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Fighting in eastern Sri Lanka spreads to the town of Muttur
By Wije Dias
4 August 2006
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Fighting is intensifying between the Sri Lankan military and
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). As the government
calculated from the outset, the armys provocative attempt
to seize the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gate is leading to a broader
war for control of the eastern province as the LTTE retaliates
against the offensive and seeks to block supply lines.
The army has failed so far to capture the sluice gate, despite
throwing thousands of soldiers into the operation and repeatedly
bombing LTTE positions since July 26. Over the past two days,
a battle has been raging for control of the town of Muttur, which
lies on the road between the major port of Trincomalee to the
north and the Mavilaru sluice gate to the south.
While media reports are limited, it appears that at least 200
LTTE fighters entered the government-held town on Wednesday and
fought their way to the town centre. While the military has denied
that the LTTE has control of Muttur, its denial was only issued
36 hours later and the situation remains unclear.
Abdul Rauf told the BBC Tamil service on Wednesday that hundreds
of LTTE cadres could be seen in all parts of Muttur. He said army
troops had retreated to camps located at the four corners of the
town, which were under LTTE siege. Other eyewitnesses told the
press that the LTTE had seized the Muttur jetty, making it difficult
for the military to bring up reinforcements.
The Colombo-based Daily Mirror quoted the defence ministry
as saying that police posts located in the central bus depot,
telecommunication department and the town centre were vacated
due to Tiger attacks. In plain language, the police deserted
their posts without putting up any resistance.
In desperation, the military began to indiscriminately shell
the town in a bid to retake control. As the shelling from the
Trincomalee naval base intensified, civilians in Muttur fled their
homes to take refuge in churches, mosques and schools.
Even though these places were clearly marked as refugee centres,
several have been hit. An artillery shell struck the Arabic College
where hundreds of Muslim men, women and children were sheltering.
At least ten were killed and scores were injured. Mortar fire
also hit St. Anthonys church, killing an eight-year-old
boy. An ambulance ferrying the injured to a nearby hospital was
attackedtwo people died on the spot and the driver later
succumbed to his injuries.
J.H. Faris, a public servant from Muttur, told Reuters: Most
of the houses are damaged. There is no electricity or water. There
are dead cattle in the streets. The people at the mosque told
us to go to the Muslim College to be safe. We were outside when
the shell fell. His son was wounded in the attack.
Government and military representatives have attempted to blame
the shelling on the LTTE. However, Sri Lankan Muslim Congress
(SLMC) leader Rauf Hakeem yesterday accused the military of firing
shells on schools and other refugee centres in Muttur, which has
a predominantly Muslim population. Hakeem, who is hostile to the
LTTE, said: The government must take responsibility for
the killing of civilians... The people were killed in attacks
carried out by the security forces. He called for an immediate
end to the hostilities.
Between 15 and 20 civilians have died in the clashes in Muttur
over the last two days. Military casualties are unclear. The LTTE
claimed yesterday to have killed 40 soldiers and announced it
was prepared to hand over the bodies. The military dismissed the
claims, saying it has killed more than 70 rebels over the past
week for the loss of only a few soldiers. Media estimates put
the total number of dead since the government launched its offensive
at more than 150.
Despite the efforts of the Colombo media, the government and
the military to paint as bright a picture as possible, it is clear
that the offensive is not going as planned. Having failed to immediately
take the Mavilaru sluice gate, the army now confronts concerted
LTTE counterattacks on its positions elsewhere. The shelling of
civilians in Muttur is a sharp warning that, far from backing
off, the government intends to press on regardless of the devastating
consequences.
Despite his claims to be a man of peace, President Mahinda
Rajapakse has been pursuing a policy of war ever since he narrowly
won last Novembers election with the backing of the Sinhala
chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the Jathika Hela
Urumaya (JHU). The army and allied anti-LTTE paramilitaries, such
as the Karuna group, have been engaged in a campaign of provocations
and murders aimed at weakening the LTTE and goading it into retaliating.
For months the JVP, JHU and other Sinhala extremists have been
pressing the government to launch a military offensive against
the LTTE, particularly in the eastern province. These communalist
layers, who are adamantly opposed to any renewal of peace talks,
have insisted that the army take advantage of the weakening of
the LTTE in the east, following the breakaway of the Karuna group
in 2004.
The closing of the Mavilaru sluice gate simply provided a convenient
pretext for the military to pursue this long-discussed strategy.
From the outset, the LTTE insisted that local farmers had closed
the gate to protest their grievances over the governments
broken promises and that the issue should be settled through negotiation.
Rajapakse rejected any talks and ordered the military to undertake
an urgent humanitarian mission to provide water to
thousands of farmers downstream.
In a back flip yesterday, defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella
declared that the door was open to a negotiated settlement to
the Mavilaru crisis. He said the military would withdraw from
the area as long as the LTTE opened the sluice gate without any
conditions attached. If the Tigers are ready, we are ready
too to start talks immediately, he declared. [W]e
do not want to go back to war.
No one should place any credence in these cynical comments.
More than a week and 150 deaths after Rajapakse ordered an offensive
to retake the sluice gate, the governments representative
now announces that it does not want war and the matter can be
solved by negotiation. One obvious reason for this abrupt change
of heart is the arrival in Colombo today of Norwegian envoy Jon
Hanssen-Bauer in an effort to end the fighting. Rambukwellas
remarks are a crude attempt to pin the blame for the current conflict
on the LTTE.
As farmers and the rural poor throughout Sri Lanka know only
too well, the Rajapakse government has not the slightest interest
in their well-being. A recent Census and Statistic Department
report found that the average income in the districts of Matara,
Matale, Hambantota, Kurunegala, Badulla and Monragala is below
the official poverty line of about $US21 a month. It is to divert
attention from this deepening social crisis that the government
is stirring up communal tensions and plunging the country back
to war.
The attitude of the Rajapakse government is revealed more clearly
in the statements of its Sinhala chauvinist allies. Addressing
a public rally on Wednesday, JVP parliamentary leader Wimal Weerawansa
praised the use of military power to seize the Mavilaru sluice
and denounced comments this week by Norways top facilitator
Erik Solheim, who called for an end to offensive operations and
a return to the status quo established by the 2002 ceasefire.
Pushing for all-out war against the LTTE, Weerawansa declared
that the ceasefire agreement was a dead letter and called for
the government to formally withdraw from it.
See Also:
Fierce fighting escalates in Sri Lanka
[2 August 2006]
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]
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