|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Fierce fighting escalates in Sri Lanka
By K. Ratnayake
2 August 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
For the first time since the signing of a ceasefire in 2002,
Sri Lankan soldiers and Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
fighters have been engaged in open battle over the last two days.
While reports of casualties vary widely, fierce fighting has claimed
scores of lives and left many more wounded.
After four days of aerial attacks on LTTE positions, the military
launched a ground offensive on Sunday involving 3,000 troops to
seize control of the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gate, which lies
within LTTE territory near the eastern port of Trincomalee. The
government has accused the LTTE of closing the gate, cutting off
water to thousands of small farmers in surrounding areas.
Despite government claims that the operation would be strictly
limited and over in 24 hours, the military has failed to take
control of the sluice gate. Under conditions of heavy military
censorship, reports of the bitter fighting have been limited and
biased. Nevertheless the army conceded that it lost 27 soldiers
on Monday and claimed to have killed 39 rebelsclaims that
the LTTE has denied.
The conflict is rapidly spreading as the army has sought to
reinforce its offensive. On Monday evening, the LTTE detonated
a mine blowing up a bus transporting troops in the area. The military
has acknowledged that at least 15 soldiers and a civilian driver
died in the attack, which injured many more.
The battle continued yesterday as the military used artillery,
multi-barrel rocket launchers and Israeli-built Kfir warplanes
to bombard and strafe LTTE positions. The army claims to have
fought its way to within a kilometre of the sluice gate.
Military spokesman, Brigadier Prasad Samarasinghe told the
state-owned Daily News: Initially it was the mine
fields that slowed the advance of the ground troops towards the
anicut [sluice gate]. Now the mortar fire by the LTTE using 81mm
and 120mm mortars is impeding the advancing the troops progress.
In one of the few first-hand reports, published in todays
Daily Mirror, a wounded soldier described the situation.
He said that a Tiger force of about 200 was tenaciously
hanging on near the sluice gate. He had seen around 40 bodies
of dead LTTE cadres strewn around the area. The military
was being repeatedly harassed by other LTTE fighters. He said
that the group suddenly appeared, fired at oncoming troops
and then dropped out of sight.
Clashes also took place elsewhere. Yesterday Jetliner, a passenger
ferry being used to bring more than 850 troops from the northern
Jaffna peninsula to Trincomalee, came under artillery and mortar
fire from LTTE positions in Sampoor directly opposite the port
facilities. While Jetliner docked safely, four sailors were killed
and another 30 were wounded in the barrage. The military retaliated
by strafing the Sampoor area.
Fear of all-out war has caused a growing stream of refugees
to flee the Trincomalee district. They are carrying their
belongings away, but there is no real place for them to go,
an unnamed source told the BBC. The fighting is 20 kilometres
away, but everyone fears that violence will spread towards the
town. All the offices are closed now and people dont really
know what is happening. There is a war out there, there is fighting.
It is very heavy and I feel that the casualties will be high.
Contradictory media reports have appeared of other naval clashes.
The LTTE claimed to have sunk one of the navys fast attack
vessels yesterday but the military immediately denied the report.
Defence spokesmen insisted that the navy had sunk at least three
of the LTTEs small gunboats and damaged others in the Trincomalee
area.
The rapid expansion of the conflict gives the lie to government
claims that it is carrying out a limited, humanitarian
operation to open the Mavilaru sluice gate to provide water for
local farmers. The military have exploited the issue as the pretext
for launching an offensive to seize LTTE territory, in clear breach
of the 2002 ceasefire agreement, as well as to bomb LTTE positions
that are nowhere near Mavilaru.
On Saturday, the air force bombed an LTTE conference hall at
Karadiyanaru, 24 kilometres northwest of Batticaloa. On Monday,
military announced that its warplanes have attacked the LTTE naval
base at Vakarai, killing at least 30 LTTE members.
According to the LTTE, the government was never interested
in resolving the water issue, which erupted after the Colombo
government a month ago shelved longstanding plans to build a reservoir
in the Mavilaru area. Locals protested by closing the sluice gate
and issued a series of demands. The Norwegian-led Sri Lankan Monitoring
Mission (SLMM), which oversees the ceasefire, was due to meet
with the LTTE and local farmers on July 27 to discuss a solution,
but the government ordered the bombing campaign to begin on the
previous evening.
Speaking in Colombo on Monday, SLMM head Major Ulf Henricsson
publicly questioned the governments humanitarian aims,
declaring: The Ilakkantai Sea Tiger base was not bombed
for water. He also pointed out that the offensive to take
the Mavilaru sluice gate could well be counterproductive if the
LTTE decides to blow up the reservoir. He characterised the offensive
as overkill and the wrong method to get water, if
that was the issue.
Speaking to the Hindustan Times, a Western diplomat
was similarly sceptical. If water was the issue and the
dam had to be taken, the best way would have been to send copter-borne
commandoes to secure that place in one swift operation and get
out, he said.
The SLMM is in an increasingly awkward position. The government
has not withdrawn from the ceasefire agreement and continues to
insist that it abides by the terms. Yet over the past nine months
since Mahinda Rajapakse won the presidency, the military and its
allied anti-LTTE paramilitaries have waged a covert war to provoke
and undermine the LTTE. The current military offensive is setting
the stage for a return to all-out civil war.
Henricsson pessimistically told the press on Monday: In
reality, there is no ceasefire but on paper it is still there.
At the moment none of the parties are interested in talks... a
full-scale war will be a disaster.
Significantly, the military offensive in Sri Lanka has been
met with silence internationally. Despite their claims to support
a continuing truce and a negotiated peace in Sri Lanka, the US,
India, the European powers and Japan have not issued a word of
criticism, let alone condemnation of the actions of the Rajapakse
government.
The US has effectively given the green light in recent months
for the Rajapakse government to adopt an aggressive stance against
the LTTE. The Bush administration backed the ceasefire in 2002
and the subsequent peace talks not out of concern for the Sri
Lankan people but to end a conflict that threatened US economic
and strategic interests in the Indian subcontinent. After the
peace talks failed in 2003, and particularly after the election
of Rajapakse last November, Washington has tacitly supported the
escalation of military action against the LTTE to crush it or
force it to capitulate.
The Bush administration has waged an international diplomatic
campaign to pressure Canada and the European Union to ban the
LTTE as a terrorist organisation. These moves were
a heavy blow to the LTTE, which relies on financial and political
support among the Tamil diaspora around the world.
The decision directly undermined efforts by Norway to resurrect
the ceasefire agreement as the LTTE insisted that EU members of
the SLMMFinland, Sweden and Denmarkhad to be replaced
by non-EU personnel. Last week Finland and Denmark announced that
their decision to pull out, with Sweden following suit this week,
leaving just Norway and Iceland to hold together a depleted mission
to monitor an increasingly meaningless ceasefire.
As fighting escalated on Sunday, S. Elilan, a senior LTTE leader
in Trincomalee, told the media that the ceasefire agreement had
become null and void. The war is on and we are
ready. The war has begun. It is the government which has started
the war, he said. The following day, however, he softened
his statement, saying that any decision to pull out of the ceasefire
agreement would have to made by the LTTE leadership based in the
northern town of Kilinochchi.
The LTTE is caught in a bind. It agreed to the ceasefire in
2002 and formally renounced its longstanding demand for a separate
state of Tamil Eelam, hoping to reach a powersharing deal with
the Colombo government. After negotiations fell apart in 2003
without any discussion of such an agreement, the LTTE repeatedly
appealed to the international community to push the
government back to talks. It has become more and more evident,
however, that the US and major powers are insisting on nothing
short of the LTTEs complete capitulation before any renewal
of negotiations.
The Rajapakse governments provocative military moves
over the last nine months are being driven by a growing economic
and social crisis for which it has no answer but to whip up communal
hatred and plunge the country back to a civil war that has already
claimed 65,000 lives. The offensive in the east of the island
is being accompanied by a frenzied campaign by Rajapakses
Sinhala chauvinist alliesJanatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)
and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU)and in the print and electronic
media to justify the military aggression as a humanitarian
mission to provide water to thousands of poor farmers.
The return to war is not aimed simply at the LTTE and the Tamil
masses but against working people as a whole. The same government
that is professing concern for the farmers in the Trincomalee
district has done nothing to alleviate the extreme poverty rampant
in rural areas. Just three weeks ago, sections of the media were
denouncing port and petroleum workers as more damaging than the
LTTE terrorists and demanding that the government
take tough measures to end any industrial action. War will inevitably
be accompanied by further demands for workers and the poor to
sacrifice for the defence of the nation.
See Also:
Sri Lankan military launch
major offensive to retake LTTE territory
[31 July 2006]
Another bogus peace move by
Sri Lanka's president
[22 July 2006]
Sri Lankan president postures
as a peacemaker
[8 July 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |