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Sri Lankan militarys intrigues with LTTE rebel faction
threaten ceasefire
By K. Ratnayake
8 July 2004
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The Sri Lankan ceasefire agreement is increasingly under threat
following revelations that the army provided assistance to a breakaway
faction of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) headed
by its former eastern commander, V. Muralitharan, better known
as Karuna. As the conflict between the two factions continues
in the east, the LTTE has warned of a return to war if the militarys
collusion with Karuna persists.
The Karuna faction broke away from the LTTE in March, accusing
the northern Wanni-based leadership of monopolising the top posts
and the benefits of the ceasefire signed in February 2002. While
the LTTE rapidly retook control of the Batticaloa-Ampara region
of the island in mid-April, a series of murders have since taken
place in the area under murky and unexplained circumstances.
At least 21 LTTE members, including seven loyal to Karuna,
have been killed since late April. In addition, six civilians
have been shot dead in government-held areas, as well as several
police and army intelligence personnel and their informants. The
Wanni leadership has accused Karunas fighters of murdering
its cadre with the assistance of the Sri Lankan army, including
its intelligence wingallegations that the military and defence
ministry have repeatedly denied.
On June 21, however, Karuna loyalist Nilavini, formerly head
of the LTTEs womens military wing in the east, appeared
at a press conference in the Wanni town of Kilinochchi. Nilavini
explained that she, Karuna and three other top women military
cadre were brought to Colombo by an opposition United National
Front (UNF) parliamentarian Ali Zahir Moulana Seyed.
After initially being housed at the JAIC Hilton, one of the
citys five-star hotels, they were shifted to military safe
houses. According to Nilavini, a high-ranking army intelligence
official visited Karuna regularly. When Karuna told the women
on June 13 that he was leaving the country, they contacted a relative,
travelled to the Wanni and rejoined the LTTE.
Aspects of the story are still unclear. But Ali Moulana has
since admitted bringing the group to Colombo and, amid the furor
that followed, resigned as an MP. Despite denials from the military,
there is mounting evidence that the army held Karuna and the women
in protective custody.
After Nilavinis press conference, Defence Secretary Cyril
Herath, speaking on the BBC Sinhala service, categorically
denied the allegations. But he was soon contradicted by
a minister in the United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government.
At a cabinet press briefing on June 24, Information Minister Mangala
Samaraweera admitted that a section of the military had been supporting
the Karuna faction, but without the governments approval.
According to a BBC report, Samaraweera declared: Obviously
there have been military personnel involved. I mean we cannot
deny [it] but [it was] not with the knowledge or connivance of
the government. He explained that the government was investigating
the affair and sought to divert attention by accusing the UNF
leader Ranil Wickremesinghe of duplicity in helping
Karuna and attempting to disrupt the peace process. Wickremesinghe
has denied any involvement.
Samaraweera issued a further statement on the same day correcting
media reports. He emphasised that he did not admit to the
authorised involvement of the Sri Lankan military in the Karuna
issue as alleged. But neither did he deny that sections
of the military were involved. Deputy Defence Minister Ratnasiri
Wickramanayake attempted to shut the door on the issue by declaring
that the army has no connection at all in helping Karuna
to escape or thereafter. He blamed false propaganda
from those who are against the government.
On June 27, however, the Sunday Times defence correspondent
Iqbal Athas, who has close connections with the military establishment,
stated in his regular column: The Sunday Times is
able to reveal today that the army did provide protective
custody to Col Karuna and his party. The fact
that such protection was given to him and cadres was brought to
the attention of the authorities concerned, investigations by
the Sunday Times revealed. They were fully aware.
The protestations of innocence by the government and the military
have been further exposed by revelations that a cabinet minister,
Douglas Devandanda, leader of the Eelam Peoples Democratic Party
(EPDP), has been in contact with Karuna. Devandanda has admitted
that he not only spoke with the renegade LTTE leader but advised
him on how to go about forming a political party. The EPDP is
a Tamil party and militia, notorious for its close collaboration
with the army against the LTTE in the north of the island.
A dangerous game
The exact nature of the militarys dealings with Karuna
remain unclear, but it is simply not credible that the military
top brass knew nothing about what was going on. At the very least,
the military, or sections of it, was giving protective custody
to Karuna, while his fighters were carrying out attacks on the
cadre and supporters of the Wanni-based LTTE leadership.
The obvious impact of the militarys actions was to undermine
the present ceasefire and the governments attempts to restart
negotiations with the LTTE. The LTTE leadership clearly could
not indefinitely tolerate a situation in which the army was colluding
with a rebel faction that challenged its claims to be the
sole representative of the Tamil people and that was killing
its fighters and officials.
Concerned over the potential for the Karuna affair
to plunge Sri Lanka back to war, Norwegian special envoy Erick
Solheim arrived back on the island last week for a four-day visit.
President Chandrika Kumaratunga called on Norway to resume its
role as mediator in the so-called peace process in late April,
after her UPFA defeated the UNF in general elections on April
2.
Solheim met with LTTE political-wing leader S.P. Thamilchelvan
on June 30, but declared there had been no breakthrough in establishing
the basis for new peace talks. In his statement to the media,
Thamilchelvan bluntly explained why, declaring: If the Sri
Lankan president and government are serious about the ceasefire
agreement and peace talks they should stop sheltering Karuna and
backing the murder and mayhem in which some of the henchmen are
indulging in Batticaloa... If this situation is allowed to continue
it will jeopardise the ceasefire and the entire peace process.
Commentator Iqbal Athas noted in the Sunday Times last
weekend that the LTTE response was quite cautious. The LTTE did
not demand the handover of Karuna. The main focus was the
LTTEs complaint about an alleged Army collusion with the
Karuna faction to carry out attacks. This, the LTTE had pointed
[out], had caused difficulties for them in restoring normalcy
in areas under their control in the Batticaloa district,
he wrote.
While Solheim was trying to reconcile the government and the
LTTE, the US warned both sides not to jeopardise the peace process.
US Ambassador Jeffrey Lunstead called on the LTTE and military
to talk to each other and cautioned them not to allow the
situation in the east to go out of control. Washington is
pushing for an end to the countrys 20-year civil war, which
threatens to cut across its growing economic and strategic interests
in the South Asia region.
After talks with Solheim on July 1, Kumaratunga issued a carefully-worded
statement rejecting publicly aired allegations by the LTTE
that the government had authorised the Sri Lankan military activities
in the Eastern Province in support of the Karuna faction.
The statement was a transparent exercise in damage control, which
denied any government involvement, but did not categorically rule
out that military may have been collaborating with Karuna.
At present, Kumaratungas exact role in the events is
not clear. But, as commander-in-chief and defence minister, it
is virtually impossible that she knew nothing about what was taking
place. In fact, in late May, Kumaratunga took the unusual step
of appointing the armys chief-of-staff, Lieutenant General
S.H.S. Kottegoda, as overall operational commander in the eastern
district to improve the security situation. Kottegoda
promptly toured the military establishments in the region and,
by all accounts, laid down the law to those in command to adhere
strictly to the ceasefire agreement.
Significantly Kottegoda took over as army commander last week
following the retirement of Lieutenant General L.P. Balagalle
from the post. In what was interpreted as a deliberate snub to
Balagalle by the Colombo press, Kumaratungas statement on
July 1 declared that under the command of Lt. Gen. Shantha
Kottegoda, the Sri Lankan Army will continue to abide by the ceasefire
agreement. It was more than a slip of the pen. Kumaratunga
clearly knew or suspected that Balagalle, former head of military
intelligence and the man responsible in the late 1980s for recruiting
the LTTEs armed rivals to fight on the armys side,
had been intriguing in the East.
In his farewell speech on June 30, Balagalle made a point of
completely denying the LTTE allegations. But when
the Karuna faction broke away in March, he was keen to use the
split in the LTTE to weaken the organisation. In an interview
on the Indian-based rediff.com website on April 5, he commented:
[I]f the division continues, it has weakened them, there
is no doubt about it. If Karuna continues to oppose Prabhakaran
[the LTTE leader], it will certainly be a problem for them. They
will certainly be a weakened force.
What has been revealed are sharp divisions in the military,
not simply over the Karuna faction, but the governments
attempts to restart the peace process. It is a situation that
Kumaratunga has played a key role in creating.
Before the April 2 elections, the president collaborated closely
with the military, Balagalle in particular, and Sinhala extremist
parties, such as the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), to undermine
the ceasefire signed in 2002 by the previous UNF government. She
repeatedly accused former prime minister Wickremesinghe of compromising
national security and making impermissible concessions to the
LTTE in the course of peace talks.
Last November, Kumaratunga took the first steps in what amounted
to a constitutional coup. With the backing of the military and
the JVP, she used her presidential powers to take over three key
ministries, including defence, and moved to impose a state of
emergency. She only pulled back under pressure from Washington
and New Delhi. After three months of a tense political standoff,
Kumaratunga finally dismissed the elected government in February
and called fresh elections on April 2.
The UPFAa coalition between Kumaratungas Sri Lanka
Freedom Party (SLFP), the JVP and several smaller partieswon
more seats than the UNF, but not a majority in parliament. In
the aftermath of the election, Kumaratunga immediately came under
pressure from business and the major powers to restart peace talks
with the LTTE. The countrys donors made clear that $4.5
billion in financial assistance would be forthcoming only if the
ceasefire and the peace process continued.
Kumaratunga made an abrupt about-face and called in the Norwegian
mediators. In doing so, she has alienated her former allies in
the military and the Sinhala chauvinist groups. The JVP remains
in the government but has threatened serious consequences if the
government begins negotiations on the basis of the LTTEs
proposals for an interim administration in the North and East.
The militarys intrigues with Karuna have revealed that a
section of the army is working to sabotage the ceasefire.
What the conspiracies and manoeuvres around the Karuna affair
have again demonstrated is the complete inability of any section
of the Sri Lankan ruling elite to end the countrys disastrous
civil war on a progressive basis to meet the needs and aspirations
of the masses.
See Also:
Continued killings in eastern
Sri Lanka threaten to undermine ceasefire
[1 June 2004]
Attempts to restart Sri Lankan
peace talks heighten political instability
[20 May 2004]
Sri Lanka: LTTE launches offensive
to suppress dissident eastern faction
[13 April 2004]
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