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Sri Lankan paramilitary leader convicted in Britain
By Athiyan Silva
13 March 2008
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A British court case against Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan,
alias Karuna, the former leader of the Tamileela Makkal Viduthalai
Pulikal (TMVP), has shed further light on the collaboration between
the Sri Lankan government and various paramilitaries in the resumed
war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The TMVP,
originally known as the Karuna group, is a breakaway faction of
the LTTE and based in the Eastern province of Sri Lanka.
On January 25, the Isleworth Crown Court in Britain sentenced
Karuna to nine months imprisonment for identity fraud and violating
the UK Identity Card Act of 2006. This reactionary law allows
for the holding of an increasing amount of personal information
on individuals and has been used by the British government to
target immigrants in particular.
In the case of Karuna, however, he admitted that he had travel
documents falsely identifying him and pleaded guilty. The main
charge against Karuna was travelling to UK on a diplomatic passport,
which had his own photograph, but the name of someone else. How
he obtained a diplomatic passport and British visa raises questions
about his relationship with senior government figures in Sri Lanka.
According to court reports, Karuna entered Britain on September
18 last year. On November 2 he was arrested by British officials
in an apartment in South Kensington, London. He had a Sri Lankan
diplomatic passport in the name of Kokila Dushmantha Gunawardena,
an ethnic Sinhala name.
British police confirmed that the travel documents were genuine
although under a false name and that a valid visa had been issued
by British High Commission in Colombo. The High Commission in
turn claimed it had received the passport used by Karuna from
the Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry with a supporting visa request.
Based on local sources, the Sunday Leader, a Sri Lankan
weekly, claimed that the Sri Lankan Immigration and Emigration
Department had issued the passport under orders from top government
authorities on August 18. His visa application falsely declared
the person was the director general of the Wildlife Conservation
Department, the report stated. Other newspapers, including the
Sunday Times, reported that Karuna received Sri Lankan
diplomatic help in the UK during his visit.
The Sri Lankan government has simply stonewalled. Foreign Minister
Rohitha Bogollagama denied any government involvement in securing
a diplomatic passport for Karuna. But he did not deny the media
reports.
Karunas formal statement, read in open court on January
25, was a serious embarrassment for the Sri Lankan government.
In pleading guilty, Karuna stated that defence secretary Gotabhaya
Rajapakse, the brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, had arranged
everything concerning his travel to the UK. Karuna added
that he had known Gotabhaya Rajapakse since he defected from the
LTTE.
Gotabhaya Rajapakse denied the claim, telling Lakbima News
on January 27: I havent helped him [Karuna].
IANS News quoted the defence secretary as saying: I
do not know how Karuna got the passport. He also queried
how Karuna got a British visa, implying collusion by the High
Commission or officials in London.
However, Rajapakse admitted in the course of the IANS
News interview to knowing Karuna who had asked a
long time ago for help in travelling to the UK. Karuna had
wanted to see his children who were already there, he said. Rajapakse
claimed that he had tried to arrange the travel through a friendly
third country, but failed.
In a particularly revealing statement, Rajapakse declared:
Why should I want to send him away when he could be useful
in Sri Lanka? Rajapakse did not elaborate, but over the
past two years the Karuna group has colluded with the military
in terrorising the Tamil population in the East and attacking
the LTTE. While the government has repeatedly denied such collaboration,
the defence secretarys admission testifies to the close
relationship with Karuna.
Before breaking from the LTTE, Karuna was a senior figure.
He participated as an LTTE representative in peace talks initiated
by the Colombo government in 2002 with the backing of major powers.
The peace process was not based on granting democratic rights
to the Tamil masses, but on securing a power-sharing arrangement
that would enable the mutual exploitation of the working classboth
Tamil and Sinhala.
Sections of the ruling elite rallied behind former President
Chandrika Kumaratunga, who, along with the military top brass
and chauvinist groups such as the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP),
opposed the peace process, claiming it was a betrayal.
Kumaratunga seized three key ministries in November 2003 from
the United National Party (UNP)-led government and in February
2004 she sacked the entire cabinet.
Karuna broke away from the LTTE in March 2004. He and his allies
were bitterly critical of the LTTE leadership for favouring the
North over the East. He demanded that the LTTEs eastern
wing be allowed to function independently and called
for a separate administrative district for the eastern Batticaloa-Amparai
area. In seeking to cut a deal with Colombo for the benefit of
the Tamil elites in the East, Karunas outlook was simply
the logical extension of the LTTEs own politics.
One of the LTTEs senior female commanders, Nilavani,
lined up with Karuna and accompanied him to Colombo in mid-2004.
Shortly after, she broke with Karuna, made amends with the LTTE
leadership and went to its northern headquarters in Kilinochchi.
She explained to the BBC in June 2004 how Sri Lankan military
intelligence had protected and held lengthy discussions with Karuna
in Colombo.
Initially we were all together in Colombo under Sri Lankan
security forces. Later Karuna moved to a separate place,
Nilavani told a press conference. In Colombo, they were kept at
the five-star Hilton Hotel for three days before being taken to
military safe houses. Her statement is further evidence that Sri
Lankan, and possibly Indian, intelligence was involved in engineering
the split in the LTTE.
A few months later, Karuna was able to open public offices
for his political party, the TMVP, in Colombo and the East, with
the tacit protection of the security forces. The split was one
factor in the push by sections of the military for a renewal of
the war to take advantage of the weakened LTTE position in the
East. Rajapakse narrowly won the presidency in November 2005 on
a program designed to provoke a conflict by demanding a review
of the ceasefire agreement.
The Karuna group is widely believed to have been involved in
the violent provocations that commenced shortly after the election.
It was implicated in the assassination of Joseph Pararajasingham,
a prominent pro-LTTE parliamentarian, at St. Marys cathedral
in the government-controlled town of Batticaloa on Christmas Eve
in 2005.
On April 7, 2006, V. Vigneswaran, another prominent pro-LTTE
politician, was killed in Trincomalee inside a High Security Zone.
A report issued by the University Teachers for Human Rights (UTHR,
Jaffna), which is known to oppose the LTTE, declared in October
2006 that Vigneswaran was killed by a Karuna cadre named
Riyaseelan (Seelan).
In November 2006, special advisor to the UN Representative
for Children and Armed Conflict, Allen Rock, told the media after
a 10-day fact finding mission in Sri Lanka, that there was strong
and credible evidence that sections of the military had
supported and participated in the abduction of children for the
Karuna faction. He complained that members of the Karuna group
roamed the Eastern province with impunity, openly carrying arms
through military checkpoints and engaging in violence and intimidation.
According to UNICEF, families in the Ampara, Batticaloa, and
Trincomalee districts had reported 208 child abductions by the
Karuna group as of December 31, 2006. Human rights groups, as
well as officials of the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM),
which oversaw the ceasefire, reported the collusion of the Karuna
faction with the military and police. After the Rajapakse government
relaunched the war in 2006, reports indicated that sections of
the Karuna faction collaborated in military operations.
In mid-2007, an internal conflict erupted within the TMVP between
Karuna and his deputy S. Chandrakanthan, also known as Pillayan.
Increasingly discredited among Tamils in the East for his groups
child abductions and killings, and under fire from international
human rights organisations, Karuna left for Britain on his diplomatic
passport. Three days after his arrest, Pillayan loyalists seized
the TMVP offices in Batticaloa in a quick, decisive coup on November
5 and placed the remaining Karuna loyalists in custody.
Now the Karuna group is known as the Pillayan group. The government
and the military quickly established a working relationship with
the new leadership. Rajapakses ruling United Freedom Peoples
Alliance (UPFA) entered a formal alliance with TMVP to contest
local government elections in Batticaloa district held on March
10. UPFA leaders justified the alliance by declaring that previous
governments had also collaborated with rival paramilitaries to
the LTTE.
The exact role of the Rajapakse brothers in obtaining a passport
for Karuna and in his subsequent arrest remains to be seen. While
his comments in court may have caused some embarrassment, the
fact that Karuna is out of the way in a British jail is very convenient
for the Sri Lankan government and military, who have much more
to fear if he were to tell the whole story of their involvement
in his violent crimes.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government plans
sham local elections in eastern Batticaloa
[22 February 2008]
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