Thursday, July 19, 2007
Army finds LTTE Multi-Barrel at Thoppigala
Troops conducting search operations in the Thoppigala jungle have found a Multi Barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL) of the LTTE terrorists in the Omunugala area at around 12:00 noon, today ( July 18).
The MBRL is one of the important items of heavy armour of the LTTE terrorists, and had been used against both troops and civilians.
According to Defence sources in the East, the troops had dug up the MBRL which was found dumped at a location close Omunugala, West of Narakamula. This is a part of the heavy armour the LTTE had abandoned when it fled the Thoppigala jungle as troops moved in for the final assault on Baron's Cap.
The LTTE terrorists had damaged some of heavy armour and vehicles they left behind as they fled Thoppigala. It is believed that some more heavy guns of the terrorists could be lying hidden in the jungle terrain of Thoppigala. More search operations will be under way to recover these.
The troops made today's find amid the campaign by certain political elements in the South to bring disgrace to the soldiers who won an important victory against the terrorists in the Eastern province. Some of these politicians have even gone to the extent of insulting the soldiers by raising ill-informed questions about the fate of the LTTE's arsenal in Thoppigala.
(http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=20070718_06)
Make or break? Osprey prepares for first operational deployment
If all runs according to plan, September 2007 should see the maiden operational deployment of the Bell-Boeing MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft. Responsibility will be entrusted to US Marine Corps (USMC) Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 263 (VMM-263), which is to vacate the security and sanctuary of its home base at MCAS New River, North Carolina, for the rather more spartan and considerably more hostile surroundings of Al Asad, Iraq.
This event has been a long time coming, with the development history of the V-22 Osprey spanning more than two decades, during which it has endured more than its fair share of trials and tribulations, as well as some moments of tragedy. Even today, with operational introduction imminent, the Osprey tiltrotor continues to generate controversy, opponents arguing vehemently that it should be scrapped on grounds of safety and unsuitability while supporters are no less forthcoming in singing its praises.
As always, the truth probably lies somewhere between these two extremes and while it may not be 'make or break' for the MV-22, it is clear that the next few months will provide an acid test for both the personnel and equipment of VMM-263, with those on opposing sides of the debate looking for 'ammunition' to support their arguments and terminate the debate once and for all.
The subject of this debate has not exactly enjoyed the smoothest development history since it originated as the Joint Service Advanced Vertical Lift Aircraft (JVX) back in Fiscal Year 1982 (FY82). At that time, it was anticipated that at least 900 examples of the chosen design would be produced for all branches of the US armed forces and management of the JVX programme was initially a US Army responsibility.
However, US Army interest soon waned, with overall control of the programme passing to the US Navy (USN) in January 1983, shortly before award of a preliminary design contract in late April of the same year. This was followed by a seven-year Full Scale Development (FSD) contract on 2 May 1986, by which time the JVX proposal had evolved into the V-22 Osprey, as a joint venture between Bell and Boeing.
First flown in prototype form on 19 March 1989, the V-22 showed significant promise from the outset, but the programme soon encountered difficulties, foremost among them being an attempt at cancellation in December 1989. On this occasion, the US Congress came to the rescue when it elected to restore funding to the programme, but further troubles followed, with one of the five flying prototypes being destroyed on its maiden flight in June 1991 as a direct result of the miswiring of key avionics systems. Worse followed in July 1992 when another prototype was destroyed after one of the nacelles caught fire, resulting in loss of control with fatal consequences for the seven occupants.
Despite these setbacks, work on the programme continued to make slow but steady progress throughout the remainder of the decade, culminating in a successful maiden flight by the first production example of the MV-22B on 30 April 1999 and formal acceptance of this aircraft by the USMC on 14 May. Trials with this and other early production examples appeared to be going well, despite another unfortunately fatal accident in April 2000, this time involving the fourth LRIP (low-rate initial production) MV-22B. This was induced by the so-called vortex ring state, a phenomenon peculiar to helicopters, whereby recirculating air from rotor downwash makes it difficult to check the rate of descent.
Changes to operating techniques did much to alleviate the problem and allowed the grounding order imposed on 8 April to be lifted six weeks later, on 25 May. Since then, provision of a sink-rate warning system providing audible and visual indications of a potentially hazardous flight condition have also been incorporated as part of the measures aimed at addressing this problem.
The MV-22 was nevertheless moving closer to achieving operational status, with a recommendation that it be adopted for fleet service being made on 8 November 2000, while authorisation to proceed with full-rate production was expected to be granted before the end of the year. Not surprisingly, confidence was undoubtedly high but was to experience a severe knock when the eighth LRIP Osprey was involved in an accident near New River in December 2000. On this occasion, the problem was far more serious, originating with failure of a hydraulic line and compounded by problems encountered with the flight-control system that ultimately induced a stall and subsequent fatal crash.
An immediate grounding order was imposed and the future of the programme appeared in grave doubt for the next year, while various studies were undertaken. In December 2001, however, it was decided to continue and following modification of a handful of aircraft, flight testing eventually resumed with the fourth EMD example on 29 May 2002.
Five years on, that decision looks set to be vindicated with a key milestone being passed on 13 June 2007 with achievement of initial operational capability (IOC). This effectively means that both the MV-22B and VMM-263 are perceived as ready to undertake expeditionary operations alongside other Marine aviation elements.
(http://www.janes.com/news/defence/naval/idr/idr070713_1_n.shtml)
This event has been a long time coming, with the development history of the V-22 Osprey spanning more than two decades, during which it has endured more than its fair share of trials and tribulations, as well as some moments of tragedy. Even today, with operational introduction imminent, the Osprey tiltrotor continues to generate controversy, opponents arguing vehemently that it should be scrapped on grounds of safety and unsuitability while supporters are no less forthcoming in singing its praises.
As always, the truth probably lies somewhere between these two extremes and while it may not be 'make or break' for the MV-22, it is clear that the next few months will provide an acid test for both the personnel and equipment of VMM-263, with those on opposing sides of the debate looking for 'ammunition' to support their arguments and terminate the debate once and for all.
The subject of this debate has not exactly enjoyed the smoothest development history since it originated as the Joint Service Advanced Vertical Lift Aircraft (JVX) back in Fiscal Year 1982 (FY82). At that time, it was anticipated that at least 900 examples of the chosen design would be produced for all branches of the US armed forces and management of the JVX programme was initially a US Army responsibility.
However, US Army interest soon waned, with overall control of the programme passing to the US Navy (USN) in January 1983, shortly before award of a preliminary design contract in late April of the same year. This was followed by a seven-year Full Scale Development (FSD) contract on 2 May 1986, by which time the JVX proposal had evolved into the V-22 Osprey, as a joint venture between Bell and Boeing.
First flown in prototype form on 19 March 1989, the V-22 showed significant promise from the outset, but the programme soon encountered difficulties, foremost among them being an attempt at cancellation in December 1989. On this occasion, the US Congress came to the rescue when it elected to restore funding to the programme, but further troubles followed, with one of the five flying prototypes being destroyed on its maiden flight in June 1991 as a direct result of the miswiring of key avionics systems. Worse followed in July 1992 when another prototype was destroyed after one of the nacelles caught fire, resulting in loss of control with fatal consequences for the seven occupants.
Despite these setbacks, work on the programme continued to make slow but steady progress throughout the remainder of the decade, culminating in a successful maiden flight by the first production example of the MV-22B on 30 April 1999 and formal acceptance of this aircraft by the USMC on 14 May. Trials with this and other early production examples appeared to be going well, despite another unfortunately fatal accident in April 2000, this time involving the fourth LRIP (low-rate initial production) MV-22B. This was induced by the so-called vortex ring state, a phenomenon peculiar to helicopters, whereby recirculating air from rotor downwash makes it difficult to check the rate of descent.
Changes to operating techniques did much to alleviate the problem and allowed the grounding order imposed on 8 April to be lifted six weeks later, on 25 May. Since then, provision of a sink-rate warning system providing audible and visual indications of a potentially hazardous flight condition have also been incorporated as part of the measures aimed at addressing this problem.
The MV-22 was nevertheless moving closer to achieving operational status, with a recommendation that it be adopted for fleet service being made on 8 November 2000, while authorisation to proceed with full-rate production was expected to be granted before the end of the year. Not surprisingly, confidence was undoubtedly high but was to experience a severe knock when the eighth LRIP Osprey was involved in an accident near New River in December 2000. On this occasion, the problem was far more serious, originating with failure of a hydraulic line and compounded by problems encountered with the flight-control system that ultimately induced a stall and subsequent fatal crash.
An immediate grounding order was imposed and the future of the programme appeared in grave doubt for the next year, while various studies were undertaken. In December 2001, however, it was decided to continue and following modification of a handful of aircraft, flight testing eventually resumed with the fourth EMD example on 29 May 2002.
Five years on, that decision looks set to be vindicated with a key milestone being passed on 13 June 2007 with achievement of initial operational capability (IOC). This effectively means that both the MV-22B and VMM-263 are perceived as ready to undertake expeditionary operations alongside other Marine aviation elements.
(http://www.janes.com/news/defence/naval/idr/idr070713_1_n.shtml)
USD200 million profit margins maintain sophisticated Tamil Tiger war
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has created one of the most sophisticated insurgencies in the world, largely due to a complex global network of financial resources and weapons that are integral to prolonging its campaign for a separate Tamil state in Sri Lanka.
In a unique report on the financial operations of the LTTE, Jane’s Intelligence Review reports that with financial and procurement structures well organised and strategically positioned around the globe, the group has a profit margin that would be the envy of any multinational corporation – some USD200 to 300 million per year.
The Tamil Tigers is consequently the only known insurgent organisation with its own army, navy and now even a rudimentary air force, with access to financial resources and weapons giving it the luxury of introducing bold, new dimensions to the conflict.
The report details two overarching financial and procurement bodies that provide the main source of LTTE money, manpower and weapons; the Aiyanna Group and the Office of Overseas Purchases (nicknamed the KP Department).
The Aiyanna Group functions as the group’s intelligence and operations body, likely to be responsible for monitoring and ensuring the organisation’s financial support and revenue streams, while the KP Department is most probably the LTTE’s procurement arm.
In addition, the LTTE creates and staffs some charitable organisations, projecting its influence through this front to raise money from Tamil communities and, ultimately, convert the gains into arms.
The Jane’s Intelligence Review report says that the system works as an efficient way to move funds wherever investment or procurement opportunities arise while utilising a charitable façade’s tax-free status and legitimacy.
Geographically, the LTTE use a myriad of methods to maintain this formidable, non-state support structure. The southern province of Tamil Nadu in India plays a pivotal role in LTTE procurement and has become an essential transit point in the LTTE arms, narcotics, contraband and possibly human smuggling.
Beyond Sri Lanka’s neighbour, Cambodia is one of the most significant single sources of weapons for the insurgent group. The remainder of internationally procured weapons are believed to originate from the rest of Southeast Asia, North Korea, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Cyprus, Greece, Turkey and Ukraine.
The report adds that the procurement of anti-aircraft technology, given the destruction wrought by the Sri Lankan Armed Forces' aerial assets, will be the primary driver of the LTTE’s continued international fundraising campaign.
(http://www.janes.com/press/press/pc070719_1.shtml)
In a unique report on the financial operations of the LTTE, Jane’s Intelligence Review reports that with financial and procurement structures well organised and strategically positioned around the globe, the group has a profit margin that would be the envy of any multinational corporation – some USD200 to 300 million per year.
The Tamil Tigers is consequently the only known insurgent organisation with its own army, navy and now even a rudimentary air force, with access to financial resources and weapons giving it the luxury of introducing bold, new dimensions to the conflict.
The report details two overarching financial and procurement bodies that provide the main source of LTTE money, manpower and weapons; the Aiyanna Group and the Office of Overseas Purchases (nicknamed the KP Department).
The Aiyanna Group functions as the group’s intelligence and operations body, likely to be responsible for monitoring and ensuring the organisation’s financial support and revenue streams, while the KP Department is most probably the LTTE’s procurement arm.
In addition, the LTTE creates and staffs some charitable organisations, projecting its influence through this front to raise money from Tamil communities and, ultimately, convert the gains into arms.
The Jane’s Intelligence Review report says that the system works as an efficient way to move funds wherever investment or procurement opportunities arise while utilising a charitable façade’s tax-free status and legitimacy.
Geographically, the LTTE use a myriad of methods to maintain this formidable, non-state support structure. The southern province of Tamil Nadu in India plays a pivotal role in LTTE procurement and has become an essential transit point in the LTTE arms, narcotics, contraband and possibly human smuggling.
Beyond Sri Lanka’s neighbour, Cambodia is one of the most significant single sources of weapons for the insurgent group. The remainder of internationally procured weapons are believed to originate from the rest of Southeast Asia, North Korea, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Cyprus, Greece, Turkey and Ukraine.
The report adds that the procurement of anti-aircraft technology, given the destruction wrought by the Sri Lankan Armed Forces' aerial assets, will be the primary driver of the LTTE’s continued international fundraising campaign.
(http://www.janes.com/press/press/pc070719_1.shtml)
Reverberations of the Thoppigala Liberation - How it Silenced the International Interferers
There are wide ranging aftershocks of this historical victory. One reason why the East is more important for the LTTE than Wanni is that it frustrates potential attempts by the international community to intervene in SL with a forced solution. This needs further elaboration as it is one of the most strategic repercussions of the Thoppigala affair cunningly avoided by the UNP controlled media and the foreign media.
When the doomed CFA (Cease Fire Agreement) was singed in 2002, the two parties had to accept the ‘de facto’ ‘line of control’. Each party had to, thereafter, honour each others’ ‘line of control’. While the LTTE always tried to expand their terror network, the Sri Lankan government gave up the administration of justice. The starting point was therefore the most important thing and the LTTE rapidly expanded their eastern front from December 2001 to end February 2002 in time for the CFA. Even when the CFA was being singed, there were clashes in the Eastern waters between the terrorists and the Navy.
What would happen if a similar endeavour is made now? The LTTE will never accept the new ‘line of control’ which comprises only the land area from Omanthai to Muhamalai and not a square inch in the East. First thing they would do is to grab a chuck of the East before such a ‘ceasefire’ comes into being. That means the attempt would hit an impasse at the inception. On the other hand, if the LTTE is prevented from recapturing the East, they will not come for this new ‘ceasefire’. There is a third option. It would be to follow the same strategy as they did after the 2002 agreement; to wage a one-sided war. However, it is going to be almost impossible to do it without violating the ‘agreement’. There are no further options available to the LTTE. LTTE must accept the same fate as Jaffna for the East.
For these reasons, the international community would be very reluctant to interfere. The only way they can interfere is by reinforcing the ramshackled 2002 CFA agreement. Such an attempt would spark court cases that will annul the illegal CFA. The attempt of the international community to tighten the ‘peace’ screws on Sri Lanka has failed. Any new attempt would hurt the LTTE and not the GoSL as it is disadvantageous to them.
The results are silent, but clear and immediate.co-chairs went silent with their attempted engagement
appeals to the UN, etc. by various Elamists stopped abruptly the British attempt to interfere with the conflict stopped on the track Indian interest in interfering also stopped.
Silencing all interferers is a strategically important achievement of the Thoppigala liberation. No amount of money-wasting celebrations could match this feat.
It also frustrates UNP’s “Surrender for ‘Peace’” strategy. This is the real reason why the UNP tries to belittle the victory. If Ranil becomes the president and Mangala the PM, the second thing they do (first thing being celebrating their victory in each other’s company) is to come to another surrender agreement with the LTTE (or revive the 2002 agreement). Reviving the 2002 agreement means pulling back the forces from Thoppigala, etc. If people consider Thoppigala to be strategically important, reviving the 2002 CFA is going to be impossible. On the other hand, if a new agreement to be reached with the LTTE, still, the forces got to be pulled back from Thoppigala, etc. Either way it is a surrender. Therefore, the UNP does everything possible to paydown the real importance of the East and Thoppigala knowing very well that the tigers only need Thoppigala to roam the complete East.
What the government should do to frustrate these LTTE cum UNP aspirations?
1. Hold the Provincial Council election in the East ASAP
2. Retain the East by whatever means necessary
3. Catalyse economic growth and investment
4. Improve school attendance rates
5. Build coexistence with the Karuna-group ironing out any differences that may emerge peacefully, because the ‘restive East’ needs peace at least now; definitely not another war.
6. Bring in tough laws to protect reserves (including jungles) vesting it upon the government to protect these with severe punitive deterrents. If rainforests are unimportant by themselves, Ranil may handover the ‘Sinharaja’ forest to the LTTE!!
The strategic importance of the East is growing by the day. Real celebrations would begin when Thoppigala and the East becomes an obstacle to any future surrender endeavour. That is when the real aftershocks of our MBRL barrage, the sonic booms of SLAF jets and the sighs and laughter of our gallant soldiers would be felt loudest by the Elamists, separatists and their henchmen.
It is a sad saga for the UNP that Ranil surrenders to the LTTE which was defeated by Lalith. The need for Lalith in the UNP helm was never so desperate than today when we celebrate a strategic turning point in the 24 year-old conflict.
(http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items07/200707-1.html)
When the doomed CFA (Cease Fire Agreement) was singed in 2002, the two parties had to accept the ‘de facto’ ‘line of control’. Each party had to, thereafter, honour each others’ ‘line of control’. While the LTTE always tried to expand their terror network, the Sri Lankan government gave up the administration of justice. The starting point was therefore the most important thing and the LTTE rapidly expanded their eastern front from December 2001 to end February 2002 in time for the CFA. Even when the CFA was being singed, there were clashes in the Eastern waters between the terrorists and the Navy.
What would happen if a similar endeavour is made now? The LTTE will never accept the new ‘line of control’ which comprises only the land area from Omanthai to Muhamalai and not a square inch in the East. First thing they would do is to grab a chuck of the East before such a ‘ceasefire’ comes into being. That means the attempt would hit an impasse at the inception. On the other hand, if the LTTE is prevented from recapturing the East, they will not come for this new ‘ceasefire’. There is a third option. It would be to follow the same strategy as they did after the 2002 agreement; to wage a one-sided war. However, it is going to be almost impossible to do it without violating the ‘agreement’. There are no further options available to the LTTE. LTTE must accept the same fate as Jaffna for the East.
For these reasons, the international community would be very reluctant to interfere. The only way they can interfere is by reinforcing the ramshackled 2002 CFA agreement. Such an attempt would spark court cases that will annul the illegal CFA. The attempt of the international community to tighten the ‘peace’ screws on Sri Lanka has failed. Any new attempt would hurt the LTTE and not the GoSL as it is disadvantageous to them.
The results are silent, but clear and immediate.co-chairs went silent with their attempted engagement
appeals to the UN, etc. by various Elamists stopped abruptly the British attempt to interfere with the conflict stopped on the track Indian interest in interfering also stopped.
Silencing all interferers is a strategically important achievement of the Thoppigala liberation. No amount of money-wasting celebrations could match this feat.
It also frustrates UNP’s “Surrender for ‘Peace’” strategy. This is the real reason why the UNP tries to belittle the victory. If Ranil becomes the president and Mangala the PM, the second thing they do (first thing being celebrating their victory in each other’s company) is to come to another surrender agreement with the LTTE (or revive the 2002 agreement). Reviving the 2002 agreement means pulling back the forces from Thoppigala, etc. If people consider Thoppigala to be strategically important, reviving the 2002 CFA is going to be impossible. On the other hand, if a new agreement to be reached with the LTTE, still, the forces got to be pulled back from Thoppigala, etc. Either way it is a surrender. Therefore, the UNP does everything possible to paydown the real importance of the East and Thoppigala knowing very well that the tigers only need Thoppigala to roam the complete East.
What the government should do to frustrate these LTTE cum UNP aspirations?
1. Hold the Provincial Council election in the East ASAP
2. Retain the East by whatever means necessary
3. Catalyse economic growth and investment
4. Improve school attendance rates
5. Build coexistence with the Karuna-group ironing out any differences that may emerge peacefully, because the ‘restive East’ needs peace at least now; definitely not another war.
6. Bring in tough laws to protect reserves (including jungles) vesting it upon the government to protect these with severe punitive deterrents. If rainforests are unimportant by themselves, Ranil may handover the ‘Sinharaja’ forest to the LTTE!!
The strategic importance of the East is growing by the day. Real celebrations would begin when Thoppigala and the East becomes an obstacle to any future surrender endeavour. That is when the real aftershocks of our MBRL barrage, the sonic booms of SLAF jets and the sighs and laughter of our gallant soldiers would be felt loudest by the Elamists, separatists and their henchmen.
It is a sad saga for the UNP that Ranil surrenders to the LTTE which was defeated by Lalith. The need for Lalith in the UNP helm was never so desperate than today when we celebrate a strategic turning point in the 24 year-old conflict.
(http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items07/200707-1.html)
Target Colombo
In light of the severe reverses suffered by the LTTE in the East, there are apprehensions that the outfit will bring the war to the capital city and target both civilian and government establishments.
A day after President Mahinda Rajapakse declared that the military had captured Thoppigala, the last remaining pocket of influence of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the East that has been under its effective control since 1994, the outfit warned that it is aiming to cripple the country with major attacks on military and economic targets. In an interview on July 12, 2007, the LTTE political wing leader, S.P. Tamilselvan, declared,
Our targets would be in the future major military and economic structures of the government of Sri Lanka as peace was not possible with President Mahinda Rajapakse. They will be targets which help the government sustain its military operations and military rule. For instance (our) attack on the oil installations. That is one of the targets that will cripple the economy of Sri Lanka as well as the military capability of Sri Lanka, so such will be the tactic.
The capital city of Colombo has long been a target of LTTE terrorist strikes, and is a natural object for this strategy of economic attrition. In light of the severe reverses suffered by the LTTE in the East, consequently, there are apprehensions that the outfit will bring the war to the capital and target both civilian and government establishments. The government has, therefore, not only beefed up security to defend its forward defence lines in the operational areas, but also all potential political, military and economic targets in Colombo. In fact The Nation reported on July 1, 2007, "Never before have security checks being so stringent in Colombo and the suburbs than during this past year."
According to Institute for Conflict Management data, while 10 persons--seven civilians, one security force (SF) trooper and two terrorists--were killed in 2005 in Colombo, the number of casualties increased to 50--25 civilians, 17 SF personnel and eight terrorists--in 2006. As on July 2, 2007, the death count for the current year was already 21, including 13 civilians and eight soldiers.
The first major LTTE attack in Colombo dates back to July 24, 1995, when 70 persons were killed and approximately 600 others injured as the LTTE bombed a passenger train. On January 31, 1996, 91 persons were killed in a truck bomb attack on the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. Later, on October 15, 1997, 18 persons were killed as LTTE suicide bombers drove a truck packed with a large quantity of explosives into the twin tower World Trade Centre building.
The first major incident recorded in Colombo after the 2002 cease-fire agreement (CFA) was on July 7, 2004, when a suspected woman LTTE suicide bomber blew herself up at the Kollupitiya Police Station next to the Sri Lankan Prime Minister's official residence killing herself and four police personnel and injuring nine persons. Again, at least two persons were killed and 15 others wounded in a bomb blast at the end of a concert by Shahrukh Khan in Colombo on December 11, 2004. The August 12, 2005, killing of the then foreign affairs minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar, near his private residence on Bullers Lane was the first major political assassination after the CFA.
2006 witnessed a significant spurt in violence in Colombo. On April 25, 2006, the Army Commander, Lt. General Sarath Fonseka, was injured while eight persons were killed when a female suicide cadre of the LTTE, disguised as a pregnant woman, blew herself up in front of the military hospital inside the Army Headquarters. The attack on the Army Commander, many believe, and this was recently admitted by the Sri Lankan government, really transformed the state’s policy towards the LTTE, tilting it towards a final assault against the rebels.
Defense spokesperson and Minister Keheliya Rambukwella stated, on July 4, 2007, that, despite the LTTE’s highly provocative acts since the first Geneva talks in February 2006, the government did not fire a single shot or violate the truce until the abortive attempt on Fonseka’s life; "Only then did the government make a shift to use its military power, targeting the terrorists if national security is threatened."
A suicide bomber killed the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) Deputy Chief of Staff, Major General Parami Kulathunge, the third highest appointment in the SLA, and three others, at Pannipitiya, a Colombo suburb, on June 26, 2006. Kethesh Logananathan, Deputy Secretary-General of the government's Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process and a former Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front member, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen near Vandervet place in Dehiwela on August 12, 2006. On December 1, 2006, in another suicide attack, the LTTE targeted the Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapakse, who is also the brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, at Dharmapala Mawatha, killing two soldiers and injuring 12 persons.
On March 26, 2007, the LTTE carried out their first ever air attack on the main Sri Lankan Air Force base in Katunayake at Colombo, killing three Air Force personnel and injuring 17. A light wing aircraft manned by the outfit dropped two bombs near the engineering section of the base. There were no damages to the fighter jets stationed at the Air Base. This, incidentally, is the same Air Base which a 14-member LTTE suicide squad attacked on July 24, 2001, destroying 11 aircraft and damaging three.
Again, on April 29, 2007, an LTTE aircraft bombed oil and gas storage facilities in and around Colombo. One of the two bombs dropped on Shell’s Muthurajawela Gas Storage Facility caused minor damage to the fire guard equipment while the other damaged the water supply. The two bombs dropped on the Kolonnawa Oil Storage Depot failed to explode.
On May 24, 2007, a suspected LTTE suicide bomber on an explosive-laden motorcycle rammed a bus carrying Army personnel on the First Cross Street in Colombo, killing two soldiers and wounding five persons. And on May 28, 2007, seven civilians were killed and 42 persons, including 36 civilians, sustained injuries, in an LTTE-triggered claymore mine explosion at Belekkade Junction in the Rathmalana area of the capital.
On June 1, 2007, Police seized a truck destined for Colombo, with 1,052 kilograms of C-4 explosives hidden under a pile of coconuts, at a Police Checkpoint in Kurunegala District. Later on June 10, Prime Minister Rathnasiri Wickramanayaka disclosed that the LTTE had sent another truck with over 1,000 kilograms of explosives into Colombo.
Amidst all these developments, the Colombo Police on June 7, 2007, started eviction of Tamils from the capital as part of a crackdown against the LTTE. 376 Tamil men, women and children, lodged in low-budget hotels, were forced out of their rooms, ordered into buses and driven off under armed escorts. Rohan Abeywardene, Inspector General of Police (IGP) for Colombo, later said the ethnic Tamils were being sent back to their own villages for their own safety amid a series of abductions blamed on state security services and the LTTE, and to avoid insurgents infiltrating the capital. On June 9, IGP Victor Perera stated that recent events had shown that the LTTE terrorists were operating without much difficulty in Colombo. The government later apologized for the involuntary deportation of the Tamils, after the Supreme Court stepped in and criticized the move.
Colombo has a multi-ethnic and multi-religious population and, according to the 2001 Census, the Sri Lankan Tamil population in the Colombo Municipal Council limits was 29.7 per cent.
The total population of Colombo District is 2,251,274, which comprises 1,724,459 (76.6 percent) Sinhalese, 247,739 (11 percent) Sri Lankan Tamil, 24,821 (1.1 percent) Indian Tamil and 11.3 percent of Sri Lanka Moor, Bergher, Malay and others (2001 Census).
Police sources have revealed that lodges in the Wellawatte, Bambalapitiya, Messenger Street, Pettah and Wattala areas of Colombo have provided safe havens to the LTTE. In Pettah alone, there are 68 lodges, owned by Tamils and catering to fellow Tamils from the North-East and from the tea plantations in Central Sri Lanka. Pettah is the city's main wholesale market and, traditionally, it has had a strong Tamil and Muslim presence. Tamil sources say that, on any day, there would be at least 5,000 Tamils from the North-East in the lodges in and around Colombo. Reiterating the allegation that the lodges were being used by the LTTE, defence spokesperson Keheliya Rambukwella said on June 26, "The primary investigations have revealed that the chief suspects of the Rajagiriya bomb case was residing in a lodge in Colombo. Experience in the past 10-years shows that LTTE operatives use the lodges in the city to stay and plan out terrorist strikes." He also disclosed that 90 per cent of the recent terrorism-related incidents in and around Colombo were hatched in these lodges.
Although the government initially backed the Police action against the Tamil residents, it eventually had to retract following the Supreme Court’s interference on June 8, when the Court issued an injunction directing the Police to stop the evacuation of Tamils from Colombo’s lodges. Responding to a fundamental rights petition filed by the Centre for Policy Alternatives, the Chairman of the panel of Judges, Nimal E. Dissanayaka, said that the action was based on wrong advice. Subsequently, Prime Minister Wickramanayaka, on June 10, expressed regret over the eviction of Tamils from Colombo. Further on June 15, President Rajapakse, while regretting the eviction, stated further that the government had to keep extra vigil over the lodges since almost all suicide bombers had operated from these.
It is not only the upsurge of violence in Colombo, but also the rampant occurrence of abductions and disappearances, which have attracted the government’s attention towards the grim security scenario in the capital city. For instance, two Tamil members of the Red Cross from the east were abducted in the presence of their colleagues at Colombo’s main Fort Railway Station and their dead bodies were later recovered in the Kiriella area in Rathnapura District, far to the South East of Colombo.
The LTTE has, unsurprisingly, developed a deep network in Colombo and its suburbs. Colombo’s demographic composition with its large base of Sri Lankan Tamils, Hill country Tamil (Tamils of Indian Origin) and Muslim Tamils makes it relatively easy for the LTTE to infiltrate the city to carry out their subversive activities.
On June 4, 2007, the government introduced a new security plan for Colombo city, dividing the capital into three security zones. Additional troops from the SLA and the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) have been deployed to check all vehicles and movement of civilians. Anti-aircraft guns have reportedly been fitted on top floors of about 58 storied buildings in Colombo to counter an LTTE aerial strike. Each key junction in Colombo is to be manned by SLA and SLN troops. According to Sunday Observer, many of the sleeper LTTE cadres waiting in Colombo and suburbs have had to flee the city, as they feared being arrested with the intensified surveillance in an around the capital after the revelation that many suicide cadres were waiting in the capital, disguised as Muslims, while engaged in various jobs under false identities."Investigations revealed that the suicide cadre who made an attempt on the life of Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa lived in Colombo for many years, disguised as a Muslim three-wheeler driver."
Despite these new measures being taken, it will be an uphill task for the Security Forces to completely secure Colombo, as the increasingly beleaguered LTTE will certainly intensify efforts to strike at the heart of the country in order to draw attention of the international community. Such efforts are also intended to provoke the government to take radical measures such as forcing Tamil civilians to leave Colombo, which, in one way or another, helps shore up the LTTE support base in the Tamil community, a base that has been shrinking over the years. Colombo, consequently, remains under, and deeply vulnerable to, imminent and intense threat of terrorist attack.
(http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20070719&fname=srilanka&sid=1&pn=3)
A day after President Mahinda Rajapakse declared that the military had captured Thoppigala, the last remaining pocket of influence of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the East that has been under its effective control since 1994, the outfit warned that it is aiming to cripple the country with major attacks on military and economic targets. In an interview on July 12, 2007, the LTTE political wing leader, S.P. Tamilselvan, declared,
Our targets would be in the future major military and economic structures of the government of Sri Lanka as peace was not possible with President Mahinda Rajapakse. They will be targets which help the government sustain its military operations and military rule. For instance (our) attack on the oil installations. That is one of the targets that will cripple the economy of Sri Lanka as well as the military capability of Sri Lanka, so such will be the tactic.
The capital city of Colombo has long been a target of LTTE terrorist strikes, and is a natural object for this strategy of economic attrition. In light of the severe reverses suffered by the LTTE in the East, consequently, there are apprehensions that the outfit will bring the war to the capital and target both civilian and government establishments. The government has, therefore, not only beefed up security to defend its forward defence lines in the operational areas, but also all potential political, military and economic targets in Colombo. In fact The Nation reported on July 1, 2007, "Never before have security checks being so stringent in Colombo and the suburbs than during this past year."
According to Institute for Conflict Management data, while 10 persons--seven civilians, one security force (SF) trooper and two terrorists--were killed in 2005 in Colombo, the number of casualties increased to 50--25 civilians, 17 SF personnel and eight terrorists--in 2006. As on July 2, 2007, the death count for the current year was already 21, including 13 civilians and eight soldiers.
The first major LTTE attack in Colombo dates back to July 24, 1995, when 70 persons were killed and approximately 600 others injured as the LTTE bombed a passenger train. On January 31, 1996, 91 persons were killed in a truck bomb attack on the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. Later, on October 15, 1997, 18 persons were killed as LTTE suicide bombers drove a truck packed with a large quantity of explosives into the twin tower World Trade Centre building.
The first major incident recorded in Colombo after the 2002 cease-fire agreement (CFA) was on July 7, 2004, when a suspected woman LTTE suicide bomber blew herself up at the Kollupitiya Police Station next to the Sri Lankan Prime Minister's official residence killing herself and four police personnel and injuring nine persons. Again, at least two persons were killed and 15 others wounded in a bomb blast at the end of a concert by Shahrukh Khan in Colombo on December 11, 2004. The August 12, 2005, killing of the then foreign affairs minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar, near his private residence on Bullers Lane was the first major political assassination after the CFA.
2006 witnessed a significant spurt in violence in Colombo. On April 25, 2006, the Army Commander, Lt. General Sarath Fonseka, was injured while eight persons were killed when a female suicide cadre of the LTTE, disguised as a pregnant woman, blew herself up in front of the military hospital inside the Army Headquarters. The attack on the Army Commander, many believe, and this was recently admitted by the Sri Lankan government, really transformed the state’s policy towards the LTTE, tilting it towards a final assault against the rebels.
Defense spokesperson and Minister Keheliya Rambukwella stated, on July 4, 2007, that, despite the LTTE’s highly provocative acts since the first Geneva talks in February 2006, the government did not fire a single shot or violate the truce until the abortive attempt on Fonseka’s life; "Only then did the government make a shift to use its military power, targeting the terrorists if national security is threatened."
A suicide bomber killed the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) Deputy Chief of Staff, Major General Parami Kulathunge, the third highest appointment in the SLA, and three others, at Pannipitiya, a Colombo suburb, on June 26, 2006. Kethesh Logananathan, Deputy Secretary-General of the government's Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process and a former Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front member, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen near Vandervet place in Dehiwela on August 12, 2006. On December 1, 2006, in another suicide attack, the LTTE targeted the Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapakse, who is also the brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, at Dharmapala Mawatha, killing two soldiers and injuring 12 persons.
On March 26, 2007, the LTTE carried out their first ever air attack on the main Sri Lankan Air Force base in Katunayake at Colombo, killing three Air Force personnel and injuring 17. A light wing aircraft manned by the outfit dropped two bombs near the engineering section of the base. There were no damages to the fighter jets stationed at the Air Base. This, incidentally, is the same Air Base which a 14-member LTTE suicide squad attacked on July 24, 2001, destroying 11 aircraft and damaging three.
Again, on April 29, 2007, an LTTE aircraft bombed oil and gas storage facilities in and around Colombo. One of the two bombs dropped on Shell’s Muthurajawela Gas Storage Facility caused minor damage to the fire guard equipment while the other damaged the water supply. The two bombs dropped on the Kolonnawa Oil Storage Depot failed to explode.
On May 24, 2007, a suspected LTTE suicide bomber on an explosive-laden motorcycle rammed a bus carrying Army personnel on the First Cross Street in Colombo, killing two soldiers and wounding five persons. And on May 28, 2007, seven civilians were killed and 42 persons, including 36 civilians, sustained injuries, in an LTTE-triggered claymore mine explosion at Belekkade Junction in the Rathmalana area of the capital.
On June 1, 2007, Police seized a truck destined for Colombo, with 1,052 kilograms of C-4 explosives hidden under a pile of coconuts, at a Police Checkpoint in Kurunegala District. Later on June 10, Prime Minister Rathnasiri Wickramanayaka disclosed that the LTTE had sent another truck with over 1,000 kilograms of explosives into Colombo.
Amidst all these developments, the Colombo Police on June 7, 2007, started eviction of Tamils from the capital as part of a crackdown against the LTTE. 376 Tamil men, women and children, lodged in low-budget hotels, were forced out of their rooms, ordered into buses and driven off under armed escorts. Rohan Abeywardene, Inspector General of Police (IGP) for Colombo, later said the ethnic Tamils were being sent back to their own villages for their own safety amid a series of abductions blamed on state security services and the LTTE, and to avoid insurgents infiltrating the capital. On June 9, IGP Victor Perera stated that recent events had shown that the LTTE terrorists were operating without much difficulty in Colombo. The government later apologized for the involuntary deportation of the Tamils, after the Supreme Court stepped in and criticized the move.
Colombo has a multi-ethnic and multi-religious population and, according to the 2001 Census, the Sri Lankan Tamil population in the Colombo Municipal Council limits was 29.7 per cent.
The total population of Colombo District is 2,251,274, which comprises 1,724,459 (76.6 percent) Sinhalese, 247,739 (11 percent) Sri Lankan Tamil, 24,821 (1.1 percent) Indian Tamil and 11.3 percent of Sri Lanka Moor, Bergher, Malay and others (2001 Census).
Police sources have revealed that lodges in the Wellawatte, Bambalapitiya, Messenger Street, Pettah and Wattala areas of Colombo have provided safe havens to the LTTE. In Pettah alone, there are 68 lodges, owned by Tamils and catering to fellow Tamils from the North-East and from the tea plantations in Central Sri Lanka. Pettah is the city's main wholesale market and, traditionally, it has had a strong Tamil and Muslim presence. Tamil sources say that, on any day, there would be at least 5,000 Tamils from the North-East in the lodges in and around Colombo. Reiterating the allegation that the lodges were being used by the LTTE, defence spokesperson Keheliya Rambukwella said on June 26, "The primary investigations have revealed that the chief suspects of the Rajagiriya bomb case was residing in a lodge in Colombo. Experience in the past 10-years shows that LTTE operatives use the lodges in the city to stay and plan out terrorist strikes." He also disclosed that 90 per cent of the recent terrorism-related incidents in and around Colombo were hatched in these lodges.
Although the government initially backed the Police action against the Tamil residents, it eventually had to retract following the Supreme Court’s interference on June 8, when the Court issued an injunction directing the Police to stop the evacuation of Tamils from Colombo’s lodges. Responding to a fundamental rights petition filed by the Centre for Policy Alternatives, the Chairman of the panel of Judges, Nimal E. Dissanayaka, said that the action was based on wrong advice. Subsequently, Prime Minister Wickramanayaka, on June 10, expressed regret over the eviction of Tamils from Colombo. Further on June 15, President Rajapakse, while regretting the eviction, stated further that the government had to keep extra vigil over the lodges since almost all suicide bombers had operated from these.
It is not only the upsurge of violence in Colombo, but also the rampant occurrence of abductions and disappearances, which have attracted the government’s attention towards the grim security scenario in the capital city. For instance, two Tamil members of the Red Cross from the east were abducted in the presence of their colleagues at Colombo’s main Fort Railway Station and their dead bodies were later recovered in the Kiriella area in Rathnapura District, far to the South East of Colombo.
The LTTE has, unsurprisingly, developed a deep network in Colombo and its suburbs. Colombo’s demographic composition with its large base of Sri Lankan Tamils, Hill country Tamil (Tamils of Indian Origin) and Muslim Tamils makes it relatively easy for the LTTE to infiltrate the city to carry out their subversive activities.
On June 4, 2007, the government introduced a new security plan for Colombo city, dividing the capital into three security zones. Additional troops from the SLA and the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) have been deployed to check all vehicles and movement of civilians. Anti-aircraft guns have reportedly been fitted on top floors of about 58 storied buildings in Colombo to counter an LTTE aerial strike. Each key junction in Colombo is to be manned by SLA and SLN troops. According to Sunday Observer, many of the sleeper LTTE cadres waiting in Colombo and suburbs have had to flee the city, as they feared being arrested with the intensified surveillance in an around the capital after the revelation that many suicide cadres were waiting in the capital, disguised as Muslims, while engaged in various jobs under false identities."Investigations revealed that the suicide cadre who made an attempt on the life of Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa lived in Colombo for many years, disguised as a Muslim three-wheeler driver."
Despite these new measures being taken, it will be an uphill task for the Security Forces to completely secure Colombo, as the increasingly beleaguered LTTE will certainly intensify efforts to strike at the heart of the country in order to draw attention of the international community. Such efforts are also intended to provoke the government to take radical measures such as forcing Tamil civilians to leave Colombo, which, in one way or another, helps shore up the LTTE support base in the Tamil community, a base that has been shrinking over the years. Colombo, consequently, remains under, and deeply vulnerable to, imminent and intense threat of terrorist attack.
(http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20070719&fname=srilanka&sid=1&pn=3)
Lanka says war or peace option with LTTE
As security forces wrested the last bastion of rebels in the island's east, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has said that it was up to Tamil Tigers to decide between war and peace.
"War or peace, we are ready. It is in their hands. It is now up to the Tigers to decide which path they want to tread on," the President told the state-run Daily News today.
The interview was published on the day the President chaired ceremonies here marking the military victory in Thoppigala, in the east of the island last week and the "Eastern Reawakening" programme.
Asked if the military wanted to extend action to the North in the aftermath of gaining total control over the East or whether he intends to negotiate with the LTTE from a position of strength, the President said the Government would act in accordance with the option that is chosen by the LTTE.
"LTTE has no desire for peace
"We have never hesitated to negotiate and we never left the negotiating table. It was the LTTE which always abandoned talks midway. This happened in Geneva, Oslo and on many other occasions. It is the LTTE which has no desire for peace," the President said.
He said an All Party Conference was already trying to evolve a consensual political solution to the island's drawn out conflict which has claimed over 60,000 lives in the past 35 years.
"It will not be a proposal initiated by the Government alone. It will be a collective effort of all political parties. All political parties must make a healthy contribution... to make this a reality. They must not shirk this responsibility," Rajapakse said.
Reiterating the government's commitment to a political solution, he, however, pointed out that the government would never betray the nation in evolving such a solution.
He said the fall of Thoppigala, the last Tiger bastion in the East, marked not only the total domination of the East by the Security Forces and the Government, but also a new era for the people of the East who were oppressed by the LTTE.
He attributed the success of the humanitarian operation in the East to correct political as well as military leadership.
Priorities
"Our immediate priority is establishing civil administration in the area. We will develop infrastructure facilities, health, education and welfare measures. Later on we will be holding local and provincial elections so that Easterners can elect their own representatives. Such democratic rights were stifled by the LTTE," the president said.
The Eastern Reawakening programme which begins today will address all these issues, he added.
Security was stepped up in Colombo as Rajapakse viewed a military parade at Colombo's Independence Square where the National Day celebrations are usually held.
(http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200707191140.htm)
"War or peace, we are ready. It is in their hands. It is now up to the Tigers to decide which path they want to tread on," the President told the state-run Daily News today.
The interview was published on the day the President chaired ceremonies here marking the military victory in Thoppigala, in the east of the island last week and the "Eastern Reawakening" programme.
Asked if the military wanted to extend action to the North in the aftermath of gaining total control over the East or whether he intends to negotiate with the LTTE from a position of strength, the President said the Government would act in accordance with the option that is chosen by the LTTE.
"LTTE has no desire for peace
"We have never hesitated to negotiate and we never left the negotiating table. It was the LTTE which always abandoned talks midway. This happened in Geneva, Oslo and on many other occasions. It is the LTTE which has no desire for peace," the President said.
He said an All Party Conference was already trying to evolve a consensual political solution to the island's drawn out conflict which has claimed over 60,000 lives in the past 35 years.
"It will not be a proposal initiated by the Government alone. It will be a collective effort of all political parties. All political parties must make a healthy contribution... to make this a reality. They must not shirk this responsibility," Rajapakse said.
Reiterating the government's commitment to a political solution, he, however, pointed out that the government would never betray the nation in evolving such a solution.
He said the fall of Thoppigala, the last Tiger bastion in the East, marked not only the total domination of the East by the Security Forces and the Government, but also a new era for the people of the East who were oppressed by the LTTE.
He attributed the success of the humanitarian operation in the East to correct political as well as military leadership.
Priorities
"Our immediate priority is establishing civil administration in the area. We will develop infrastructure facilities, health, education and welfare measures. Later on we will be holding local and provincial elections so that Easterners can elect their own representatives. Such democratic rights were stifled by the LTTE," the president said.
The Eastern Reawakening programme which begins today will address all these issues, he added.
Security was stepped up in Colombo as Rajapakse viewed a military parade at Colombo's Independence Square where the National Day celebrations are usually held.
(http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200707191140.htm)
Sri Lanka rebels forcing Tamils to join war effort
In Tamil Tiger territory, youths like Rajathurai Ponnambalam are living in hiding to avoid being forcibly recruited by the rebels and sent to fight in a Sri Lankan civil war they don't believe in.
Many residents Reuters spoke to during a rare visit to the rebels' heartland in the north said the Tigers are demanding every family contribute at least one member to a movement widely banned as a terrorist organisation by the likes of the United States, Britain and the European Union.
They tell of how brothers, sisters, sons and daughters have been taken against their will to camps to be trained as fighters. They say they are helpless to prevent it.
"They said: 'Your family does not have an LTTE member, so you must join," said Ponnambalam, who is in his 20s and gave a false name for fear of retribution from the rebels. "I did not agree, so they took me away in a vehicle."
"They took me to join the group as a fighter. They showed me about training, about fighting," he added. "I don't want to join. My family depends on me."
He managed to get away. Many others have not been so fortunate, or live in constant fear that they will be next.
The Tigers deny they insist on recruiting one person from each family, but aid workers say the demand was made earlier this year and that the rebels have promised their staff will be exempt.
"There is no strict compulsion as to every family should give a single member," Tiger political wing leader S.P. Thamilselvan said in an interview during a visit to the rebel's de facto state.
"There are families from which you have two or three members (who have) already opted to serve in the LTTE ... but we are very keen to ensure that not more than one person from one family is in the LTTE, because that would be minimizing their family work."
AID STAFF TARGETED
Families receive letters from the Tigers with names of members who must join underlined. Most international aid agencies are having to keep some local staff indoors. Some of them have not been able to leave their compounds for months.
"All the NGOs in the area have great concerns towards recruitment policy. We do experience that staff of all the different NGOs are getting abducted or have tremendous pressure towards them because they want to recruit them," said Arne Bangstad, programme manager of Nordic aid agency FORUT.
"We have been promised by the political wing that such recruitment should not take place and that the humanitarian status of the NGOs would be respected. But in practicality, we find that this is not really the case."
Recruitment posters are pasted around Kilinochchi town. Pictures of the rebels' elite Black Tiger suicide wing pepper bus-stands and shop fronts.
"Join with us. Protect our land from the Sinhalese army," the posters say next to a photograph of a rebel fighter in characteristic Tiger-striped fatigues taking aim with an assault rifle.
A giant billboard in the town shows a montage of President Mahinda Rajapaksa holding a noose around the neck of a child slain in the grisly massacre of a family in the northwestern district of Mannar last year, which the rebels and military each blame on the other.
The distant sound of heavy artillery fire across the front lines that separate rebel from government territory serves as a permanent reminder of what awaits those recruited.
FAMILIES HELPLESS
"One of my sons is in the LTTE. He joined 63 days ago. He did not join voluntarily," one elderly man confided, insisting on anonymity. "His mother is not well. After they took him her sickness got worse. What can I do, even if I get angry?"
Another man says his underage daughter joined to meet the quota so that her elder brother could continue to be her family's main bread winner in a district where 70 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, earning less than a dollar a day.
Similar stories abound, and fear is palpable as a new chapter in a two-decade civil war that has killed nearly 70,000 people since 1983 deepens. However families say married couples are generally exempt.
The United Nations Children's agency UNICEF says the Tigers are still recruiting children despite pledges not to. UNICEF listed 1,591 outstanding cases of underage recruitment by the Tigers at the end of May. One child on its records is aged nine.
A United Nations envoy and aid groups have also accused elements of the military of helping to abduct children as soldiers for a band of breakaway rebels called the Karuna faction, which is seen as allied to the government.
The Tigers deny they are recruiting children -- defined as youths under the age of 18 -- and say some youngsters lie about their age to join up and fight.
But not all recruitment is forced.
While many ordinary Tamils say they do not agree with the Tigers' violent methods, some have been polarized by the endless cycle of death and say war is the only way to make their case for wide autonomy.
(http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1132332007)
Many residents Reuters spoke to during a rare visit to the rebels' heartland in the north said the Tigers are demanding every family contribute at least one member to a movement widely banned as a terrorist organisation by the likes of the United States, Britain and the European Union.
They tell of how brothers, sisters, sons and daughters have been taken against their will to camps to be trained as fighters. They say they are helpless to prevent it.
"They said: 'Your family does not have an LTTE member, so you must join," said Ponnambalam, who is in his 20s and gave a false name for fear of retribution from the rebels. "I did not agree, so they took me away in a vehicle."
"They took me to join the group as a fighter. They showed me about training, about fighting," he added. "I don't want to join. My family depends on me."
He managed to get away. Many others have not been so fortunate, or live in constant fear that they will be next.
The Tigers deny they insist on recruiting one person from each family, but aid workers say the demand was made earlier this year and that the rebels have promised their staff will be exempt.
"There is no strict compulsion as to every family should give a single member," Tiger political wing leader S.P. Thamilselvan said in an interview during a visit to the rebel's de facto state.
"There are families from which you have two or three members (who have) already opted to serve in the LTTE ... but we are very keen to ensure that not more than one person from one family is in the LTTE, because that would be minimizing their family work."
AID STAFF TARGETED
Families receive letters from the Tigers with names of members who must join underlined. Most international aid agencies are having to keep some local staff indoors. Some of them have not been able to leave their compounds for months.
"All the NGOs in the area have great concerns towards recruitment policy. We do experience that staff of all the different NGOs are getting abducted or have tremendous pressure towards them because they want to recruit them," said Arne Bangstad, programme manager of Nordic aid agency FORUT.
"We have been promised by the political wing that such recruitment should not take place and that the humanitarian status of the NGOs would be respected. But in practicality, we find that this is not really the case."
Recruitment posters are pasted around Kilinochchi town. Pictures of the rebels' elite Black Tiger suicide wing pepper bus-stands and shop fronts.
"Join with us. Protect our land from the Sinhalese army," the posters say next to a photograph of a rebel fighter in characteristic Tiger-striped fatigues taking aim with an assault rifle.
A giant billboard in the town shows a montage of President Mahinda Rajapaksa holding a noose around the neck of a child slain in the grisly massacre of a family in the northwestern district of Mannar last year, which the rebels and military each blame on the other.
The distant sound of heavy artillery fire across the front lines that separate rebel from government territory serves as a permanent reminder of what awaits those recruited.
FAMILIES HELPLESS
"One of my sons is in the LTTE. He joined 63 days ago. He did not join voluntarily," one elderly man confided, insisting on anonymity. "His mother is not well. After they took him her sickness got worse. What can I do, even if I get angry?"
Another man says his underage daughter joined to meet the quota so that her elder brother could continue to be her family's main bread winner in a district where 70 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, earning less than a dollar a day.
Similar stories abound, and fear is palpable as a new chapter in a two-decade civil war that has killed nearly 70,000 people since 1983 deepens. However families say married couples are generally exempt.
The United Nations Children's agency UNICEF says the Tigers are still recruiting children despite pledges not to. UNICEF listed 1,591 outstanding cases of underage recruitment by the Tigers at the end of May. One child on its records is aged nine.
A United Nations envoy and aid groups have also accused elements of the military of helping to abduct children as soldiers for a band of breakaway rebels called the Karuna faction, which is seen as allied to the government.
The Tigers deny they are recruiting children -- defined as youths under the age of 18 -- and say some youngsters lie about their age to join up and fight.
But not all recruitment is forced.
While many ordinary Tamils say they do not agree with the Tigers' violent methods, some have been polarized by the endless cycle of death and say war is the only way to make their case for wide autonomy.
(http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1132332007)
Sri Lanka says 12 dead in clash with rebels
Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers launched a pre-dawn attack on an army detachment in the northwestern district of Mannar on Friday and three soldiers and nine rebels were killed in the ensuing clash, the military said.
The incident came a day after the government staged a show of military might in the capital with a parade of tanks and troops and a fly-past by fighter jets to celebrate the capture of vast swathes of eastern territory from the rebels.
It also comes after a rash of land and sea clashes, ambushes and air raids that have killed an estimated 4,500 people since last year alone.
"There was a confrontation in the early morning in Mannar. The LTTE fired mortars and artillery. We lost three (soldiers), and four were wounded," said military spokesman Brigadier Prasad Samarasinghe.
"Ground troops observed nine LTTE cadres killed, and sources say 24 were injured."
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who are fighting for an independent state in north and east Sri Lanka, were not immediately available for comment and there was no independent confirmation of what had happened or the death toll.
Analysts say the foes have tended to exaggerate enemy losses and play down their own in a war that has killed nearly 70,000 people since 1983.
And while losing their foothold in the east is a significant military defeat, the rebels have vowed to switch to guerrilla warfare tactics in a bid to cripple the economy with attacks on major military and economic targets and analysts see no clear winner on the horizon.
(http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSCOL8426720070720)
The incident came a day after the government staged a show of military might in the capital with a parade of tanks and troops and a fly-past by fighter jets to celebrate the capture of vast swathes of eastern territory from the rebels.
It also comes after a rash of land and sea clashes, ambushes and air raids that have killed an estimated 4,500 people since last year alone.
"There was a confrontation in the early morning in Mannar. The LTTE fired mortars and artillery. We lost three (soldiers), and four were wounded," said military spokesman Brigadier Prasad Samarasinghe.
"Ground troops observed nine LTTE cadres killed, and sources say 24 were injured."
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who are fighting for an independent state in north and east Sri Lanka, were not immediately available for comment and there was no independent confirmation of what had happened or the death toll.
Analysts say the foes have tended to exaggerate enemy losses and play down their own in a war that has killed nearly 70,000 people since 1983.
And while losing their foothold in the east is a significant military defeat, the rebels have vowed to switch to guerrilla warfare tactics in a bid to cripple the economy with attacks on major military and economic targets and analysts see no clear winner on the horizon.
(http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSCOL8426720070720)
Soosai caught in boat blast
The LTTE Sea Tiger leader Soosai was critically injured in a boat explosion off Mullaitivu seas yesterday morning, military sources said.
According to the Military sources an LTTE suicide boat exploded in the seas off Mullaitivu yesterday morning. "We believe that the sea Tiger leader Colonel Soosai was in the exploded boat and critically injured", sources added.
(http://www.dailynews.lk/2007/07/20/sec01.asp)
According to the Military sources an LTTE suicide boat exploded in the seas off Mullaitivu yesterday morning. "We believe that the sea Tiger leader Colonel Soosai was in the exploded boat and critically injured", sources added.
(http://www.dailynews.lk/2007/07/20/sec01.asp)
LTTE has huge profits - Report
: The London-based Jane’s Intelligence Review says the LTTE has not only created one of the “most sophisticated insurgencies in the world” but also has an annual “profit margin” of $200 to $300 m illion.
A report released on Wednesday says the Tigers have succeeded in establishing one of the sophisticated insurgency networks, largely due to a complex global network of financial resources and weapons that are integral to prolonging its campaign for a separate Tamil state.
In a rare report on the LTTE’s financial operations, Jane’s reports that with financial and procurement structures well organised and strategically positioned around the globe, the group has a profit margin that would be the envy of any multinational corporation.
The report details two overarching financial and procurement bodies that provide the main source of LTTE money, manpower and weapons: the Aiyanna Group and the Office of Overseas Purchases (nicknamed the KP Department).
As per Jane’s, the Aiyanna Group functions as the group’s intelligence and operations body, likely to be responsible for monitoring and ensuring the organisation’s financial support and revenue streams, while the KP Department is most probably the procurement arm.
The LTTE creates and staffs some charitable organisations, projecting its influence through this front to raise money from Tamil communities and, ultimately, convert the gains into arms, it reports.
The report says the system works as an efficient way to move funds wherever investment or procurement opportunities arise while utilising a charitable façade’s tax-free status and legitimacy.
(http://www.hindu.com/2007/07/19/stories/2007071956371400.htm)
A report released on Wednesday says the Tigers have succeeded in establishing one of the sophisticated insurgency networks, largely due to a complex global network of financial resources and weapons that are integral to prolonging its campaign for a separate Tamil state.
In a rare report on the LTTE’s financial operations, Jane’s reports that with financial and procurement structures well organised and strategically positioned around the globe, the group has a profit margin that would be the envy of any multinational corporation.
The report details two overarching financial and procurement bodies that provide the main source of LTTE money, manpower and weapons: the Aiyanna Group and the Office of Overseas Purchases (nicknamed the KP Department).
As per Jane’s, the Aiyanna Group functions as the group’s intelligence and operations body, likely to be responsible for monitoring and ensuring the organisation’s financial support and revenue streams, while the KP Department is most probably the procurement arm.
The LTTE creates and staffs some charitable organisations, projecting its influence through this front to raise money from Tamil communities and, ultimately, convert the gains into arms, it reports.
The report says the system works as an efficient way to move funds wherever investment or procurement opportunities arise while utilising a charitable façade’s tax-free status and legitimacy.
(http://www.hindu.com/2007/07/19/stories/2007071956371400.htm)
10 SLA killed in raid on minicamp in Mannar - LTTE
Liberation Tigers launched a pre-dawn raid Friday on a Sri Lanka Army (SLA) minicamp at Neelachcheanai in Mannar, killing 10 SLA soldiers and seizing all the weapons from the camp, located near Uyilangku'lam entry/exit point. Four LTTE fighters were killed in action. A Medium Machine Gun (MMG), a Light Machine Gun (LMG), a 60 mm mortar, four automatic rifles, 25 hand grenades and an ammunition cache were seized by the Tigers, according to LTTE's Military Spokesman Irasiah Ilanthirayan.
LTTE fighters returned to their positions after "succesfully neutralizing the threat posed by the hostile enemy camp from which infiltration units were operating," Mr. Ilanthiryan said.
The raid took place at 2:35 a.m.
(www.tamilnet.com)
LTTE fighters returned to their positions after "succesfully neutralizing the threat posed by the hostile enemy camp from which infiltration units were operating," Mr. Ilanthiryan said.
The raid took place at 2:35 a.m.
(www.tamilnet.com)
Where is this Ramesh now?
The story of the above photo is one of the reveals made by one Vedan, a LTTE cadre who was arrested when he was admitted to the Trincomalee hospital with a fracture in his leg.
The one consuming food on the left of the photo is the second-in-command of the LTTE military wing of the Eastern Province, Colonel Ramesh. He was also the deputy of Colonel Jeyam who was the leader of the Eastern Province after the Karuna's break away. The one in conversation with Ramesh is a disabled LTTE area leader. The photo has been taken in the last week of April this year and Ramesh is seen consuming food in a certain place in the jungle away from war tension with his firearm behind him.
Vedan who was arrested at Trincomalee hospital was fleeing to North with his leader Baskaran. Injured Vedan stopped at Thambalagamuwa on the way. Baskaran and his group retreated to the Peraru jungle. They exchanged fire with a group of home guards while crossing the Trincomalee-Habarana Road. Baskaran and the group had to leave behind a laptop and some other equipment. Security forces found this photograph from that laptop.
Vedan who was arrested at the Trincomalee hospital later revealed the story behind it.
The government security forces officially announced the capture of Thoppigala on 11th. Ramesh and the other LTTE leaders are believed fled to North without being caught by the security forces.
(www.lankaenes.com)
Sri Lanka armed forces search for small groups of Tamil Tigers in Thoppigala
Sri Lanka security forces continued the search and clear operations to wipe out the small groups of Tamil Tiger cadres in newly captured Thoppigala jungles in the Eastern Province.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE) cadres are reportedly fleeing the area in small groups. The government security forces have confronted them in several occasions.
Government security forces officially announced the capture of Thoppigala on July 11.
Meanwhile the opposition United National Party Media Chief Lakshman Kiriella yesterday charged the government stating it has information from Army internal sources that 800 cadres including LTTE leaders were allowed to safely escape by orders from the top to Mullaitivu via Welikanda, Serunuwara, Muttur and Manirasakulam with multi barrel rocket launchers.
(http://www.colombopage.com/archive_07/July1645433SL.html)
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE) cadres are reportedly fleeing the area in small groups. The government security forces have confronted them in several occasions.
Government security forces officially announced the capture of Thoppigala on July 11.
Meanwhile the opposition United National Party Media Chief Lakshman Kiriella yesterday charged the government stating it has information from Army internal sources that 800 cadres including LTTE leaders were allowed to safely escape by orders from the top to Mullaitivu via Welikanda, Serunuwara, Muttur and Manirasakulam with multi barrel rocket launchers.
(http://www.colombopage.com/archive_07/July1645433SL.html)
Raising of the special mechanized infantry regiment
The Commander Security Forces (J) , Major General G.A.Chandrasiri addressed ALL RANKS in Jaffna, in the Indoor Sports Complex, Pallaly, on Tuesday (10) morning prior to the raising of the 3rd Special Mechanized Infantry Regiment. The Commander Security Forces took the opportunity to speak to the participants regarding not only the raising of a "new Arm" to enhance the fighting capability of the Infantry and the Army in general by the introduction of the Mechanized Infantry Regiment but also on the role and aspects of the "new" concept and deployment.
The Commanding Officer and Other Ranks of the Mechanized Regiment consists of Officers and men who had field experience both here and abroad in the Armoured Corps as well as those with specialized training from allied services. They had also completed a course of training in Jaffna.
(http://www.nationalsecurity.lk/fullnews.php?id=6596)
The Commanding Officer and Other Ranks of the Mechanized Regiment consists of Officers and men who had field experience both here and abroad in the Armoured Corps as well as those with specialized training from allied services. They had also completed a course of training in Jaffna.
(http://www.nationalsecurity.lk/fullnews.php?id=6596)
Civilians say LTTE used them as slaves - Military
A large number of civilians detained as prisoners in LTTE custody in Thoppigala revealed they were used as slaves and were forced to set up landmines which killed nearly 100 of them.
Eleven such detainees, who escaped from the LTTE custody before the capture of Thoppigala, told the military that more than 80 detainees were killed for not obeying orders, a senior military official said.
These civilians, residents of Mavadivembu, Valaichennnai, Vandaramoolai, Batticaloa, Illupdichenai and Kannankuda were able to reach the military on Saturday at Kinniyadi in Batticaloa.
The official said all these detainees had been held in dark torture cells, which were later found by the military.
“The LTTE had forced them to bury landmines and in some instances they had been asked to gather intelligence on behalf of the Tigers,” the official said. Their tasks also included burying of anti – personnel mines and constructing ‘booby’ traps.
“Some of these victims who had protested to Tiger harassment were killed,” he said. The civilians had confessed the Tigers had kept the victims starving for days before killing them.
Two teenagers, seven in their twenties and two in their late thirties were among those who surrendered to the troops. The official said these detainees had burn injuries, scars and other bruises on their bodies, proof of the suffering they had under gone under LTTE detention.
(Civilians say LTTE used them as slaves - Military)
Eleven such detainees, who escaped from the LTTE custody before the capture of Thoppigala, told the military that more than 80 detainees were killed for not obeying orders, a senior military official said.
These civilians, residents of Mavadivembu, Valaichennnai, Vandaramoolai, Batticaloa, Illupdichenai and Kannankuda were able to reach the military on Saturday at Kinniyadi in Batticaloa.
The official said all these detainees had been held in dark torture cells, which were later found by the military.
“The LTTE had forced them to bury landmines and in some instances they had been asked to gather intelligence on behalf of the Tigers,” the official said. Their tasks also included burying of anti – personnel mines and constructing ‘booby’ traps.
“Some of these victims who had protested to Tiger harassment were killed,” he said. The civilians had confessed the Tigers had kept the victims starving for days before killing them.
Two teenagers, seven in their twenties and two in their late thirties were among those who surrendered to the troops. The official said these detainees had burn injuries, scars and other bruises on their bodies, proof of the suffering they had under gone under LTTE detention.
(Civilians say LTTE used them as slaves - Military)
Civilians say LTTE used them as slaves - Military
A large number of civilians detained as prisoners in LTTE custody in Thoppigala revealed they were used as slaves and were forced to set up landmines which killed nearly 100 of them.
Eleven such detainees, who escaped from the LTTE custody before the capture of Thoppigala, told the military that more than 80 detainees were killed for not obeying orders, a senior military official said.
These civilians, residents of Mavadivembu, Valaichennnai, Vandaramoolai, Batticaloa, Illupdichenai and Kannankuda were able to reach the military on Saturday at Kinniyadi in Batticaloa.
The official said all these detainees had been held in dark torture cells, which were later found by the military.
“The LTTE had forced them to bury landmines and in some instances they had been asked to gather intelligence on behalf of the Tigers,” the official said. Their tasks also included burying of anti – personnel mines and constructing ‘booby’ traps.
“Some of these victims who had protested to Tiger harassment were killed,” he said. The civilians had confessed the Tigers had kept the victims starving for days before killing them.
Two teenagers, seven in their twenties and two in their late thirties were among those who surrendered to the troops. The official said these detainees had burn injuries, scars and other bruises on their bodies, proof of the suffering they had under gone under LTTE detention.
(Civilians say LTTE used them as slaves - Military)
Eleven such detainees, who escaped from the LTTE custody before the capture of Thoppigala, told the military that more than 80 detainees were killed for not obeying orders, a senior military official said.
These civilians, residents of Mavadivembu, Valaichennnai, Vandaramoolai, Batticaloa, Illupdichenai and Kannankuda were able to reach the military on Saturday at Kinniyadi in Batticaloa.
The official said all these detainees had been held in dark torture cells, which were later found by the military.
“The LTTE had forced them to bury landmines and in some instances they had been asked to gather intelligence on behalf of the Tigers,” the official said. Their tasks also included burying of anti – personnel mines and constructing ‘booby’ traps.
“Some of these victims who had protested to Tiger harassment were killed,” he said. The civilians had confessed the Tigers had kept the victims starving for days before killing them.
Two teenagers, seven in their twenties and two in their late thirties were among those who surrendered to the troops. The official said these detainees had burn injuries, scars and other bruises on their bodies, proof of the suffering they had under gone under LTTE detention.
(Civilians say LTTE used them as slaves - Military)
Five die as LTTE and Special Forces clash in Vavuniya
The LTTE and government Special Forces clashed in Vavuniya yesterday resulting in casualties on both sides.
LTTE military wing spokesman Rasiah Illentheriyan, in an emailed statement, claimed that a team of Sri Lankan Special Forces were confronted by the LTTE at the Palamoddai fortification in Vavuniya last afternoon and 4 troopers were killed and at least 6 others injured in the fighting.
He added that following a search of the area the LTTE recovered one dead body of a government trooper, three T-56 assault rifles, ammunition, night vision scopes and other military equipment. He said that one LTTE cadre was also killed in the confrontation. The dead body of the soldier is to be handed over to the ICRC today.
However the Media Centre for National Security (MCNS) said that an attack had taken place in Navatkulam, Vavuniya last morning when a military foot patrol confronted a group of LTTE cadres and killed one.
(http://www.dailymirror.lk/2007/07/17/news/09.asp)
LTTE military wing spokesman Rasiah Illentheriyan, in an emailed statement, claimed that a team of Sri Lankan Special Forces were confronted by the LTTE at the Palamoddai fortification in Vavuniya last afternoon and 4 troopers were killed and at least 6 others injured in the fighting.
He added that following a search of the area the LTTE recovered one dead body of a government trooper, three T-56 assault rifles, ammunition, night vision scopes and other military equipment. He said that one LTTE cadre was also killed in the confrontation. The dead body of the soldier is to be handed over to the ICRC today.
However the Media Centre for National Security (MCNS) said that an attack had taken place in Navatkulam, Vavuniya last morning when a military foot patrol confronted a group of LTTE cadres and killed one.
(http://www.dailymirror.lk/2007/07/17/news/09.asp)
4 SLA elite soldiers killed, 6 wounded in Mannar border - LTTE
Liberation Tigers confronted a team of the 2nd Battalion of Sri Lanka Army Special Forces (SF), killing four and wounding 6 when the SLA SF team attempted to breach into LTTE territory in Paalamoaddai in Mannaar-Vavuniyaa border, Monday around 4:00 p.m., according to the military spokesman of the Tigers. A body of a SF soldier was recovered by the Tigers together with 3 T-56 rifles, explosives and military hardware including a night-vision equipment.
Arrangements were underway to hand over the dead body of the SF soldier to the ICRC, Mr. Ilanthirayan said.
The SF team that sustained casualties was withdrawn by the SLA and a search operation by the Tigers was going on, he said.
Tigers have handed over 4 SLA dead bodies to the ICRC in Mannaar on Sunday. The body of a Deep Penetration Unit (DPU) soldier, killed Sunday, was handed over to the SLA through the ICRC on Tuesday.
(www.tamilnet.com)
Arrangements were underway to hand over the dead body of the SF soldier to the ICRC, Mr. Ilanthirayan said.
The SF team that sustained casualties was withdrawn by the SLA and a search operation by the Tigers was going on, he said.
Tigers have handed over 4 SLA dead bodies to the ICRC in Mannaar on Sunday. The body of a Deep Penetration Unit (DPU) soldier, killed Sunday, was handed over to the SLA through the ICRC on Tuesday.
(www.tamilnet.com)
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