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Major naval battle: Sri Lanka plunges toward open civil war
By K. Ratnayake
13 May 2006
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In a major escalation of the conflict in Sri Lanka, the military
and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fought a pitched
naval battle on Thursday in the seas near the northern fishing
village of Vettilaikerni. Up to 50 are estimated to have died
on both sides. In retaliation, the military launched a series
of air strikes and artillery attacks on LTTE positions, including
near the rebel headquarters of Kilinochchi.
While the Colombo government and media immediately denounced
the LTTE for initiating the attack, the latest incident follows
a long series of provocations by anti-LTTE Tamil paramilitaries
working with sections of the Sri Lankan military. While the 2002
ceasefire between the LTTE and the government still is formally
in place, the islands undeclared war in the North and East
is accelerating.
According to the Sri Lankan military, up to 15 LTTE boats attacked
a naval convoy, comprising a troop carrier with 700 soldiers on
boardthe Pearl Cruise IIand four patrol boats, on
Thursday afternoon. In the two-hour battle, an LTTE vessel laden
with explosives rammed and sunk one of the naval gunboats, killing
17 sailors, including two officers, and one army signalman. The
navy claimed its patrol boats, with air support, destroyed five
LTTE vessels and damaged several others, killing at least 30 LTTE
members.
The LTTE accused the navy of disrupting its sea exercises and
provoking the clash. It claimed to have damaged another naval
craft, which sank near Point Pedro, and to have lost only four
of its fighters. However, the Norwegian-led Sri Lanka Monitoring
Mission (SLMM), which had observers on the Pearl Cruise II, accused
the LTTE of gross violations of the ceasefire and
of carrying out an offensive operation.
The LTTE criticised the SLMM for partiality and
insisted on its right to conduct naval exercises. An LTTE statement
warned the SLMM against travelling on board naval vessels in the
future, declaring: If you choose to ignore our warning and
request, we are not responsible for the consequences.
Both sides have effectively been on a war footing for months
amid escalating violence following the election of President Rajapakse
last November. While the government routinely denies any involvement
in attacks on LTTE personnel and positions, there is growing evidence
of the militarys involvement with various Tamil paramilitaries
in carrying out killings designed to inflame communal tensions.
At talks in Geneva in February, the government agreed to implement
the ceasefire clauses requiring it to disarm militia operating
in army-controlled areas, but that undertaking has not been carried
out.
On Thursday, SLMM monitor Jouni Suninen told Reuters: We
have very strong indications that at least part of the government
troops have been involved in these killings. He took the
correspondent to a spot where the sister of a suspected LTTE member
was shot deadjust 60 metres from an army checkpoint. SLMM
investigator Jukka Heiskanen took statements from the three soldiers
on duty, who claimed to have heard nothing. Rejecting the claims
as completely implausible, he told the newsagency: It is
ridiculous. They dont even try to make things up.
Government spokesman Nimal Siripala de Silva told parliament
this week, the government vehemently condemns the recent
killings of civilians in Jaffna, Vavuniya and Avissawella and
will take necessary action to punish the perpetrators. These
comments are also absurd. The military and police have imposed
heavy security in areas under its control in the eastern and northern
war zones, regularly harassing and intimidating Tamils, as well
as carrying out extensive sweeps to detain LTTE suspects.
Yet no one involved in the increasing number of disappearances
and murders has been arrested, let alone charged and punished.
Efforts to convene another round of peace talks in Geneva,
due last month, have stalled. Japans special envoy Yasushi
Akashi spent four days in Sri Lanka this week but failed to convince
the government and the LTTE to return to negotiations. LTTE leader
V. Prabakharan snubbed him during his visit to the LTTE headquarters
in Kilinochchi. Political wing leader S.P. Thamilchelvan told
Akashi the LTTE would not participate until the end of warlike
attacks by the Sri Lanka armed forces.
Akashi speaks on behalf of the Co-Chairs of the so-called Sri
Lankan peace processthe US, Japan, the European Union and
Norway. Increasingly the Co-Chairs have adopted a more menacing
stance toward the LTTE, while praising the Rajapakse government
for its restraint. In comments to the Colombo media, Akashi condemned
the LTTEs April 25 attack on the army headquarters in Colombo,
while appealing to the government only to ensure the armed
forces did not go beyond their responsibilities.
In doing so, the major powers are tacitly allowing the Sri
Lankan government and the military to adopt a more provocative
stance toward the LTTE. Akashi reminded the media that donor countries
were offering a peace dividend of $4.5 billion if
the war was ended. But increasingly the United Peoples Freedom
Alliance (UPFA) government and its Sinhala extremist backers such
as the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) are intent on war. Rajapakses
posturing as a man of peace is in large part aimed at painting
the LTTE as the aggressor and enlisting international support
to militarily crush it.
Last weekend Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera
visited New Delhi for a round of talks with senior Indian leaders,
including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. While publicly calling
on India to tell the LTTE to return to talks, one of the main
purposes of Samaraweeras mission was to urge the Indian
government to sign a defence agreement between the two countries.
In December 2003, military commander General Lionel Balagalle
leaked details of the proposed pact, revealing plans for extensive
military cooperation in areas of intelligence, air support and
joint naval operations that would significantly enhance the Sri
Lankan militarys capacity to defeat the LTTE.
The deal was put on hold after provoking opposition from parties
in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, which are sympathetic
to the LTTE. While the politics of Tamil Nadu remain a factor,
the Indian government is hostile to the LTTE and fears any LTTE
victories would have a destabilising influence on the subcontinent.
Samaraweera reportedly spoke to Indian Defence Minister Pranab
Mukherjee last weekend about the pact, but received no commitment.
While there was no formal agreement, the Indian military is undoubtedly
cooperating with its Sri Lankan counterparts. The Indian press
even indicated yesterday that Indian warships might have appeared
near the scene of Thursdays battle to scare off the LTTE
vessels.
The sham character of Rajapakses public talk of peace
is most clearly exposed by his continuing reliance on the JVP,
which is campaigning for war with the LTTE. JVP parliamentary
leader Wimal Weerawansa told parliament during a recent debate
over the extension of the countrys emergency powers: We
should look at the terrorist challenge. They have already started
Eelam war 4. We have to answer them directly in their language.
All [parties] should get together in this endeavor. There is no
other alternative.
Speaking subsequently to the JVP-aligned Patriotic National
Movement, he declared: As the Tiger organisation has brought
the Sri Lankan motherland to the brink of division and the country
has been drawn into a fourth Eelam war there is no alternative
but defeating them militarily. He criticised the government
for trying to appease the international community
by continuing to speak about a negotiated settlement.
While the Sri Lankan political establishment and the military
are preparing to plunge the country back into a devastating civil
war, the vast majority of the population does not want a renewal
of the conflict that has already cost 65,000 lives. The Socialist
Equality Party (SEP) in Sri Lanka has consistently opposed the
drive to war and politically fought to unite working peopleTamil,
Sinhala and Muslimin an independent movement based on socialist
policies to fight for their class interests. We urge our readers
to carefully consider the issues raised in the statement by SEP
General Secretary Wije Dias entitled A socialist answer
to the danger of war in Sri Lanka issued on March 11.
See Also:
A socialist answer to the
danger of war in Sri Lanka
[11 March 2006]
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