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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Despite presidents denials, Sri Lankan military continues
offensive war
By Sarath Kumara
23 August 2006
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In a meeting on Monday with diplomats from the US, the European
Union, Norway and Japan, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse
denied that his government was waging war against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Repeating earlier comments to the
media, he claimed that the Sri Lankan military was only responding
to LTTE attacks and had not launched any offensive operations.
The diplomats represent the co-chairs of the so-called Sri
Lankan peace process, which has all but collapsed, along with
the 2002 ceasefire agreement, amid open fighting over the last
month. In a statement issued after the meeting, the president
rather absurdly declared that the government remained committed
to the truce and was awaiting the LTTEs response for the
resumption of peace talks.
Rajapakses comments are based on a series of lies. The
president initiated the current fighting when he ordered an offensive
by 2,000 troops on July 26 to capture the Mavilaru sluice gate
inside LTTE territory. The government claimed that the operation
was a limited humanitarian operation, but the head of the Sri
Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM), Ulf Hendrickson, declared that
it was an obvious breach of the 2002 ceasefire.
The military used the Mavilaru offensive as the pretext for
bombing other key LTTE targets, provoking retaliatory attacks
that have continued to escalate. From August 11, the LTTE launched
attacks on army positions on the northern Jaffna peninsula. Heavy
fighting was reported last Friday at Muhamalai and Nagarkovil
along with LTTE artillery attacks on the key Palaly air base and
military complex. The northern portion of the peninsula held by
government forces is largely cut off by land and air.
The latest casualty lists released yesterday by the military
indicate the extent of the fighting. According to the press statement,
armed forces casualties from August 1 to 21 have been 159 dead
and 452 injured. The military claims to have killed around 600
LTTE fighters and wounded many more, but the figures are likely
to be inflated. Defence spokesmen continue to insist, for instance,
that scores of schoolgirls killed in a bombing attack last week
were child soldiers.
Significantly, none of the powers represented at Mondays
meeting criticised Rajapakse. For three weeks, as the military
launched its offensive at Mavilaru, the co-chairs maintained a
complete silence, effectively giving the Sri Lankan government
a green light to proceed. The co-chairs issued a call last week
for an end to the conflict and a resumption of peace talks, but,
like meeting with the president, it appears to have been little
more than a formality.
In a statement issued after the meeting, Rajapakse declared
that his government would consider an end to the fighting if LTTE
leader V. Prabhakaran made an explicit commitment to a comprehensive
and verifiable cessation of hostilities. The president immediately
added the condition that such a cessation of hostilities
should include explicit modalities of ensuring that the Sampur
area does not pose a military threat to the Trincomalee harbour
and its environs.
The caveat amounts to a demand that the 2002 ceasefire, which
he claims to uphold, be rewritten to strengthen the position of
the Sri Lankan military. Since being narrowly elected as president
last November, Rajapakse, with the backing of his Sinhala chauvinist
allies, has provocatively been pressing for a renegotiation of
the truce. In the current fighting, the LTTE has used its Sampur
bases to threaten the port of Trincomaleea key strategic
facility and lifeline to government troops in Jaffna.
Army commander Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka expressed
the governments real attitude in comments to the right-wing
Island newspaper. Fonseka, who was nearly killed in an
LTTE suicide bombing in April, declared: Its only
a matter of time before the LTTE is defeated. Declaring
that the army has nothing against Tamils, he justified
the killing of schoolgirls at Puthukudiyirippu last week by saying
they were child soldiers. SLMM and UNICEF officials
who visited the site have refuted the claim.
Amid the open clashes with the LTTE, the military and its paramilitary
allies are continuing a covert war of intimidation and terror
against anyone deemed to be an LTTE supporter. Since last November,
Rajapakse has presided over a series of provocative murders and
escalating violence aimed at weakening the LTTE and undermining
the 2002 ceasefire.
On August 18, a group of armed thugs attacked a warehouse connected
to the pro-LTTE newspaper Uthayan near Jaffna town. They
tied up, blindfolded and threatened to kill the guard, before
setting fire to the building. The government-controlled areas
of the Jaffna peninsula have been under stringent security and
extensive curfews for nearly two weeks, pointing to the involvement
of the military in the attack. Four Uthayan employees have
been murdered this year.
On the morning of August 19, hundreds of soldiers stormed onto
the Jaffna university campus and arrested International Tamil
Student Federation leader T. Paherathan. They also broke into
the student federation office and seized computers and documents
belonging to the union. The operation, the first of its kind,
continued until the early evening as troops broke down doors and
searched premises.
On the night of August 20, unidentified gunmen shot and killed
Sinnathamby Sivamaharajah, 68, a former Tamil MP and managing
director of the pro-LTTE Namathu Eelanadu. Sivamaharajah
has organised campaigns against the militarys continued
occupation of extensive high security zones that resulted in the
expulsion of thousands of residents from their homes and businesses.
He was murdered outside his home on the Jaffna peninsula near
one of the zones.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government prepares to suppress
the struggles of workers
[22 August 2006]
War in Sri Lanka creates a flood of refugees
[21 August 2006]
Sri Lankan president demands media toes
the line on the war
[19 August 2006]
Sri Lankan air force bombing kills scores
of students
[15 August 2006]
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