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Sri Lankan military intensifies drive against LTTE
By Sarath Kumara
11 October 2007
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Over recent weeks, Sri Lankan security forces have engaged
in escalating air, ground and naval attacks against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in preparation for a major thrust
into the separatist organisations northern strongholds.
After seizing the LTTE-held areas in the eastern province, ministers,
defence officials and generals have reiterated their intention
to destroy the LTTEs military capacity.
The militarys aggressive actions make a mockery of government
claims that it still abides by the 2002 ceasefire and is engaged
in purely defensive operations. Last Sunday, the navy
sank an LTTE cargo vessel, the Matsuseema, in international waters
about 1,700 kilometres from the southern tip of Sri Lanka, killing
all 15 people on board. A navy spokesman claimed that the ship
was carrying military hardware, including communication equipment,
radars, high-powered outboard motors and jet skis.
According to the Sri Lankan navy, the Matsuseema was the seventh
ship sunk this year and the last of the LTTEs cargo vessels.
Last month, the government announced that three LTTE ships carrying
military equipment had been sunkagain in international waters
some 1,400 kilometres from the island. An estimated 40-45 people
were killed. There is no indication that the navy attempted to
stop, search or capture the vessels before opening fire.
Euphoric over the victory, the government held a ceremony on
September 17 to hail the sailors involved in the one-sided naval
encounter. Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse, brother of President
Mahinda Rajapakse, declared: We are ready to defeat terrorism
using military power rather than depending on a political solution
which we find difficult to reach right now. His comments
are one more demonstration that the government has no intention
of returning to peace talks.
The military is also continuing land and air operations. The
air force has carried out strikes on the LTTEs northern
strongholds, including near the town of Killinochchi, where the
LTTE leadership is based.
On September 25, war planes bombed Pooneryn on the northwestern
coast, the site of a Sea Tiger base. On September 29, Vallipunam
in the Mullaithivu district was heavily bombed. The government
claimed to have hit a rebel training camp but the LTTE accused
the air force of targeting civilian settlements. On October 2,
the air force used Kfir jets to strafe Visvamadu, near Kilinochchi.
Again the LTTE alleged that six civilian areas had been struck.
The Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM), which still oversees
the non-existent ceasefire, has noted regular small-scale ground
skirmishes. Its report for September 24-30 stated that shelling
had continued on a daily basis from Pompamaidu, near the northern
town of Vavuniya, through to Murunkan on the Mannar road.
In the last week of September, the armed forces launched attacks
on two frontsfrom Mannar on the northwestern coast and from
Omanthai near Vavuniyaand met heavy LTTE resistance. According
to official figures, two soldiers were killed and another 20 were
injured, but the Sunday Times reported that the real casualty
figures were much higher.
Further fighting took place last week. Lakbimanews reported
that three soldiers had been killed and 25 wounded, one seriously,
last Wednesday and Thursday at Vilathikulam west of Omanthai.
An army captain and another soldier went missing during a heavy
mortar barrage. The LTTE later handed their bodies back to the
military via the International Red Cross.
On Monday, the military claimed that four LTTE fighters were
killed when they attacked a forward defence line in Mannar. In
clashes near the Kilali Lagoon in the Jaffna district, another
two rebels were killed. Small-scale clashes with the LTTE occurred
in the eastern district of Ampara, which the government claims
to have liberated.
Over-optimism
There is no doubt that the LTTE has suffered military setbacks
during the past year. In the course of the countrys bloody
24-year civil war, however, the military has time and again proven
incapable of destroying the LTTE. While the Rajapakse government
is pressing ahead with its military adventures, sections of the
ruling elite are nervous about the potential for a disaster, as
well as the impact of the war on the economy and the emergence
of sharp social tensions.
Writing last month in the aftermath of the navys sinking
of three LTTE vessels, defence correspondent Iqbal Athas, who
has close links to the military establishment, strongly cautioned
against over-optimism. Despite the attacks on ground, at
sea and by air, Tiger guerrillas retain a military capacity. Whilst
strongly acknowledging the brave role of the security forces and
police to deal with them, the truth of the threats posted by the
guerrillas should not be buried by heaps of propaganda. Those
who do so are fooling only themselves, he wrote in the Sunday
Times on September 23.
In his column on September 30, Athas pointed to signs that
the governments victory throughout the eastern
province was not as secure as claimed. As well as reporting heavy
casualties in battles in the north, he wrote: Though
still not on a highly worrying scale, small numbers of guerrillas
have become active in all three districts in the EastTrincomalee,
Batticaloa and Ampara. In Trincomalee, there have been reports
of guerrilla intelligence cadres moving around the Trincomalee
town and Tampalagamuwa areas.
Athas warned that the guerrilla activity in the
East though small but growing, portends other serious problems.
He noted that the government and military relied quite heavily
in Batticaloa district on the support of an allied Tamil paramilitary
groupthe so-called Karuna group headed by V. Muralitharan,
which split from the LTTE in 2004, claiming the leadership was
neglecting the East. Popular hostility to the Karuna group and
its thuggish methods is undoubtedly growing. Even Athas reported
that the outfit had been accused of a number of killings,
kidnappings and abductions. Some of them were political whilst
others were reportedly for extortion of vast amounts of money.
The government and the military, which has already witchhunted
Athas for exposing possible fraud in the purchase of MiGs from
the Ukraine, immediately condemned the September 30 column. Military
spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara declared that his information
was false, designed to sling mud at the government and security
forces. He branded Athas as unpatriotic and
declared that invisible hands are trying to prop up the
LTTE.
Nanayakkaras comments reflect the hysterical chauvinist
climate that has been drummed up in Colombo, not only against
opponents of the war, but even those like Athas who are cautiously
critical of the military strategy. As it prepares for new military
offensives in the North, the government and the military are desperate
to suppress the groundswell of popular opposition to the war and
its impact on living standards.
The militarys offensives over the past year have relied
heavily on air strikes, artillery barrages and now deep-water
naval operationsall of which for a country like Sri Lanka
are expensive. After hiking defence expenditure by a massive 45
percent this year, the government is preparing to boost it by
another 20 percent, from 139 billion rupees ($US 1.3 billion)
to 166 billion rupees, next year.
Inevitably, ordinary working people will be forced to bear
the burden in the form of rising prices, and cutbacks to public
sector jobs, subsidies and services, as well as the rising toll
of civilian casualties and those rendered homeless.
See Also:
Sri Lankan president's speech at the
UN: lies in defence of war and human rights abuses
[5 October 2007]
Sri Lankan government imposes
new taxes to fund war
[19 September 2007]
Sri Lankan military launches
northern offensive against LTTE
[12 September 2007]
Sri Lankan government's "peace"
committee on point of collapse
[1 September 2007]
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