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Bomb blast marks formal end of Sri Lankan ceasefire agreement
By K. Ratnayake
17 January 2008
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A roadside bomb tore through a bus yesterday morning, killing
at least 28 people and injuring more than 60 near Buttala in the
south east of Sri Lanka. No group has claimed responsibility but
the government immediately blamed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE), exploiting the tragedy to justify its decision to
pull out of the 2002 ceasefire agreement. The ceasefire formally
expired yesterday after the government gave two weeks notice of
its withdrawal on January 2.
Buttala is close to the countrys eastern province, which
the government proclaimed as liberated last year after
the military launched a series of offensives to capture LTTE-held
territory. The bus was packed with villagers from the impoverished
rural area. Eyewitnesses told the press that the attackers had
shot passengers after the blast. While the Defence Ministry announced
that a large number of schoolchildren were on the bus, local hospital
officials said no children had been killed.
Several other incidents took place in quick succession. Another
bomb struck an army vehicle nearby, injuring four soldiers. Minutes
later armed men reportedly shot at farmers working their fields,
killing at least five. Eyewitnesses said the attackers wore uniforms
similar to those of the army. Fearful of further violence, people
from Niyndalle, Dambeyaya and Minipura have started fleeing the
area.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse denounced the bombing:
This is a brazen demonstration to the whole world of [the
LTTEs] unchanged commitment to terrorism and the absolute
rejection of democracy and all norms of civilised behaviour, in
pursuit of its unacceptable goal of separatism, which threatens
the sovereignty and integrity of Sri Lanka.
The military also seized on the blast for propaganda purposes,
posting images of the bloodstained corpses of victims on the defence
ministry website. Government defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella
blamed the LTTE for the other two incidents, claiming that LTTE
fighters had been seen fleeing after shooting farmers.
Several hundred angry locals gathered near the Buttala police
station after the bus bombing. Some villagers told the press they
had seen suspicious persons in the adjacent jungle prior to the
blast, and had informed police. They criticised the police for
failing to carry out a proper search.
The LTTE, which has issued no statement to date, may have been
responsible for the bus bombing. It has carried out similar atrocities
in the past, particularly directed at innocent Sinhalese civilians.
Its statements routinely blame the Sinhala nation
as a whole for the crimes carried out by the security forces.
The LTTE signed the ceasefire in 2002 and renounced its demand
for a separate Tamil statelet, hoping for a power-sharing arrangement
with the Colombo government backed by the international
community. Negotiations quickly broke down and the major
powers tacitly supported Rajapakses renewed war over the
past two years, refusing to criticise the militarys open
breach of the ceasefire. Having lost control of areas in the eastern
province, the LTTE now confronts military offensives on its northern
strongholds.
It is also possible that an anti-LTTE militia allied with the
security forces was responsible for the bomb blast. A breakaway
from the LTTE formerly headed by V. Muralitharan or Karuna is
notorious in the East for its ruthless methods. Now known as the
Pillayan group, after its new leader ousted Karuna, it has been
engaged in attacks on opponents, seeking to inflame communal clashes
between Muslims and Tamils with the backing of military.
Whoever carried it out, the bombing has played directly into
the hands of the government. Schools were closed in the area of
the blast and security stepped up in Colombo. Government ministers,
the military and Sinhala extremist organisations such as the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) used the attack to intensify communal
tensions and create a mood of fear and panic.
The bombing has been useful to deflect the rather timid concerns
expressed by Japanese special envoy Yasushi Akashi in Colombo
over the weekend. Akashi, who met with Rajapakse, said he was
worried that the end of the ceasefire would lead to more violence
and civilian casualties. He hinted that Japan might review its
aid program in light of the governments decision to pull
out of the ceasefire. Japan is Sri Lankas largest aid donor
and, along with US, the EU and Norway, co-sponsor of the so-called
peace process.
Norway, which was the formal facilitator of the peace process,
has expressed similar concerns. The Norwegian-led Sri Lankan Monitoring
Mission (SLMM), which oversaw the ceasefire agreement, pulled
its staff out of the country yesterday. Norway has been bitterly
criticised by the JVP and other Sinhala chauvinist groups for
its alleged pro-LTTE bias. SLMM head Johann Solberg appealed for
a return to peace talks and a negotiated political solution to
the long-running war.
The Bush administration declared that it was troubled
by the end of the ceasefire, but took no action to push for a
resumption of peace talks. In reality, the US, which has stridently
criticised the LTTE and supplied military aid to Sri Lanka, has
been a major factor in encouraging the Rajapakse government to
return to war. Significantly, in the wake of the governments
decision to pull out of the ceasefire, the FBI issued a statement
on its website declaring the LTTE to be among the most dangerous
and deadly extremists in the world.
The collapse of the ceasefire followed Rajapakses narrow
victory in the 2005 presidential elections with the support of
the JVP. His election promises included the renegotiation of the
2002 ceasefire to strengthen the position of the militarya
move that effectively destroyed any further peace talks. Shortly
after Rajapakse won office, the military and allied paramilitaries,
such as the Karuna group, launched a dirty covert war designed
to weaken the LTTE and goad it into reacting.
In July 2006, Rajapakse ordered the military onto the offensive
to seize the LTTE-held area of Mavilarua flagrant breach
of the ceasefire that provoked no international criticism. The
pretext was an LTTE protest that shut the Mavilaru irrigation
sluice gate, cutting off water to farmers downstream. It soon
became apparent that the Mavilaru operation was just the first
of a series of offensives designed to oust the LTTE from the eastern
province.
An estimated 5,000 people have died in fighting over the past
two years and 200,000 civilians have been driven from their homes.
Many have been the victims of the militarys use of indiscriminate
aerial and artillery attacks. At the same time, there is considerable
circumstantial evidence that the military and its associated paramilitaries
have abducted and killed hundreds of people, mainly Tamils, in
a further attempt to terrorise the local population. The decision
to formally pull out of the ceasefire was simply the final nail
in the coffin of the so-called international peace process.
The Rajapakse government is politically responsible for restarting
the islands brutal 25-year civil war and thus for yesterdays
bus bombing, along with the many other tragedies that the renewed
conflict has already produced.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government pulls out of 2002
ceasefire agreement
[9 January 2008]
Tamil opposition MP assassinated in Sri
Lankan capital
[7 January 2008]
Sri Lankan president marks tsunami anniversary
by beating the war drums
[2 January 2008]
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