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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
WSWS speaks to families of soldiers killed in Sri Lankas
war
By our correspondents
25 August 2006
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As the Sri Lankan military continues its war against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the number of dead and wounded soldiers
is rising dramatically. According to the official casualty figures,
159 military personnel have been killed and another 452 injured
during fighting since the beginning of August.
President Mahinda Rajapakse provocatively ordered a limited,
humanitarian offensive involving several thousand troops
on July 26 to capture the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gate. Fighting
has since spread to other parts of the North and East of the island,
with continued clashes on the Jaffna peninsula. The 2002 ceasefire
agreement is, in effect, a dead letter.
Once again the coffins of soldiers killed in the fighting are
returning south. Most of the troops are poor rural youth who enlist
to provide for their families and then are used as cannon fodder
in the war. The government, the media and Sinhala chauvinist groups
attempt to distract attention from the mounting toll of misery
with patriotic phrases hailing the supreme sacrifices for
the motherland.
However, as World Socialist Web Site reporters found
when they spoke to the families of dead soldiers, there is considerable
frustration and anger that poor working people are once again
bearing the brunt of the war.
Champika Prasad, a 19-year-old soldier, was
killed in Muhamalai by a rocket-propelled grenade on August 12.
Fighting was intense on the night of August 11 as the LTTE sought
to advance northward up the Jaffna peninsula. Muhamalai is a key
army forward position near LTTE-controlled territory.

Prasad joined the army in March 2005, soon after leaving school
and was deployed last December to the Muhamalai forward defence
line. He last saw his family on July 13. His body was returned
in a sealed coffin. According to his family, his face had been
badly disfigured.
His home was in the poor, isolated village of Neththipola in
Kurunegala district, about 80 kilometres from Colombo. The only
transport to the village is a small bus from nearest town of Kuliyapitiya.
After finishing school, most young people have no job opportunities,
leaving the army as the only option.
Prasads father, P. Simpeenus, told the WSWS his family
did not like him joining the army. But he had no job and was drawn
in by the militarys recruitment advertisements. The
ceasefire was good, he said, but we dont like
[the LTTE] dividing the country. It would be good if the problem
could be solved peacefully. My son came home several times. Though
he said he liked the army, he asked his mother not to allow his
younger brother to join.
Prasads grandfather, P. Rankira, blamed Sinhala communal
parties for the war, rather than the LTTE. He explained that Tamils,
Muslims and Sinhalese had previously lived together in the area.
Tamil teachers from Jaffna taught in the Muslim schools. He said
the main reason for the war was the anti-Tamil riots in 1983.
He recalled how Tamil-owned shops had been burned down by Sinhalese
thugs. That was how the war started. I dont know even
the alphabet. But that is how I understand the situation,
he said.
He also spoke of the chauvinist terror campaign waged by the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) in 1989. In those days we
closed the doors to our houses at 5 p.m. because of their threats.
They are the people that are bringing the war now. Some of the
Buddhist monks are also demanding war.
Prasads elder brother said Prasad was not happy farming
because of the difficulties. The family has less than a hectare
of land to grow rice and other crops. Last season, they were unable
to sell all their rice and received a low price for what they
did sell. The government has paid them 30,000 rupees, or $US300,
to cover funeral expenses.
Asela Thilakaratna, 26, from Alhitiyawa, 15
kilometres from Prasads village, was killed on August 2
in the eastern town of Muttur. He had a wife and a child.
Aselas mother Sumanawathi said: Asela joined the
army in 2000. He only came home for his fathers funeral
in 2001 with difficulty. My daughter is working at a biscuit-manufacturing
factory, which is going to close because of rising flour prices.
She earns only 3,000 rupees a month. My other son works as a trainee
at a garage in Colombo but receives no income.

Aselas wife Krishanthi Nadeeka explained: Asela
didnt come home for nearly two months. Last time he told
me that there were claymore mines everywhere. He was killed in
a mortar attack. He was identified by his brothers who travelled
to Trincomalee. We are in a desperate situation and dont
know what is going to happen to us.
We dont like the war. We dont know whether
war will be over and whether there will be peace. We saw on the
TV what Buddhist monks did in the antiwar meeting. They call for
war. Last week, Buddhist monks attacked the speakers at
an antiwar rally and attempted to break up the meeting.
H. M. Somathilaka Ranasingha was killed by
a claymore mine on July 31 during the military offensive to capture
the Mavilaru sluice gate. He joined the army in 1991, after studying
up to ordinary levels at the Atampola school in Kuliyapitiya.
At the time of his death, he was living in the village of Rilpola
in the Badulla district.
His mother Magilin Nona explained that the family of seven
children had a very hard life at Narammla village in North-Western
Province. Her husband and other family members worked as labourers.
Four of her children had joined the army to earn a living but
her daughter and eldest son later resigned. Her youngest son is
still serving.
We lost our son because of the war. Now we are old. There
is nobody to look after us. We do not even own a small plot of
land to cultivate. There is no way to survive but by labouring
again.
Somathilakas wife, H.M. Rupawathie, said she felt utterly
helpless with her two children: Hundreds of thousands of
rupees and relatives will not fill the gap. Before my marriage,
I worked in a garment factory. Now I cannot work there. It has
been closed for months.
She explained that her two-year-old daughter was asking about
her father. What shall I do now? I am against the war. How
many more like me have become helpless because of it? We were
happy during the cease-fire period. My husband was also happy
because there was no war.
Another relative, W. P. Karunaratna, was angry about the JVPs
role. Now the JVP is encouraging a war. Earlier [in the
1980s], they campaigned for a patriotic war. They threatened people
and demanded that people strike. I faced this when I was working
in the Mahaweli irrigation scheme.
Poor youth, without jobs or any future, join the army
and get killed by the dozens. No one who has property and privileges
go to fight. No one wants to get killed. Everyone wants peace.
Corporal R. Siriwardana, 38, was killed in
fighting at Nargarkovil on August 14. His father was a railway
worker and his family survives on 350 rupees a month from the
governments welfare program. A relative pointed to his tiny
home and said the family could not hold his funeral there because
there was not enough space for even 10 people.
This war should be stopped. This is a communal war. Poor
people are dying in this war, he said angrily.
See Also:
Despite president's denials, Sri Lankan
military continues offensive war
[23 August 2006]
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]
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