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Sri Lanka:
Tensions escalate in eastern province following murder of
Tamil candidate
By Wije Dias
3 April 2004
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Rajan Sathyamoorthy, the leading Tamil National Alliance (TNA)
candidate in Sri Lankas Batticaloa district, was gunned
down last Tuesday, along with his brother-in-law. The cold-blooded
murders are another indication of the violent confrontation brewing
between the two competing factions of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Sathyamoorthy was a well-known supporter of
V. Muralitharan, also known as Karuna, who broke from the LTTE
leadership in early March and set up his own command in the east
of the island.
The killers entered Sathyamoorthys house, pretending
to be campaign supporters, then sprayed the interior with bullets,
killing the two men on the spot and seriously wounding another.
Police reported that Sathyamoorthy had received repeated death
threats but said he had refused an offer of protection. The deaths
brought the number of election-related murders in the campaign
for yesterdays general election to four.
Attempts were made to kill two other prominent eastern Tamils
who support Karuna and have spoken out against the LTTE leadership.
They were V. Thiruchelvam, a faculty head at Eastern University,
and Ratnam Maunagurusamy, the top government official in the eastern
province. Both survived, but had to undergo intensive medical
care.
The LTTE leadership based in the northern Wanni region has
denied any responsibility for killing Sathyamoorthy. Just before
the murder, however, the LTTE issued what amounted to a death
sentence on Karuna and anyone supporting him. To safeguard
our nation and our people, it has been decided to get rid of Karuna
from our soil... Anybody who opposes disciplinary action against
Karuna, will be considered as a traitor to the Tamil national
cause, it declared.
The LTTE is notorious for the repression of any dissent in
its own ranks as well as for the intimidation and murder of its
political opponents. The Wanni leadership had every reason to
target Sathyamoorthy. He led what amounted to a breakaway faction
of the TNA in the East, which backed Karuna and no longer recognised
the LTTEs claim to be the sole representative of the Tamil
people.
The TNA is an alliance of Tamil parties formed in 2001 as a
virtual parliamentary proxy for the LTTE. The LTTE was hoping
that the TNA would hold the balance of power in the next parliament
and thus create favourable conditions for any renewed peace talks.
With the Karuna split and the fracturing of the TNA, those plans
are in tatters.
Two weeks before Sathyamoorthys murder, one of Karunas
deputies called a meeting of all TNA candidates in the East. He
instructed them to refrain from campaigning for the TNA manifesto
and to concentrate instead on the problems of the eastern region.
The Karuna faction has no principled disagreement with the Wanni
leadership, but has criticised it for taking the lions share
of the organisations money and administrative positions,
and for neglecting the East.
According to a report of the meeting in the Daily Mirror,
only one TNA candidate, Joseph Pararajasingham, opposed Karuna.
Sathyamoorthy reportedly told the gathering that arrangements
were being made, in consultation with senior lawyers in Colombo,
for all TNA MPs elected from Batticaloa and Amparai to function
as an independent parliamentary group under Karunas direction.
A week later, the head of the LTTEs political division,
S.T. Tamilselvan, publicly branded Sathyamoorthy a traitor during
a TV interview.
Sathyamoorthys own record is indicative of the class
orientation of the LTTE. He was a leading businessman and president
of the Batticaloa Traders Association. Until the ceasefire between
the government and the LTTE was signed in February 2002, he had
been a longstanding member of the rightwing United National Party
(UNP), contesting the Batticaloa district for the party in 1994.
Over the past two years, he was a prominent organiser for the
LTTE, working closely with Karuna.
Sharpening conflict
In the aftermath of yesterdays election, the conflict
between the two LTTE factions is likely to escalate. While the
Wanni leadership has denounced Karuna as a traitor and dismissed
his influence as insignificant, the eastern group has an estimated
6,000 well-armed fighters at its disposal, many of whom are battle-hardened.
One of Karunas complaints has been that the eastern
cadres have borne a large share of the fighting against the Sri
Lankan army but received few of the privileges.
Karuna has exploited the growing resentment and dissatisfaction
with the LTTEs anti-democratic methods and its failure to
resolve any of the pressing social problems confronting Tamils.
Incapable of offering any progressive solution, however, the eastern
faction blames the northerners and appeals to longstanding
grievances over the dominance of Tamils from the northern town
of Jaffna.
Karuna has gained some support among layers of Tamil business
people, academics and government officials in the East as well
as young people. There have been several protests and demonstrations
in the East against the Wanni leadership. Following the attempt
on the life of Thiruchelvam on March 23, some 3,000 protestors
gathered in Vantharamoolai and burnt an effigy of LTTE leader
V. Prabhakaran.
If he consolidates his grip in the Batticaloa and Ampara districts,
Karuna will further undermine Prabhakarans claim to be the
sole representative of Tamils, which is the basis
for the LTTEs monopoly of Tamil seats in the peace talks
with the government. At present, neither President Chandrika Kumaratungas
United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) nor the rival United National
Front (UNF) has indicated any support for Karunas demand
for a separate ceasefire. The Norwegian-led Sri Lanka Monitoring
Mission (SLMM) has withdrawn its monitors from the areas under
his control.
But the situation could rapidly change in the parliamentary
horse-trading that is likely to follow yesterdays election.
Both the UPFA and UNF will be looking to make deals to establish
a parliamentary majority. If the next government openly supports
one or other LTTE faction, it is likely to heighten tensions and
lead to fighting.
According to the Situation Report in the Sunday
Times, more than 1,000 fighters from the two factions are
facing off against each other on opposite banks of the Verugal
river, north of Batticaloa and south of Trincomalee. The LTTE
has been attempting to strength its position by moving northern
fighters into the area and deploying several vessels to seal off
Verugal Bay.
Iqbal Athas, who writes the Situation Report, has
close ties to Sri Lankan military and intelligence circles. He
reported that the army and navy have both reinforced their forces
in the region. According to Athas, the military top brass has
warned the SLMM that the outbreak of clashes [between the
LTTE factions] may force the security forces to get entangled.
While Athas is silent on the matter, there are undoubtedly elements
of the military who want to seize the opportunity of a divided
LTTE to make military gains.
The slaying of Sathyamoorthy is just one symptom of a highly
combustible situation that threatens to plunge the country back
into the disastrous civil war that has already claimed the lives
of at least 60,000 people.
See Also:
Sri Lankan elections foreshadow a deepening
political crisis
[2 April 2004]
A split in the LTTE heightens
danger of war in Sri Lanka
[18 March 2004]
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