|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Relatives of recently killed Sri Lankan soldiers speak to
WSWS
By our correspondents
11 January 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Sri Lanka is rapidly descending once again into civil war.
More than 100 people have been killed in ambushes, clashes and
assassinations since Mahinda Rajapakse of the Sri Lanka Freedom
Party (SLFP) won the November 17 presidential election.
The chief responsibility for the escalating violence rests
with Rajapakse who, in order to gain the support of the Sinhala
extremist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Jathika Hela Urumaya
(JHU), agreed to a series of provocative demands on the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Following the election, the military
has stepped up its repression on the Tamil minority and is in
all likelihood connected to a series of killings of LTTE members
and supporters.
The LTTE appears to have responded in kind. More than 50 army
and navy personnel have been killed in ambushes since the November
election. The latest occurred last Friday when a navy gunboat
was rammed and sunk by a boat packed with explosives, killing
13 sailors. Like the military, the LTTE has denied any involvement
in the attacks.
The WSWS interviewed the family members of a number of soldiers
who have been killed recently. Most Sri Lankan soldiers are economic
conscriptspoor rural youth who have been forced to enlist
to support their families, only to be used as cannon fodder in
the bloody 20-year war. Exploited in death as in life, the government,
military top brass and the media hail the heroes for
their defence of the unitary state against the Tiger
terrorists.
The WSWS interviews reveal a different picture. They reflect
the widespread and justified fear of a return to all-out war,
suspicion and anger at the new government and all political parties,
and concerns over the continuing deterioration of living standards.
Mahinda Liyanage was killed along with at
least 10 other soldiers when the army truck in which they were
travelling was hit by a land mine on December 27. The truck was
taking arms and the soldiers from Point Pedro on the northern
coast of the Jaffna peninsula to the Palaly army complex further
south.
Mahinda came from the village of Buluwemuduna in the hill country
near Kandy about 140 kilometres from Colombo. His wife and three-year-old
son live in a half-finished house along with his parents and two
sisters. His wife Manjula is pregnant with another child.
His father, 64, is working at a petrol shed in Kandy. One of
his sisters is still studying and the other is working in the
Celltronic factory in the Pallekelle industrial zone. One of his
brothers is also a soldier, currently serving in Haiti as part
of the Sri Lankan battalion sent to participate in the so-called
peace-keeping forces. The other brother is a police constable.
Mahindas wife, Manjula, explained how she heard of her
husbands death. On the night of December 27, we heard
some noises and tapping on the door. We were fearful but a village
priest told us not to be afraid as some army people had arrived.
A corporal, who is also disabled, told us the news. The next day,
army men came with Mahindas coffin and gave us 75,000 rupees
($US750) for the funeral. My son asked me where his father was
but the coffin was sealed and it was prohibited to open it.
Mahinda joined the army in 1995 when he was 22. He studied
at the Liyangaswagura junior school up to Ordinary Level, but
was forced to leave his studies because of the JVPs activities
in the area in 1988-89. At the height of its fascistic terror
campaign, the JVP was forcibly recruiting young people to its
patriotic front. Mahinda went into hiding in the Ratnapura area
then got a job at a filling station before joining the army.
In 2000, when the military suffered a series of defeats at
the hands of the LTTE, Mahinda was severely injured in a blast
at Chavakacheri, near Jaffna. After recovering, he was transferred
to another army division and served in several camps. Manjula
said her husband had been due home on leave in January.
Mahindas father said: There is something wrong
with the ceasefire agreed upon by the LTTE and the government
three years ago. Under the ceasefire, we hoped there would be
no danger for our sons in the army. At least in that sense we
lived without fear and terror. But now the fear and uncertainty
have returned to our lives.
The army gave Mahindas wife a standard certificate for
dead soldiers saluting her husband as a brave soldier defending
the unitary state. As the family noted, even the inscription
on the certificate was wrong, saying Mahinda had joined the army
immediately after leaving school.
We did not want to send our sons into the military. It
seems no one in power wants to end this war, his father
exclaimed. Another villager commented: They said that he
sacrificed his life for the unitary state without fear and bravely.
But defending this unitary state means defending the capitalist
system, doesnt it?
About 10 young men from the same village are in the military.
And several women are war widows. Villagers have erected bus shelters
in the memory of dead soldiers. A woman explained that Mahinda
and her brother, who died in the fighting in 2000, were classmates
and both joined the army. Before then, none of her family of seven
had jobs and now four were surviving on her brothers pension.
Mahindas funeral took place on December 31 at a village
cemetery. Nearby was the tomb of another soldier, Corporal Karunathilake,
who was killed in 1999. The army sent representatives but no one
came from any of the major political parties. According to one
person, a local JVP parliamentarian attended but did not identify
himself.
One of Mahindas relatives explained: The central
province governor Sarath Ekanayake visited before the funeral
but said nothing about the upsurge of violence. He has just asked
what we needed. There are 150 houses in this village. We have
electricity but no water supply. We have to pay 75 rupees per
month to the temple to take three pots of water a day, because
a motor is used to pump water from the well. Otherwise we would
have to walk half a mile for water.
Most of the villagers are day labourers earning 350-400 rupees
a day, when they have work. There is no farming because of the
lack of water. Very few young people could manage to obtain higher
education.
We also visited another village, Karagastenna, three kilometres
away. Another 10 young men from that village are in army because
there are no jobs.
One of the Karagastenna soldiers, Dushantha Kumara, was killed
in 2000. His younger brother also joined the military but left
several months later. His mother has been distraught since the
death of her elder son and collapses every time she hears about
the killing of soldiers. Four family members are living on Dushanthas
pension.
W.B. Sunil, a soldier in the Sri Lanka Army
(Volunteer) Regiment, was killed on December 27 in what was believed
to be an LTTE attack on his house at China Bay in the eastern
town of Trincomalee. The attackers first stoned the house then
opened fire and threw grenades at those who came out to see what
was happening. Sunil was killed on the spot. His wife L.G. Gnanawathie
and her younger brother L.G. Premaratna were severely injured
and were admitted to the Colombo National Hospital.
Sunil was 51 and had two daughters and a son. His funeral was
held at his hometown of Dehiwala, to the south of central Colombo,
on December 31. He had worked as a driver before joining the army
in 1988.
His mother, A.A.T. Margaret Perera, told the WSWS: I
lost my son. I was terribly shocked when I heard the news. In
just one more year he would have retired. In this residential
area there are Sinhala, Muslim and Tamil people and everyone lives
together with peacefully. My family members and I used to go to
his house several times a year. We never had any problem.
His death is a result of Mahinda Chintanaya [President
Rajapakses program]. President Mahinda Rajapakses
government is pushing the country toward war again. He is working
according to what the JVP and the JHU tell him. I dont believe
this government will be able to stop war and bring peace to the
country.
If the war does break out again it will be a huge disaster.
The LTTE will blast bombs everywhere and so many innocent people
will die again. This government has failed to provide enough facilities
for tsunami victims even after a year. How can it resolve the
other problems of the country? I still give shelter to two families
of tsunami victims.
Sunils brother-in-law said: One month before his
death, our family went to his place and visited areas like Koneshwaran,
Seruwawila, and Kinniya without any disturbances. Many peopleSinhala
and Muslimcame to his funeral. Some Tamils wanted to come,
but they didnt out of fear. The government has no clear
program to solve the problem and the LTTE has been engaged in
provocations.
We visited Sunils wife and her brother Premaratna in
hospital. She was too distraught to speak at length but Premaratna
explained: I heard the LTTE had warned my brother to leave
the area. This has all happened because of the climate of war
in the country. We are against resuming the war. If war erupts
there [in Trincomalee] we will not be able to live in that area.
Premaratna was a farmer then worked in a hospital but lost that
job.
R.M. Upananda Ratnayake, 23, was killed in
the same mine blast as Mahinda Liyanage. He joined the military
in May 2004 after studying up to advanced level high school. He
engaged in sport and was very popular in his home village of Nelligashinna
near Badulla, 210 kilometres from Colombo. Some 300 people came
to his funeral, along with 50 to 60 army personnel.
Upanandas mother and father are tea plantation workers
like most people in the area. He had two sisters and a brother.
Previously his family lived on the Eladaluwa Estate then settled
in a small house at Nelligashinna near the estate. The village
has no facilities. The piped water supply is inadequate, so villagers
have to walk for about a kilometre to fetch drinking water in
plastic containers.
R.M. Ratnapala, Upanandas father, was a member of the
district committee of the United Plantation Workers Union (UPWU).
He blamed the war on the policies carried out by all the ruling
class parties. All the governments are the same. The LTTE
is working in its own interests. The one good thing about the
ceasefire agreement is that it saved the lives of many people.
Mahinda Rajapakse won the presidential election because
of the support of the JVP and the JHU. The politics of the JVP
and JHU are based on communalism that divides nationalities. The
JVP is not a Marxist party. Like the other left parties that betrayed,
the JVP did the same.
More than 20 years ago I was in Jaffna. The people there
were educated and efficient farmers. But they did not get the
opportunities they deserved. So they tried to get those opportunities
by fighting. The government says the LTTE should lay down its
arms. They might not lay down arms because they think they have
no protection.
He was critical of the comments of a local JVP councillor,
Saman Mahinda, at his sons funeral. His remark about
my sons participation in tsunami relief work is a lie. He
said my son also went to help tsunami victims there [in the north].
He was not in a position to help tsunami victims there. The JVP
weaves a web of lies for their own advantage.
At the funeral, the JVP councillor declared: Upananda
sacrificed his life for the unitary state. We salute war heroes
who sacrificed their lives to defend the motherland.
Ratnapala bitterly responded: To have a united state
there should be proper conditions for everyoneworkers and
peasants, Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslimsto live together.
This present governing system is no good.
No one knows what [President] Mahinda [Rajapakse] will
do in the future. However, the danger of war has increased since
he came to power. The international community should not give
weapons to either side. They are coming here not because of any
sympathy [for us] but for their investments.
See Also:
Sri Lankan foreign minister discusses
war, not peace, in Washington
[10 January 2006]
Sri Lankan security forces conduct massive
sweep of Tamils in Colombo
[7 January 2006]
Sri Lanka on the road back to civil war
[5 January 2006]
Amid danger of civil war, Sri Lankan
president visits New Delhi
[4 January 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |