized a large cache of sophisticated
weapons. These included 10 anti-personnel mines, 20 land mines,
four light anti-tank weapons, automatic rifles and ammunition,
LTTE uniforms, explosives and related material, and thermobaric
weapons.
The unit, which was officially part of the armys Long
Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP), operated under the auspices
of the Directorate of Military Intelligence. Details of its function,
whereabouts and operations were known only to a handful of top-level
army officers. The revelation of its existence has provoked outrage
from the military and its apologists who have accused the police
of compromising a top state secret.
Although the military police were involved in the raid on the
safe house, the military hierarchy, including the army commander
Lionel Balagalla, were apparently not informed. Balagalla immediately
contacted the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to prevent those
arrested from being interrogated and to obtain their release.
However, the armys attempt at damage control was blocked
by Internal Security Minister John Amarathunge. The soldiers were
held at a police station under the countrys Prevention of
Terrorism Act (PTA) which provides broad powers of detention without
trial. They were only finally released on January 13, after Balagalla
issued a public statement declaring that the unit had not been
engaged in political assassinations but were used in covert operations
as part of the long-running war against the separatist LTTE.
Balagallas statement was aimed at quelling widespread
media speculation that the military squad had been connected to
President Chandrika Kumaratunga and her Peoples Alliance (PA)
which was defeated in national elections in December. It was even
suggested that the unit was set up by army officers sympathetic
to the PA to assassinate the newly elected Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe.
The very fact that the army chief was compelled to officially
deny that his troops are involved in political violence in Colombo
speaks volumes. The recent election was one of the most violent
on record with 2,247 incidents officially reported, including
46 deaths. Both the PA and the United National Party (UNP) routinely
use gangs of thugs to intimidate and terrorise their opponents
and also have close connections to the military and police top
brass. In the course of the campaign, UNP leader Wickremesinghe
claimed to have information about plans by a group of soldiers
to murder him using thermobaric weapons.
The UNP government appears to have accepted Balagallas
explanation. Indeed the newly appointed Defence Minister Tilak
Marapana ordered the release of all members of the unit, except
the ex-LTTE fighter, and expressed his anger over the police raid.
A media campaign is underway to defend the unit and criticise
the police for exposing its operations.
Defence analyst Iqbal Athas, for instance, who has close connections
to the military hierarchy, has written several lengthy comments
in the English language Sunday Times criticising the police
involved in the raid. In the latest article entitled The
great betrayal, he berated the blind fanatics of the
[police] department for the humiliating ordeal
suffered by the national heroes and called for a public
apology to the army and the soldiers.
It should be pointed out that the treatment of these soldiers
during their short stay in police custody was comparatively mild
compared to the abuse and torture routinely meted out to hundreds
of Tamils who are held without trial as LTTE suspects
for months and years under the countrys draconian anti-terrorist
legislation. All of this is defended as absolutely essential to
national security by Athas and others of his ilk.
Unanswered questions
Despite the attempts to sweep the matter under the carpet,
a number of serious questions about this covert unit remain unanswered.
No one in the political establishmenteither the government
or oppositionhas questioned the legitimacy of the military
maintaining a secret assassination squad. Athas reveals, with
pride, that one of the squads most prized accomplishments
was the murder of LTTE military intelligence leader Thambirasa
Kuhasanathan. Sri Lankan politicians regularly brand the LTTE
as terrorists yet the army retains the services of
a group of professional assassins.
The LTTEs Tamil Net website provided an extensive
report on January 8 that confirmed that the armys LRRP units
had killed Thambirasa Kulashanthan, as well as Colonel Shanker,
a close confident of LTTE leader Prabhakaran. It accused the army
of two abortive attempts on the life of Thamil Chelvam, the leader
of its political wing.
The LTTE also alleged that the LRRP units were involved in
a series of attacks on civilians living in LTTE-controlled areas:
the kidnapping of two civilians last April 2, the seizure of six
farmers including three women on April 25, the gunning down of
two people in May at Batticaloa North, and the disappearance of
another three near Mathurankerny.
The army claims that its hit squads only operate behind enemy
lines but the manner in which those arrested operated raises doubts.
Why were they living in a safe house with a huge cache
of weapons rather than in military barracks? Why were their activities
known only to a handful of top officers in the Directorate of
Military intelligence?
While no official explanation has been forthcoming, the armys
apologist Athas offers a series of excuses that raise more questions
than they answer. He writes: A plethora of them [safe houses]
existed under the police and security forces when they combated
the violence of the then outlawed Janatha Vikukthi Permuna (JVP)
in the late 1980s. Suspected were arrested and grilled at these
safe houses not to mention the complaints it drew from human rights
groups of torture. In the later years, major state intelligence
agencies had their safe houses to detain and question Tiger guerrilla
suspects.
In other words, the use of safe houses by the military
special squads is a longstanding practice, not only in the war
against the LTTE but also against political opposition in the
south. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the security forces
targetted the chauvinist JVP as part of a far broader operation
to intimidate and terrorise layers of discontented rural youth
in the south. An estimated 60,000 rural youth were brutally killed
or simply disappeared during the period.
Significantly, the JVP, has since made peace with the political
establishment in Colombo. The party, which falsely claims to be
Marxist, is among the most extreme advocates of the war against
the LTTE and denying basic democratic rights to the Tamil minority.
In response to the revelations about the safe house, the JVP has
been one of the loudest in the defence of the army and its use
of military assassination squads that a decade ago were used against
JVP supporters and rural youth.
Covert military and paramilitary units such as the Black Cats
and Green Tigers were engaged in wholesale torture and murders.
The infamous Batalanda torture camp was one such safe house where
high-level interrogations took place. The same compound housed
leading members of the then UNP government, including the current
prime minister Wickremesinghe.
Wickremesinghe may not have been a target of the arrested LRRP
unit but one feature of the case points to a possible connection
to other election-related violence. It is not entirely clear how
the police came to know of the safe house. Athas points
out that the unit had only taken up residence in mid-December
and its existence was only known to select officers in the Directorate
of Military Intelligence. He claims that the information was leaked
by dissident members of the directorate but fails to answer the
obvious questionwhy? At the very least, such divisions point
to bitter feuding, possibly political, in the ranks of military.
The police superintendent in charge of the raid, Kulasiri Udugampola,
came to know of the safe house through an apparently unrelated
investigation. He was in charge of investigating the worst case
of election violencethe cold-blooded murder of 10 supporters
of Sri Lankan Muslim Congress (SLMC) at Pallethalawinna in the
Kandy district on election day, December 5.
The survivors of the attack alleged that thugs connected to
the former PA minister Anurudhdha Ratwatte, including two of his
sons, were responsible. The PA was particularly bitter about the
SLMC which had switched to the opposition and precipitated the
crisis that eventually forced the election.
Among the suspects detained were 30 soldiers, including an
army captain, from Vijayaba Infantry Regiment stationed at Boyagane
in the Kurunegala District. The police claim that it was from
one of these soldiers that the information about the safe house
was obtained. According to some media reports, one of Ratwattas
sons, Chanuka, was a frequent visitor to the Millennium City safe
house.
Both the government and opposition are now engaged in attempting
to whitewash the military. Neither the UNP nor the PA want a serious
investigation into such military units as such an inquiry would
potentially expose their own systematic involvement in political
thuggery. But working people should take a sharp warning from
this whole episodesuch squads can also be used against the
working class, particularly as opposition and protests develop
against the attacks being prepared on jobs, living standards and
democratic rights.
See Also:
Election violence in
Sri Lanka foreshadows further political turmoil
[5 December 2001]
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