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Lanka
Senior Sri Lankan minister killed in bomb blast
By Sarath Kumara
10 April 2008
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One of Sri Lankas most tightly guarded politicians, Jeyaraj
Fernandopulle, minister of highways and road development, was
killed by a bomb in the town of Weliweriya, about 35 kilometres
north of Colombo, on Sunday morning. The Colombo government immediately
seized on the killing to intensify its communal war against the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the North and East
of the country.
Fourteen others died and nearly 100 were injured in the blast,
which took place as crowds gathered for the start of a marathon
race. The event was part of a local festival scheduled for this
weekend to mark the Sri Lankan New Year. The minister was the
chief guest.
Most of the dead and injured were innocent civilians. Among
those killed were the national athletics coach, Lakshman de Alwis,
former national marathon champion, K.A. Karunaratne, and several
runners. Eyewitnesses said they saw a fireball, with a huge explosion.
Nalin Warnasooriya told Associated Press: I saw severed
heads, hands and legs. Blood and body parts were everywhere. It
was a horrible scene.
While it has not claimed responsibility, the LTTE is most likely
to have carried out the attack. The Sri Lankan military itself
and associated paramilitaries are widely believed to have been
involved in the assassination of several prominent opposition
politicians, most recently United National Party MP Tyagarajah
Maheshwaran who was shot dead in broad daylight on January 1.
In the attack on Sunday, however, all the evidence so far points
to the blast having been caused by a suicide bomberone of
the hallmark methods of the LTTE.
Moreover, Fernandopulle was a central figure in the government
of President Mahinda Rajapakse and a vociferous advocate of the
renewed civil war. He was viewed as a possible future prime minister
when the aging Ratnasiri Wickramanayake retires. In his last public
address on April 5, Fernandopulle declared that there will
be no stop to the war until the terrorists are finished off
and soon we will liberate the north as we have done in the
east. As well as being a senior minister, he was chief government
whip in parliament and treasurer of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
In the name of national security, Fernandopulle vigorously
defended the governments increasingly anti-democratic methods.
When the Supreme Court last June ruled against the forcible eviction
of all non-permanent resident Tamils from Colombo, Fernandopulle
was entrusted with the task of publicly defending the governments
atrocious actions. Again, when the Supreme Court ordered the removal
of the numerous permanent security barricades in Colombo city,
it was Fernandopulle, under parliamentary privilege, who vehemently
denounced the decision.
Fernandopulle was chosen to lead the governments campaign
in the eastern provincial council election scheduled for May 10.
Rajapakses coalitionthe United Peoples Freedom Alliance
(UPFA)has formed an electoral bloc with the Tamil Makkal
Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP), an armed LTTE splinter group, which
collaborates closely with the military and is notorious for its
intimidation of voters during recent Batticaloa district elections.
The TMVP is the prime suspect in a series of political murders
and disappearances. Fernandopulle bluntly opposed opposition calls
for the disarming of the TMVP.
Fernandopulles assassination, however, along with the
indiscriminate killing of innocent civilians, plays directly into
the hands of the government. Rajapakse and his ministers quickly
used the bombing to whip up communal hatreds and justify their
repressive policies. President Rajapakse wasted no time in ordering
retaliatory air strikes against alleged LTTE targets. Hundreds,
if not thousands, of civilians have been killed and maimed in
previous raids.
The governments own killing of innocent civilians in
no way justifies retaliatory slaughter. The LTTEs attempt
to blame the Sinhalese nationthat is, all Sinhalesefor
the death and destruction of Rajapakses renewed war is divisive
and reactionary. Ordinary Sinhalese who were killed and injured
in last Sundays bombing are not responsible for the crimes
of the Rajapakse government and the military. The vast majority
of Sri LankansSinhalese, Tamils and Muslims alikeare
opposed to the war and the misery that it has brought to working
people.
The LTTEs separatist program does not represent the interests
of the Tamil masses, but layers of the Tamil bourgeoisie, who
want to carve out a statelet in the North and East of the island
and establish their own cheap labour platform for foreign investors.
The targeting of a high-profile figure like Fernandopulle is designed
to pressure the Rajapakse government to back off its continuing
offensives against the LTTEs northern strongholds.
At the same time, the LTTE continues its appeals to the international
communitythat is, to the US and other major powersto
intervene to stop the war and restart peace talks. Taking its
cue from the Bush administration, the international community
has turned to blind eye to the Rajapakse governments tearing
up of the 2002 ceasefire agreement, its anti-democratic methods
and crimes. The latest denunciations of Sundays bombing
are just one more example of hypocrisy in Washington and other
world capitals.
The government is beating the patriotic drum as a prelude to
escalating the war and further cracking down in preparation for
the eastern provincial election. In denouncing the bombing, Rajapakse
declared: This will not weaken our resolve to eradicate
terrorism from our midst and bring peace, harmony and democracy
to all our people. Fernandopulle is being given a state
funeral with full national honours and the occasion has been declared
a national day of mourning.
The government was backed by virtually the entire media and
political establishment in Colombo. The Island published
a front-page editorial calling for all public events to be curtained
and for the country to be placed on a full war footing. It
is mind boggling why so many motoring events, exhibitions, marathons,
bicycle races, political rallies should happen at a time when
the war has reached a crucial juncture. Any other country would
have been on a war footing by now, it declared.
The Sinhala extremist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) demanded
an intensification of the war. Calling for an end to any pretence
of seeking a political solution to the war, the JVP statement
declared: Without wasting time on separatist devolution
of power proposals, the government must give full support and
encouragement to the heroic security forces to completely defeat
the LTTE.
On the day after the bomb blast, the military retaliated with
air strikes on Mankulam, near the LTTE headquarters in Kilinochchi,
and claimed to have hit a black tiger camp for training
suicide bombers. A military spokesman claimed that the air strikes
and ground operations had killed 48 LTTE cadres in Vavuniya, Mannar
and Weli Oya. There are no independent reports, as journalists
are banned from the war fronts. In all likelihood, civilians were
among the casualties.
The military also banned all vehicles coming from Vavuniya,
which is the transit point between the north and the south of
the island. Security forces launched cordon and search operations
at Weliweriya and the neighbouring towns of Gampaha and Katunayake
and arrested a number of Tamil suspects.
See Also:
Sri Lankan president nervously assesses
military stalemate
[5 April 2008]
Sri Lankan local polls: a travesty of
democracy
[2 April 2008]
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