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Lanka
Obscure Sri Lankan group claims responsibility for Tamil journalists
murder
By our correspondent
25 May 2005
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A previously unknown Sri Lankan group calling itself the Therapuththabhaya
Brigade issued an announcement last week claiming
responsibility for the recent murder of prominent Tamil journalist
Dharmaratnam Sivaram.
Sivaram was a senior editor of the Tamilnet website,
known for its political sympathy with the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE). He was abducted in Colombo on April 28 and
his body dumped on the outskirts of the capital on same night.
Nearly three weeks after his death, police have failed to unearth
any clues as to the perpetrators.
The groups letter ominously warned that those who harmed
the motherland... should be ready to become manure for the
motherland very soon.
A number of public figures have received death threats. They
include: Dharmasiri Bandaranayake, a well-known artist; Victor
Ivan and Lasantha Wickramatunga, the editors of Sinhala and English
language newspapers, Ravaya and Sunday Leader; Sunanda
Deshapriya, a journalist; Wickramabahu Karunaratne, leader of
the Nava Sama Samaja Party (NSSP); and peace activist Pakyasothy
Saravanamuththu.
Bandaranayake is known for his promotion of joint activities
between Sinhala and Tamil artists. The others publicly support
attempts to restart peace negotiations between the Colombo government
and the LTTE. Like other Sinhala chauvinist groups, the Therapuththabhaya
Brigade regards any concessions to the LTTE and the countrys
Tamil minority as tantamount to treason.
The letter branded the opposition United National Party (UNP)
and sections of Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP)the
main party in the countrys ruling coalitionas Green
Tigers and Blue Tigers conspiring to divide
the country and grant a separate state of Eelam to the LTTE. The
Norwegian government, which has acted as a mediator in the so-called
peace process, was denounced as a White Tiger.
The murder of Sivaram is part of a campaign being waged by
a number of Sinhala political parties and groups to inflame social
tensions by whipping up anti-Tamil communalism. Two decades of
devastating civil war have created powerful vested interests in
the Sri Lankan military top brass, state bureaucracy, sections
of business and the Buddhist hierarchy. Moreover, stirring up
Sinhala chauvinism is a convenient means to divert attention from
the countrys acute social tensions.
The name Therapuththabhaya Brigade is designed
to invoke a mythologised past when ancient Sinhala kings dominated
the island. Therapuththabhaya was the name of a legendary warrior
who fought under the ancient Sinhala king Dutugamunu, revered
by Sinhalese communalists for defeating a Tamil king and uniting
the country.
It is not clear who is behind the Therapuththabhaya Brigade
or even whether it exists as a separate entity. Several organisations
have been prominent in a campaign against attempts by President
Chandrika Kumaratunga to reach an agreement with the LTTE to form
a joint mechanism to provide relief to the victims of the December
26 tsunami that devastated much of coastal Sri Lanka.
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), which is part of the ruling
United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA), has threatened to walk
out of the government if any joint mechanism is established. JVP
demagogues claim that such a deal would amount to formal recognition
for the LTTE and be a step toward a separate Tamil state. It is
vying with the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) or Pure Sinhala National
Heritage for political dominance.
While it is not clear who is responsible for Sivarams
murder or the Therapuththabhaya Brigade, the JVP and
JHU both have a record of communal violence.
In the period 1987-1990, the JVP, then a proscribed party,
unleashed a fascistic terror campaign through a front organisation
named Deshapremi Janatha Viyaparaya (DJV) or Patriotic Peoples
Movement against the Indo-Lanka Accord, which was an attempt to
end the civil war by imposing an Indian peace-keeping
force in the north and east of the island.
Those who opposed the JVPs campaign were denounced as
Green Tigers or traitors and targetted by the DJVs
gunmen. Three members of Revolutionary Communist League (RCL)the
forerunner of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP)were among
those murdered in cold blood. The RCL upheld the principles of
international socialism, opposing both the JVPs chauvinist
campaign and the Indo-Lankan Accord, exposing it as a deal designed
to intensify the exploitation of the working class.
The JHU and its precursor Sihala Urumaya (SU) have been implicated
in various acts of communal violence, including attacks on Christian
churches in 2003 and 2004. Led by Buddhist priests, the JHU frequently
invokes a mythical Sinhala history to justify its demands for
what amounts to a Sinhala Buddhist theocratic state. The party
has previously painted its leader Ellawela Medhananda as a modern
day Therapuththabhayathe monk who disrobed and
became a warrior to defend the Sinhala kingdom.
Following Sivarams assassination, the JHU issued a chilling
warning along the lines of the latest Therapuththabhaya
Brigade declaration. In a statement welcoming the murder,
the JHU declared: The fate of the editor
of the Tamilnet is a warning example to all those who oppose
the country in the future.
The campaign by the JHU and JVP has not come out of the blue.
President Kumaratunga herself denounced the so-called peace process
and accused the previous United National Front (UNF) government
of undermining national security. On this pretext,
she dismissed the government and called fresh elections in April
2004, which her SLFP narrowly won in alliance with the JVP and
other parties.
Having come to power, however, Kumaratunga immediately came
under pressure from the major world powers and the most powerful
sections of big business to resume peace talks. After two decades
of war, corporate leaders in Colombo and foreign investors want
a negotiated peace deal with the LTTE that will pave the way for
economic restructuring and greater opportunities for profit. The
president has tentatively attempted to restart the peace process,
fuelling opposition from her communal allies.
Political conflict over a government-LTTE joint mechanism comes
amid sharpening social tensions fuelled by the governments
economic program and its failure to provide significant relief
to tens of thousands of tsunami victims. In times of crisis, the
Sri Lankan bourgeoisie has repeatedly encouraged communal conflict
to divide the working class and prevent a unified struggle against
its bankrupt rule.
The murder of Sivaram and the Therapuththabhaya Brigade
statement are sharp warnings to working people that the ruling
elite and its political agents will not hesitate to use the most
ruthless and anti-democratic methods again.
See Also:
Gunmen kill prominent Tamil journalist
in Sri Lanka
[6 May 2005]
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