UN rejects calls for Sri Lanka war crimes inquiry


Tamil civilians stand behind a barbed-wire fence in the Manik Farm refugee camp

Tamil civilians stand behind a barbed-wire fence in a refugee camp located on the outskirts of the northern Sri Lankan town of Vavuniya. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

Sri Lanka last night scored a major propaganda coup when the UN human rights council praised its victory over the Tamil Tigers and refused calls to investigate allegations of war crimes by both sides in the final chapter of a bloody 25-year conflict.

In a shock move, which dismayed western nations critical of Sri Lanka's approach, the island's diplomats succeeded in lobbying enough of its south Asian allies to pass a resolution describing the conflict as a "domestic matter that doesn't warrant outside interference".

The Geneva council session, called because of alarm over the high number of civilian casualties as well as the island's treatment of displaced Tamil civilians, also condemned the Tamil Tigers for using ordinary people as human shields.

In another controversial development, it supported the Sri Lankan government's decision to provide aid groups only with "access as may be appropriate" to refugee camps.

The Sri Lankan government denies it was responsible for the death of even one of the 7,000 civilians the UN estimates were killed in the first four months of the year.

Sri Lanka's human rights minister, Mahinda Samarasinghe, said: "This is a strong endorsement of our president's efforts to rout terrorism, and the successful handling of the world's biggest hostage crisis.

"This is a clear message that the international community is behind Sri Lanka."

Amnesty International described the vote as "extremely disappointing" and a "low point for the human rights council", with a spokesperson saying: "It abandons hundreds of thousands of people in Sri Lanka to cynical political considerations."

European countries, along with Canada, Chile and Mexico had backed an investigation into allegations that the Tigers prevented civilians from leaving the densely populated conflict zone, and that government forces used heavy artillery on the area and killed rebels trying to surrender.

They also urged Sri Lanka to open up refugee camps fully to international aid agencies.

The Red Cross and other groups say they remain barred from visiting some camps despite repeated requests for access.

Aid groups want to check on conditions for the hundreds of thousands of civilians displaced by the fighting.

The Red Cross – which usually refrains from publicly criticising governments – complained Sri Lanka had denied it access to the war zone during the final weeks of the conflict.

Sri Lanka's ambassador in Geneva said European nations had failed with a "punitive and mean-spirited agenda" against his country.

"This was a lesson that a handful of countries which depict themselves as the international community do not really constitute the majority," Dayan Jayatilleka told the Associated Press.

"The vast mass of humanity are in support of Sri Lanka."

The UN human rights council has no enforcement power, but countries are generally keen to avoid criticism and the negative attention its resolutions bring.

Expert trashes Prabhakaran’s DNA mapping claim

The Sri Lankan army’s claim on Tuesday that a DNA mapping has already been done on the body of LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran was termed as ‘absurd’ by Indian forensic science expert Dr P Chandrasekharan.

He told The New Indian Express that DNA mapping could be done only if the army had samples of Prabhakaran’s DNA, obtained when he was alive, which was highly improbable.

Besides, the forensic expert who helped CBI’s Special Investigation Team crack the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, said that DNA mapping could not be done in a jiffy and would require a minimum of four days, given the fact there could be no laboratory near the war zone.

After watching the visuals on television, showing soldiers having a close look at the body, Chandrasekharan said that it looked as if Prabhakaran had been shot from point blank range.

Since the top of the head was covered in the visuals, he could not assess the damage to the skull and hence was unable to say what sort of firearm was used.

Asked if Prabhakaran could have shot himself or could have been fired at by the army, he said such details could be ascertained only through a ballistic test.

Keeping this in view, he said the Lankan government should not dispose of the body in a hurry, as Pakistan did with the body of Benazir Bhutto.

Chandrasekharan said ‘the manner of death’ and ‘the cause of death’ would be known only through tests.

Since the LTTE cadre were known to bite into cyanide capsules if cornered, a visceral test would also be required to find out if Prabhakaran had swallowed the poisonous substance before being shot.

Prabhakaran's parents in govt custody: Report

The parents of the now dead Tamil Tigers chief Velupillai Prabhakaran are in the "protective custody" of the Sri Lankan government, a media report said Thursday.
Thiruvenkatam Velupillai (76) and his wife Parvathi (71) surrendered to the army several days ago, The Island newspaper quoted a government official as saying.

They were reportedly among the civilians holed up in the no fire zone along the coast in Mullaitivu district before the army launched its final assault against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Prabhakaran and other LTTE leaders were killed May 18.

"Velupillai and Parvathi were among the early batch of Sri Lankan Tamils to go to India. They settled in Tiruchi," the report said.

They returned to the LTTE zone in northern Sri Lanka in 2003, a year after the Tigers and Colombo signed a Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement. Prabhakaran had fled their home in Jaffna way back in 1972.

Prabhakaran's death and the decimation of the LTTE ended a dragging Tamil separatist conflict that left some 90,000 people dead in Sri Lanka.

I HAVE A DREAM . (With apologies to the Late Martin Luther King)

I have a dream that one day this proud island nation will rise up and live
out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal."

I have a dream that one day on the streets of Hambantota and Mullaitivu,
the sons of Tamils and Sinhalese will be able to sit down freely together
at the table of brotherhood.

I have a dream that one day even the towns of Tissamaharama and Jaffna,
towns now sweltering with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat
of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice.

I have a dream that my children will one day live in this “paradise” nation
where they will not be judged by the language of their choosing or their
ethnicity but by the content of their character.

I have a dream today!

I have a dream that one day, down in the South and up in the North, with
its previous racists, with its local leaders having their lips dripping
with words of themala and Sinhalayaâ -- one day right there in these many
towns, little Tamil boys and Tamil girls will be able to join hands with
little Sinhalese boys and Sinhalese girls as sisters and brothers.

I have a dream today!

I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, and every hill
and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and
the crooked places will be made straight; "and the glory of God shall be
revealed and all flesh shall see it together."

This is our hope, and this is the faith that I return to this island with.

With this faith, we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a
stone of hope. With this faith, we will be able to transform the jangling
discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this
faith, we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle
together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing
that we will be free one day.

And this will be the day -- this will be the day when all of God's children
will sing with new meaning:

My country 'tis of thee, sweet island of liberty, of thee I sing.
Land where my fathers died, land of our forefathers’ pride,
From every mountainside, let freedom ring!
And if Sri Lanka is to be a great nation, this must become true.
And so let freedom ring from the prodigious hilltops of Kandy.
Let freedom ring from the fertile plains in Jaffna.
Let freedom ring from the lovely beaches of Trincomalee.
Let freedom ring from the beautiful landscapes of Nuwara-Eliya.
Let freedom ring from the lagoons in Batticaloa
But not only that:
Let freedom ring from the skyscrapers in Colombo.
Let freedom ring from humble homes in Vavuniya.
Let freedom ring from every hill and anthill of Ratnapura.
From every village, let freedom ring.

And when this happens, when we allow freedom to ring, when we let it ring
from every village and every hamlet, from every town and every city, we
will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children, Sinhalese,
Tamils, Muslims, Burghers, Malays, will be able to join hands and sing in
the words of the old spiritual:

Free at last! Free at last!
Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!

LIKE WE WERE WHEN WE WERE KIDS IN SUNNY LANKA

A Canadian speaks out what most foreigners think....

The writer of this is a man who is dedicated to the wild life of Sri Lanka
CBS News Canada


If you are a Tamil and wish to continue this war then that is your right. You only have one option and that is to return to Sri Lanka. You cannot fight this battle from Canada. The reason is simple and obvious. This is not Canada's war. This is a civil war that has absolutely nothing to do with Canada. Canada and Canadians want nothing to do with this war other than to assist on a humanitarian front. What Canada and Canadians could do for the poor people in your country we have done.

Canadians are deeply saddened by the loss of your family members and friends. We realize that all contact has been lost and you are all in the excruciating position of not knowing their whereabouts or if they are injured or dead or alive. This is a catastrophe for you and Canadians appreciate that and wish it otherwise. We all want aid organizations and journalists admitted into the war zone and have asked for same. Your civil war is apparently now over and I am sure very soon the information you so badly need and deserve with be forthcoming.

That being said there are Tamils that seem to want more from Canada. One man stated, 'the only solution is a separate homeland.' So then why are you here? Really, the only point that I can see in your remaining in Canada is to disrupt our country. Canadians eyes are open and we see your terrorist organization, the Tamil Tigers are operating openly, and illegally in this country. There appears to be strong support among the Tamil people who have come to Canada, particularly in Toronto. Tamils here in Canada keep referring to their 'homeland' in Sri Lanka' and that you want your own country there. No problem - GO. You are not being held captive in Canada and you may at any time leave here in the same manner as you arrived.

Norway.....pro LTTE? Read and decide for youself

Lion, Tiger and lies
Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Too many loose ends in Lankan army's version of Prabhakaran's death

By Anita Pratap reporting from Norway

Precisely because he is many things to many people, LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran’s death has been greeted with joy by the Sinhalese, grief by his Tamil supporters, and relief by many who hope his death will bring peace to beleaguered Sri Lanka.

But is he really dead? Speculation is rife only because journalists are not allowed in, and independent verification is impossible. I was sceptical of the first report, which said he was killed while fleeing the war zone in an ambulance. No way. Prabhakaran would not do something so idiotic. Remember, the Sri Lankan army told us that Prabhakaran and his cadres were surrounded in a tiny patch of land, less than 1 sq.km. The area was so small and so well surrounded that anyone coming out on a bicycle would be spotted and stopped. So logically, what chance would an ambulance have of sprinting past unnoticed? If he had to flee from such a tiny war zone, he would have scurried out through an underground tunnel.

And then came the picture of Prabhakaran’s corpse. The first question: if he was killed in an ambulance, how come his body was discovered in a lagoon? The picture looked fake. Top of the head was blown off, but the face was clear and the eyes wide open. Prabhakaran’s most distinguishing feature are his eyes, which seemed artificially wide, as if someone was trying to prove it was indeed him by grabbing attention to his eyes. It reminded me of the front-page picture of the terrorist killed in a shootout in Ansal Plaza in New Delhi a few years ago. I had said then that I found it hard to believe that the terrorist had died that way with the gun in his hand. I have seen innumerable civilians, soldiers and guerrillas lying dead in battlefields. They don’t look like this. I instinctively felt the picture was stage-managed. Forensically, I did not see how it was possible that a guy involved in a massive shootout could die so perfectly posed. Subsequent investigations reinforced these doubts.

That is the same feeling I had when I saw the picture of Prabhakaran’s corpse. Far from setting my doubts to rest, the picture convinced me that something was fishy. The initial version was that soldiers had “shelled” the ambulance, which caught fire and was destroyed. If you pummel an ambulance with artillery shells or rocket propelled grenades, it will explode. So, if Prabhakaran were inside, his body would have been blown to bits. At the very least, charred. And when his dog tags and identity cards surfaced, the whole thing seemed even more of a set-up. Besides, Karuna’s and Daya Master’s identification of Prabhakaran’s body has as much credibility as a confession extracted in police custody.

I am not saying that I know for sure Prabhakaran is alive. What I am saying is that this version of his death does not ring true.
I have said before that Prabhakaran will never be captured alive. But there is one more thing I would add. If he knew there was no way out, he would not only have killed himself but have made sure his body was not found. There are two reasons for this. One, he is a keen student of military history and knows if his body were found, it would be desecrated by the victorious Sinhalese soldiers. All triumphant soldiers have done this through history. I can still vividly recall the dead Afghan leader Najibullah hanging from a Kabul lamp-post, cigarette stuffed in his nose, body bloated and beaten black and blue by the victorious Taliban. I have seen videos of dead female LTTE soldiers being stripped naked and paraded by gleeful Sinhalese soldiers.

Many detest him, but one must understand Prabhakaran’s psyche. He is an extraordinarily proud man, one who believes he is fighting to restore the honour and glory of the Tamils. There is simply no way he will allow himself to be desecrated and bring eternal shame and dishonour to his people. So not only will he swallow his cyanide, have his bodyguard shoot him to make his death doubly sure, but he will ensure that his body is blasted to bits, so that no corpse ever surfaces.

That brings me to the second reason why he would ensure his body was never found if he had to commit suicide to evade capture. Remember, one of his favourite heroes is Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. Even today, there are people who believe that Bose is still alive. The mystery and the mystique remain. If Prabhakaran’s body is never found, no one can be sure whether he is really dead or alive and the conspiracy theories will spin forever—keeping him alive in people’s imagination. Purpose served, especially if he is dead.

I do not rule out Prabhakaran’s death. I don’t think he was killed, more likely he took his own life. If I were to pick a day that he decided to commit suicide with his top cadres, it would be May 16.
In my last article published a month ago in THE WEEK (Crouching Tiger, May 3) on what I expected Prabhakaran’s next move to be, I had written, “He will be watching the Indian elections closely to see which dispensation takes charge in New Delhi. He will be watching to see if there is a popular upsurge of support in Tamil Nadu for the plight of Tamils across the Palk Strait. …He will be watching President Barack Obama who rightly analysed that conflicts stem from our perception of the other.”

On May 13, referring to the “desperate, humanitarian crisis” in Sri Lanka, Obama urged the Tigers to “lay down their arms” and the government to stop the “indiscriminate shelling that has taken hundreds of innocent lives”. Tiger spokespersons said they were willing to accede to Obama’s request, but the Sri Lankan government refused to slacken or halt the final onslaught to wrest the last piece of land from Prabhakaran’s grip. On May 16, the Indian election results came out and contrary to media punditry, the Congress made a resounding comeback. That spelt doom for Prabhakaran: his implacable foes will remain in power for another five years. Instead of an upsurge in Tamil Nadu, staunch LTTE supporters like Vaiko were routed. Prabhakaran has been waging this battle alone for the last three years and he knows what it has cost him—his cadres, the Tamils civilians and the diaspora. It has been truly horrific. Surviving another five years of this isolation with a hostile Congress establishment at the helm in India and an impotent international community is very hard. Getting Eelam in the near future in such hostile international circumstances is impossible.

In the past, after he was routed, Prabhakaran started all over again from scratch. That is why I had said I could envision him continuing the war. But with Congress’s victory, Tamil Nadu’s political defeat and adamancy of the Sri Lankan state to disregard even the American president, I can see why he saw the futility of continuing his struggle, deciding then to fight unto death.

In his introduction to an absolute must-read 1964 book, The World of Yesterday by Austrian author Stefan Zweig, Harry Zohn talks about the three times that Zweig had to start his life all over, caught up as he was between the two world wars. Writes Zohn: “Too exhausted to start a fourth, Zweig took his life in Brazil soon after completing his autobiography, at a time when the prospects for the realisation of all that he had ever striven for looked particularly bleak.” Zweig and Prabhakaran are complete opposites. But this, I think, sums up Prabhakaran’s mood on May 16. What lends some credence to my theory is that several members of the Tamil diaspora said they began getting calls from their LTTE contacts in Vanni, tearfully bidding farewell. That most of the top rung of the LTTE’s military wing are dead, points to mass suicide.

A war crime? The death of Charles Anthony, Prabhakaran's son, raises questions

Rumours began circulating in the blogosphere on May 16 that Prabhakaran and 300 of his top cadres had committed mass suicide and blown themselves up. In fact, Sri Lanka’s army website posted an item at 17:51 on May 17 from the battlefront: “Self-ignited LTTE explosions [were] heard and witnessed in close vicinity. Likelihood of Tigers committing suicide en masse or burning of LTTE assets on their own has not been ruled out.” Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa announced victory and end of war. On May 17 afternoon, the LTTE, issued a statement: “This battle has reached its bitter end. We remain with one last choice—to remove the last weak excuse of the enemy for killing our people. We have decided to silence our guns.” The statement blamed the silence of the international community, the impunity with which the Sri Lankan government ignored urgent appeals, used words like “desperate” and “saddened”, referred to “bitter end” twice. And added: “Against all odds, we have held back the advancing Sinhalese forces, without help or support…. Our only regrets are for the lives lost and that we could not hold out any longer.” It reads like a suicide note.

For an even more absurd reason, I am inclined to believe that he could have committed suicide on May 17. Prabhakaran was very superstitious and once confessed to me that the number 8 is very unlucky for him—even though he is born on November 26. So he never undertook major offensives on 8th, 17th and 26th of a month. I reported that. And the Sri Lankan army took it easy on those days. But Charles Anthony, his son, couldn’t care less about superstition. Many of the operations he commanded were on 26th, precisely to surprise the army. On April 26, 2006, an LTTE suicide bomber tried in vain to assassinate Sri Lankan army commander, Sarath Fonseka, who since then became Prabhakaran’s mortal enemy. From this superstitious perspective, it is perhaps not a coincidence that the likely date of Prabhakaran’s suicide is May 17. When Prabhakaran told me about his superstition regarding numbers, I read Cheiro. According to Cheiro, people born with the birth number 8 are destined for great successes and great failures! If he has indeed committed suicide, this prediction certainly rings true for him!

On May 18 at 3 a.m. Vanni time, the LTTE political chief B. Nadesan and its peace secretariat director Puleedevan telephoned their European contacts requesting them to ask the ICRC to evacuate about 1,000 of their wounded cadres and LTTE’s civil officials. But a few hours later, the Sri Lankan defence ministry claimed they had found the dead bodies of Nadesan, Puleedevan and Anthony. The LTTE accused the Sri Lankan government of “treachery”. Their version is that their international contacts told them that arrangements had been made with the Sri Lankan military to discuss “an orderly end to the war”. So as instructed, Nadesan and Puleedevan, unarmed and carrying white flags, contacted the 58 division of the Sri Lankan troops operating nearby. But they were shot and killed. If this is true, under international conventions, this would be a war crime. The number of dead bodies shown on Sri Lankan websites indicates that this war on terror ended with a bloody massacre.

Sri Lankan army released pictures of Anthony’s corpse on May 18. Up until then, they had been releasing old pictures of a bulky Anthony in battle fatigues looking at the camera sulkily. But now two photos were released—one in which he is alive and the other his corpse. The strange thing is in both pictures he is wearing the same blue shirt. The explanation then could be that he, with Nadesan and Puleedevan, had gone dressed in civilian clothes with white flags to the 58 division. Pictures were taken, where he looks clean-shaven, relaxed and neat. And then something went wrong and a massacre followed some time later (the dead Anthony’s face has stubble). All Tiger fighters wear combat fatigues, so if he was fighting, Anthony should have been wearing battle dress. But the army’s version is that Anthony and others arrived dressed in civilian clothes on what was a suicide mission. But then that doesn’t explain the picture of Anthony alive.

Intriguingly, it took another whole day before the government released the picture of Prabhakaran’s dead body. If Prabhakaran did indeed blow himself up along with his top cadres, then there can be no body to parade. In which case, the Sri Lankan government came up with a Prabhakaran “double”. How weird is that? But the answer could be simple—the army was under pressure to show a dead body as proof. No one will believe otherwise that Prabhakaran is dead. If the Sri Lankan military has evidence that Prabhakaran did indeed blast himself, then they can be certain he will not surface to dispute their claim. On May 20, Sri Lanka’s defence ministry website carried a bizarre announcement: “We are not going to comment on how he died.”

But the story gets more curious. The LTTE is silent about Anthony, but has issued a statement that Prabhakaran is alive and safe. But few believe the LTTE, so rumours are now rife that Prabhakaran will give a television interview to prove he is alive. That will be a bombshell if it happens, suggesting he had waged an elaborate war of deception, complete with his own “double”. Any move he makes will be picked up by the Sri Lankan intelligence. But that is if he is alive. A Sinhalese blogger said: “He is alive and well—in hell.

But all these conspiracy theories can be quelled. The international community can force Sri Lanka to share the DNA tests done on Prabhakaran and Anthony and verify if they match Prabhakaran’s sisters’ who live in Canada and Europe. If they match, all speculation can be put to rest. India and the four co-chairs—the United States, Europe, Japan and Norway—should insist on this

Sri Lanka refused to be bullied by the West

Thursday, May 28, 2009

By Philip Fernando in Los Angeles

As successive U S ambassadors to Colombo hemmed and hawed loosing sight of Sri Lanka’s geo-strategic importance, foreign aid component from US to Sri Lanka also dwindled drastically. So they switched from baiting to bullying using the moth-eaten argument “humanitarian intervention in the internal affairs,” as a weapon of persuasion. That too failed as Sri Lanka refused to be bullied.

The measly $ 7.4 million aid package last year to Sri Lanka is fiddle sticks—said one observer--that bait is not enough even to catch a handful of smelts in the Indian Ocean. The prized possession for naval supremacy in the East is now with China and India, who are now riding the seas east of Suez in style. The West has shown an incapacitated mind-set unable to think beyond the mundane denunciations and name calling.

Thus a resounding victory was won by Sri Lanka in repulsing the sinister attempt by the West to punish a country who just won a great victory against the Tigers: it was former U S ambassador to Sri Lanka who felt that the war against Tigers was unwinnable. Sri Lanka's strategic importance was ignored by the western powers. China, India and many Asian countries are now solidly behind Sri Lanka.

USA also lost the battle to pressurize Sri Lanka into a submissive adherence to the global outreach of the West. In contrast, Russia, China and India have a common interest insofar as they oppose the doctrine of "humanitarian intervention" in sovereign states-the hobby horse of Hillary Clinton and David Miliband. China and India have been harshly treated in the past on the human-rights issue and have extended mutual support to Sri Lanka in warding off western pressure. The bullying by the West will never work, said a seasoned analyst after West’s debacle in Geneva.

Sri Lanka had the support of many who felt the need to keep the intervention of the West away from their shores. The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions on human rights paved the way for the harassed countries to show their muscle and ward off Western bullying. Geopolitics and common sense took precedence over everything else.

Over 70 percent of world’s petroleum plies via the Indian Ocean. Fifty percent of the container traffic is also through that route. Policy makers in the West were more interested in keeping their control of the financial outlays going to their favorite lackeys. IMF loans were their prying weapons. They have not thought seriously about the “mundane’ affairs of international navigation. They paid the price when China and India usurped their supremacy with solid moves that spoke of a long-term ascendancy of their strategic presence. The West lost a major slice of control.

The UNHRC session that was expected to precede a Kangaroo court on Sri Lankan war crimes ended with a whimper as the sponsors of the resolution to initiate folded. Sri Lanka stole the thunder with a counter resolution titled “Assistance to Sri Lanka in the promotion and Protection of Human Rights,” commending Sri Lanka for its victory over terrorism and soliciting funding from a grateful international community. The 12 co-sponsors of the Sri Lankan resolution include China, India, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Cuba Nicaragua and Bolivia. Sri Lanka won the day.

Whether Clinton, Miliband and Kouchner! The writing on the wall for Tiger proxies who rushed to force a ceasefire on Sri Lanka during the waning hours of the war against the Tigers had to do a hasty retreat. They lots gaian in Geneva. Their track record is looking more dismal by the hour.

No more tears for Tamils...A MUST TO READ

Wednesday, May 27, 2009 Leave a Comment

By Dr. Noel Nadesan

(May 28, Melbourne, Sri Lanka Guardian)

The Sri Lankan President, Mahinda Rajapaksa, deserves the congratulations of all Sir Lankan regardless of their ethnicity. More than any other community, the Sri Lankan Tamils owe him their thanks for ending their misery. As every body knows Tamils in Sri Lanka were under the delusion of Tamil Eelam. His victory should at last cure this mental illness of the Tamils. Sri Lanka has at last found the leader who can act above the pressures of communal forces that had beveled Sri Lankan politics for the last 60 years.

President Rajapaksa arrived on the political scene at a time when all the communities were sick of this war. All communities wanted an end to the futile war. He arrived at the correct time to win the backing of all peace-loving people.

His political leadership was strengthened by his brothers Basil Rajapaksa who played a key role in the political field and Gotabaya Rajapaksa in the military field. He was ably assisted by a talented military commander, Gen. Sarath Fonseka. This is the first time in last thirty years political leadership did not interfere in military matters. Nor did they use military successes to their political advantage though the advantages fell into their lap automatically. .

LTTE performed pathetically by rejecting Norway mediation, demanding parity of status with the Sri Lankan government and by sending imbeciles for the negotiation with Sri Lankan government. A look at the list of the Tamil negotiators made it clear to me that LTTE was not interested in negotiating peace. Most of them are from Australia where I live. I will not even send them even to buy a packet of cigarettes from the corner shop, let alone bargaining for Eelam. Prabakaran dream was shattered when the Eastern commander Karuna split with the Wanni leadership on genuine grievances. Predictably LTTE leadership sent a team to kill him so. He had no option but to defect to the government.

LTTE killed the Sri Lankan foreign minister Lakshman Kadirgamar during the ceasefire with Sri Lanka. The government maintained commendable restraint. LTTE, however, overstepped its mark when it attempted to assassinate the military commander. War was inevitable as LTTE increased tensions and violence.

In Mavil Aru and Mutur, LTTE gave legitimate reasons for the Sri Lankan government to counter-attack which ended on the beaches of the Jaffna lagoon. These are some reasons that led to Eelam War IV. But there are also deeper and intrinsically ingrained reasons for the war. It is little known that Veluppilai Prapaharan’s personality was not conducive for peace. He revealed his sadistic tendencies from a young age. As a young boy he was given to killing garden lizards and birds with his catapult. He is a school drop out who quit school at the age of 10. It was during this time that the Jaffna student agitated on the language issue and admission to university. Prabhakaran was engaged more in internal and personal power struggles even during this time killing his opponents. In 1979 April he killed his comrade-in-arms, called Suthumali Pattkunam, when he was fast asleep. By this time he was addicted to killing. The internecine warfare among Tamil militants began in the seventies. All these happed before 1983. We cannot blame the Sri Lankan government or Sinhala community for the crimes committed by Tamil militants. . Tamils were killed even for petty thefts. Early in 1982, when I was passing Columbagam and Kachcheri Road in Jaffna, I saw the body of one petty thief left to rot on the road. I was told that he was killed by Tigers and he was left there as a lesson for others. This is the first time I realized that Jaffna was breeding a fascist outfit. What most do not know is that he was born with sadism in his bones. As a young boy he was once playing marbles with another young Tamil boy. He soon found that he was losing to his friend. Angered by this he took a stick and poked in his friend’s eyes, blinding him forever. That is Prabahakaran.

That cruelty turned me off the LTTE. I also made it a point to study his tactics more closely. His cruelty was also predictable. But it is sad to note that his fascist cult attracted many intelligent people. And some of them even became victims of his fascist cult.

When I was in India helping refugees during 84-87, I had opportunity to learn more about him.I had the opportunity to listen to his order to liquidate TELO issued through the wireless set up in Chennai. I was also getting first hand information about LTTE massacring other Tamils in Kanthankarunai in Nallur. After I received the news of the massacre news, I felt sick in my stomach. I can still remember the feeling even after 22 years...

After coming to Australia I was disappointed that the Sri Lankan governments allowed it to be hoodwinked by the Tigers. My fellows Tamils too supported this “pathological serial killer” (Prof. James Jupp) in the name of Tamil Rights. .

Tragically, some Tamil writers and NGO groups built a halo around him and created the myth of Prabahakaran as a mighty warrior. He basically used expatriates’ money and Jaffna Tamils ingenuity to build a human fortress around himself, using Tamil civilians as stones for his walls.. Interesting thing is he believed in his invincibility. He had a grand ride until the Sri Lankan army commander Sarath Fonseka took him on. His determined effort to continue the war relentlessly until the Tiger outfit is crushed has paid dividends. He has liberated not only Sri Lanka but also Tamil community at last.

(Dr. Nadesan is the Editor of UTHAYAM, the Tamil community newspaper in Australia. He led the recent delegation of Tamil expatriates to open a dialogue with the Govt.of Sri Lanka)