SAMPUR
COAST - An LTTE flag flies atop a cadjan thatched hut along the
coast in Sampur.
Suresh’s
outraged wife reveals LTTE secrets
The Chief Negotiator of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE),
Anton Balasingham last week delivered a strong message to Norwegian
facilitators - Special Envoy Erik Solheim and Ambassador Hans Brattskar.
He
said the LTTE was concerned over the killings in the East and elsewhere
carried out by armed groups, obviously with the assistance of Military
Intelligence units. During a meeting in London, he charged this
was a violation of the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) and will definitely
not be helpful to create a conducive environment for the parties
to recommence the stalled peace process.
"Unless
the Government takes effective measures to end this series of violence
perpetrated on the LTTE, it is hard to imagine how one can seriously
talk about re-commencing peace talks," their official Peace
Secretariat web site quoted Mr. Balasingham as saying.
Both
Mr. Solheim and Mr. Brattskar flew to London to de escalate rising
tensions between the Government and the LTTE. That became their
top priority to ensure the CFA remained intact. This is whilst they
continued their long drawn efforts to persuade the two sides to
return to the negotiating table - a move that no doubt is turning
out to be arduous and time consuming. More so with the two sides
trading allegations and distancing themselves from each other.
Whilst
Mr. Balasingham was articulating LTTE's position in London, some
developments that ran counter to the accusations he was making were
surfacing in Colombo. Those revelations pointed the finger directly
at the LTTE for some of the killings. The targets were helpers and
informants of the Army's Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI).
No
doubt members of the Karuna faction were also gunning down cadres
loyal to the Wanni leadership in a violent campaign that is now
hotting up in the East. Senior officials and military leaders have
denied any formal backing to the Karuna group in their campaign.
The latest to join in was President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga.
She told foreign correspondents on Friday there was no security
forces support. It was the Government's policy not to back one terrorist
group against another, she said. The new disclosures came to light
during ongoing Police investigations into the death of Suresh alias
Tissaveerasingham Surendran. He was shot dead by Tiger guerrilla
hit men on August 28 at Pepiliyana.
Suresh
was a key player in the now defunct Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols
(LRRP) once operated in the East by the DMI. He helped accomplish
vital targets. A Police raid on a Safe House (or a forward intelligence
cell) operated by the DMI, during the tenure of the former United
National Front (UNF) Government betrayed all their covert operations.
Subsequent efforts by UNF leaders to cover up this serious breach
of national security failed. One UNF Cabinet Minister offered DMI
officers attractive cash rewards, promotions and a life of luxury
together with their families in a country of their choice. They,
however, spurned the overtures which were in return for withdrawing
a fundamental rights violation case they had filed in the Supreme
Court.
When
some of the others helping the DMI operatives were tracked and gunned
down by LTTE hit men, Suresh was moved to a rented house in Pepiliyana.
He was earlier operating from Batticaloa. From Pepilyana he had
planned to go abroad to seek employment. He was under specific orders
not to move away from the house lest he be identified by guerrilla
spotters roaming the City of Colombo and suburbs. How then was Suresh
tracked down and killed?
The
answers, The Sunday Times learnt, came in confessions his wife Sivajothi
Sivalingam made to the Police. She was given the LTTE nom de guerre
Jothi. The saga she related would easily be good material for a
book with chapters studded with love, intrigue and espionage.
Jothi
and her two children lived with Suresh but left him and went to
Batticaloa after an altercation. When she was in Pepiliyana she
had regular visitors from the East. Upon her departure, Suresh lived
with Jothi's sister, Rajendran Geethanjali (LTTE nom de guerre Kavitha).
The two fell into Police hands when they arrived in Colombo to claim
the body of Suresh.
Now
Police say Jothi has confessed to having conspired with top rung
Tiger guerrilla cadres to murder Suresh. It seemed she was piqued
by Suresh's affair not only with her sister but also with another
woman. Those made her go out of the way to teach him a lesson.
She
made contact with Ramanan, the Tiger guerrilla intelligence wing
leader for Batticaloa. He in turn was in touch with Keerthi, the
LTTE intelligence boss for the East who reported directly to Pottu
Amman, the spy chief, who directed operations from the Wanni.
Jothi
had first planned to poison Suresh. However, the latter had become
suspicious. This was after he began to feel uncomfortable about
some of the men who visited his home to meet Jothi. Though they
had parted ways, Jothi was still in touch with Suresh. She had talked
to him about making plans for a grand birthday bash for their elder
son on September 28. But Jothi also had other plans that were not
conveyed to Suresh.
If
Suresh's handler in the DMI, a senior officer who played a prominent
role in DMI's LRRP operations in the East, accepted the invitation
to the party, there was going to be additional visitors. That was
in the form of either LTTE hit men armed with pistols or a suicide
bomber. Their task was to kill this DMI officer, one of those who
contributed to the success of their LRRP operations in the East.
He had also, with the help of Suresh, identified or attacked other
targets.
Police
say a more sinister plan was afoot if by some chance the officer
concerned was unable to attend the birthday party. Two "gift
packs" supposed to contain sweetmeats and pieces of birthday
cake were to be delivered to the homes of the officer in question
and to Brigadier Kapila Hendavitharana, Director of Military Intelligence.
The latter has just been named Director General of Military Intelligence
(DGMI). In that capacity he heads the tri service intelligence arms.
In reality the "gift packs" were to contain an improvised
explosive device.
Opening
the pack would have been instant death to the DMI chief and his
top operative. But, plans had been changed ahead of the impending
birthday party. This is believed to be over suspicion that Suresh,
who discouraged the birthday bash, was planning to leave the country.
The task of gunning him down, Jothi had told Police, fell on Mylvaganam
Sivakumar (LTTE nom de guerre Venthan), a notorious guerrilla hit
man responsible for a spate of attacks.
Besides
Suresh, it was Venthan and his hit men who were responsible for
killing DMI informants associated with activities of the safe house
at Athurugiriya. Here is his catalogue:
-
Ganeshamoorthy Tillekerajah alias Samy - Shot dead in Wellawatte
on December 11, 2002.
-
Sivathamby Rajan alias Varathan - Shot dead in Batticaloa on February
4, 2003.
-
Kadirgamathamby Ragupathy alias Ragu - Shot dead in Mount Lavinia
on March 13, 2003.
- Kumaraperumal
Periyamban alias Master - Shot dead in Batticaloa on May 21, 2003.
-
Lance Corporal L. Devaraja alias Ashok - Shot dead in Pepiliyana
on April 26, 2003.
-
Kandiah Yogarasa alias PLOT Mohan - Shot dead at Bambalapitiya
on July 31, 2004.
All
these killings were officially denied by the LTTE. They argued that
killings in controlled areas were a matter for the Government since
security was in their hands. Killings in uncontrolled areas, the
LTTE claimed, were the result of internecine battles within paramilitary
groups. However, Jothi's confessions to the Police have thrown new
light on the killings. The Police findings are to be sent to the
Attorney General once the investigations are concluded.
Special
Envoy Solheim arrives in Colombo on September 13. During talks with
UPFA leaders and Secretary General of the Peace Secretariat, Dr.
Jayantha Dhanapala, he is expected to place the LTTE positions enunciated
by Mr. Balasingham. In turn, the Government is now armed with fresh
evidence to counter some of the LTTE accusations, more pointedly
the involvement of Tiger guerrilla intelligence in the killings
of DMI operatives and informants.
Such
killings had continued after the previous UNF Government failed
to take preventive action. This was after the Police raid at the
Safe House in Athurugiriya led by ASP Kulasiri Udugampola, who was
then a Superintendent of Police. He has since been sent on compulsory
leave by the Police Commission. Disciplinary action was also initiated
against many Army officers named by the Commission. However, some
still continue to have Army drivers, escorts and even transport
facilities unofficially.
President
Kumaratunga appointed a one man Commission of Inquiry to probe "disclosures
of the existence of and the raid on the safe house." The Commissioner
D. Jayawickrema named some Army and Police officers who "have
conspired with Kulasiri Udugampola to raid this Safe House for their
own personal benefits." He held that the country's national
security interests were compromised by this raid.
Even
if UNF leaders tried to play down the existence of the safe house
at Athurugiriya soon after the Police raid, killings of informants
were triggered off by this incident. Such killings related not only
to those directly helping or were informants of the DMI but also
extended to many others including those assisting other Army units
or military installations in the former operational areas of the
North and East.
When
such killings proliferated, then Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe,
appointed a three member Committee to Examine Measures Required
to Enhance the Safety of Informants of the Directorate of Military
Intelligence. It was headed by then Defence Secretary, Austin Fernando
and comprised then Army Commander, Lt. Gen. Lionel Balagalle and
then Defence Advisor, retired DIG Merril Gunaratne. They spelt out
measures necessary to protect those assisting DMI. That action,
despite public denials on the existence of a DMI safe house, was
significant enough.
The
Committee's recommendations included placing informants and helpers
in close proximity to security installations and the issue of weapons.
That is not all. Later, former Defence Secretary Fernando was asked
by the Commission whether he was aware of the existence of the Safe
House. He replied:
"No.
I do not think, and I do not think there is a necessity either,
because this type of operation is so covert that even the Minister
or Secretary need not know, because these are done in such secrecy.
We only know the principles of doing it, but perhaps if a success
takes place we will be told and not written, O.K, Mr. "X"
is gone because of us, and we will not know how it was done, when
it was done or what and what were taken and all that. I do not think
there is any necessity, for the sake of State secrecy the Minister,
the Secretary, the President or the Prime Minister need not know."
Now
there is more shocking news. An investigation ordered by President
Kumaratunga, as a sequel to the Commission's findings, has in their
report made some startling disclosures. A main highlight, supported
by corroborative evidence, is the fact that the Police raid on the
safe house was not an accident or carried out due to lack of awareness.
The probe has revealed that it was in fact a conspiracy where some
high ranking Police officials, with the support of Army officers,
were involved. Among the policemen named is a high ranking officer
now head of an important investigation division.
The
Sunday Times learns that the probe report has now been forwarded
to the Attorney General's Department for action. Upon their advice,
besides indictments against those involved, disciplinary action
is to be initiated against those in the Police who have been identified.
The
ten man team that conducted the investigation was headed by Asoka
Wijetilleke, SSP. It included Neville Guruge, ASP and a team seconded
from the CID. They were made up of three Inspectors, two Sub Inspectors,
a Sergeant Major, a Sergeant and a Woman Police Constable. They
recorded evidence at the Mounted Police Division Headquarters in
Pettah.
These
developments come in the backdrop of a Tiger guerrilla manhunt for
rival cadres and DMI informants in the East, the City of Colombo
and the suburbs. Whilst stepping up the manhunt, the LTTE has also
intensified efforts to regain full military control of the Batticaloa
district. This week a large group led by Akbar had taken full control
of the Vakarai area. A house to house campaign to re enlist cadres
who fled after the Karuna split has also been launched. Their families
had been told that it was the only way they could be protected if
a war was to break out. On Thursday a group of 20 youth had been
enlisted in Sittandy.
If
recruitment was very slow in the Batticaloa distirict, it was going
on at a hectic pace in the Trincomalee district. Tiger guerrilla
cadres were also conducting searches in the Toppigala jungles for
members of the Karuna faction. This is particularly in the backdrop
of the incident near an Army check-point at Kayankerni where two
senior LTTE cadres were killed.
In
south Trincomalee, intelligence sources say, the guerrilla build
up also continues. Larger numbers are being concentrated in the
coastal village of Sampur, which is located cheek by jowl with the
entrance to Trincomalee harbour. According to these sources, the
head of LTTE's artillery wing, Banu and his close associates have
been visiting this area and strengthening encampments there. The
move has led to stepped up vigilance by the Sri Lanka Navy from
their Eastern Command in Trincomalee.
It
was early this week that the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM)
sent the Ministry of Defence and the Peace Secretariat an interim
report on LTTE camps south of Trincomalee - a matter that has been
dealt extensively in these columns. According to Defence Ministry
sources, the SLMM had confirmed the existence of a number of camps
including Manirasakulam (or Kurangu Paanchan Kulam). Their final
report is now being awaited.
With
Norwegian facilitation efforts resuming in Colombo from next week,
the UPFA has to contend with several important issues. One is the
concerns raised by the killing spree of Army informants and the
counter to LTTE accusations that military intelligence was supporting
paramilitary groups opposed to the LTTE.
Another
will be to formulate immediate counter measures to prevent the proliferation
of incidents in the City and suburbs. With direct peace talks long
way off, making sure that the ceasefire, which President Kumaratunga
has conceded is a good thing, remains intact seems a more difficult
task. |