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Lanka
Sri Lankan military launch major offensive to retake LTTE
territory
By K. Ratnayake
31 July 2006
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The Sri Lankan military has for the first time since the signing
of the current ceasefire in 2002 launched a ground offensive to
capture territory held by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE). The operation, in breach of the ceasefire agreement, is
a further major escalation of the ongoing undeclared war that
erupted following the election of President Mahinda Rajapakse
last November and has claimed at least 900 lives.
As a pretext, the Rajapakse government has used the LTTEs
decision on July 20 to close a sluice gate located at Mavilaru
inside LTTE territory, cutting off water to thousands of rice
farmers at Serunuwara near the eastern town of Trincomalee. While
the government immediately denounced the move, the LTTE insisted
that the action was taken on behalf of farmers around Mavilaru
to protest the governments failure to build a water reservoir
that has been promised since 2002.
The LTTE decision provoked a storm of protest from Sinhala
chauvinist organisations, including Rajapakses political
allies, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Jathika Hela Urumaya
(JHU). The JVP-led National Patriotic Movement issued a statement
on July 26 demanding that the government should use its
power to destroy the Tiger terrorists in order to activate the
sluice on the waterway.
On the same day, July 26, the government ordered air strikes
against LTTE positions near Mavilaru in support of ground troops
advancing from Welikanda. The following day warplanes bombed an
LTTE camp at Kathiraveli, 40 kilometres from Trincomalee, killing
six LTTE cadres and wounding several others.
Pressure mounted on July 28 for the military to accelerate
the operation. A mob led by JHU parliamentarians, Athuraliye Rathana
and Akmeemana Dayarathana, seized the sluice gate key and declared
that they intended march to Mavilaru. The JHU provocation provided
the military with an excuse for declaring that it would quickly
secure the area and open the sluice.
On Saturday, the army massed thousands of troops near its camp
at Kallaru junction at the edge of LTTE-controlled territory near
Trincomalee amid continued aerial bombing and artillery shelling.
Army chief of staff Nanda Mallwarachchi visited the area and announced
that the troops would quickly capture Mavilaru, 4 kilometres from
Kallaru junction. The government promised to open the sluice gate
within 24 hours.
By yesterday afternoon, a spokesman claimed that soldiers were
close to their objective but were proceeding slowly because of
mines and booby traps.
The Colombo government has justified the offensive by claiming
that it is necessary to release water for desperate farmers. Defence
spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella declared: The limited operation
has been undertaken on humanitarian grounds to restore the basic
requirement of water to the civilian population.
The governments concern for the plight of farmers in
the Serunuwara area is completely hypocritical. Despite his long
list of election promises last November, Rajapakse has failed
to address the rising cost of farm inputs and falling produce
prices that are squeezing farmers throughout the country, driving
some to suicide.
The government ruled out any compromise with the LTTE and refused
to negotiate, as required under the terms of the ceasefire agreement.
The military provocatively disrupted attempts by the Sri Lanka
Monitoring Mission (SLMM) to meet with LTTE leaders and farmers
to resolve the issue. The air force bombing occurred near a meeting
in Muttur east, close to Trincomalee, on July 27.
The LTTE presented the Norwegian-led SLMM, which oversees the
ceasefire, with three conditions: to construct the promised water
reservoir; to lift the militarys embargo on the supply of
food, building materials and other essential supplies on LTTE-held
areas; and to end the harassment of civilians travelling between
LTTE- and government-held areas.
Spokesman Rambukwella rejected the LTTEs demands out
of hand, declaring that the operations humanitarian
aims would not be subject to negotiation. While objecting to the
LTTEs decision to cut off water supplies, the government
has no compunction in maintaining its own embargo of essential
items that is deepening the social crisis facing people living
in LTTE-held areas.
On Saturday, aerial bombing again took place as SLMM officials,
including its head Ulf Henricsson, met with the LTTE and farmers.
Henricsson told Reuters: We sat talking and got clearance
from the government and tried to convince the LTTE to have confidence
in the government. They dropped a bomb in the vicinity. Thats
not the right signal.
The bombings were not accidental. The Rajapakse government
is not interested in resolving the water issue, but is intent
on exploiting it to justify aggressive action against the LTTE.
Military attacks have not been confined to the area immediately
around Mavilaru. On Saturday, the air force bombed an LTTE conference
hall at Karadiyanaru, 24 kilometres northwest of Batticaloa. According
to the government, 40 LTTE members were killed in the attack and
others were wounded, including top LTTE regional leaders.
In a letter to the SLMM, LTTE leader in Trincomalee, S. Elilan,
angrily declared that the actions of the Sri Lankan military were
tantamount to a declaration of war against the LTTE.
He called on the SLMM to declare publicly that the ceasefire
agreement is not holding anymore on the ground and warned
that the LTTE would retaliate fiercely if Sri Lankan troopers
enter our Mavilaru area. It will lead to serious consequences.
The political responsibility for plunging country back into
war rests squarely with the Rajapakse government. Following Rajapakses
election last November, the military has colluded with anti-LTTE
militia, such as the Karuna group, to stage a series of provocative
attacks on the LTTE. Efforts to resuscitate the so-called peace
process have floundered as the government, under pressure from
the JVP and JHU, has placed new demands on the LTTE.
While the government and military have denied any involvement
in the undeclared war in the North and East of the island, evidence
of close cooperation with anti-LTTE paramilitaries continues to
mount. In its lead article on Saturday, Lakabima provided
details of the involvement of the Karuna faction in the fighting
to open the Mavilaru sluice gate and in attacks on LTTE camps
in the area.
By pressing the European Union and Canada in recent months
to ban the LTTE as a terrorist organisation, the Bush
administration has encouraged the Rajapakse government to adopt
a more aggressive stance towards the LTTE. Following Washingtons
lead, the major powers have one-sidedly denounced the LTTE, while
praising the Colombo government for its restraint. There has been
no international condemnation of the governments current
flagrant breach of the ceasefire.
Meanwhile the governments preparation for all out war
is continuing unabated. In recent months, it has sought to purchase
military hardware not only from India and Pakistan, but also China.
Last Thursday Rajapakse issued a gazette notification widening
his power to extend the military service of major generals after
their retirement age.
Despite paying lip service to the need for a negotiated peace,
the latest offensive makes clear that the governments aim
is to plunge the country back into war in a desperate attempt
to crush the LTTE militarily.
See Also:
Another bogus peace move by Sri Lanka's
president
[22 July 2006]
Sri Lankan president postures as a peacemaker
[8 July 2006]
Sri Lankan military directly
implicated in two atrocities
[30 June 2006]
Killing of Sri Lankan general:
another sign of civil war
[28 June 2006]
Under the guise of peace,
Sri Lankan government accelerates drive to civil war
[22 June 2006]
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