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Tigers of Lanka: from Boys to
Guerrillas Velupillai
Pirabaharan was born in Jaffna hospital on November 26, 1954 when
Tamil-Sinhalese relations were inching towards a flash point. He was the
youngest of four children of Vallipuram Parvathi and Thiruvenkatam
Velupillai. Theirs was a typical middle class family where the youngest was
the darling of all. Pirabaharan's mother was deeply religious and very fond
of him. His thin-lipped father was strict and upright man who demanded
absolute discipline from his two sons and two daughters.
He was affectionate and gave them whatever comforts his salary as a district
land officer in the Sri Lankan government could allow. Pirabaharan was his
favourite child too, and the young boy would often cuddle up to his father
at night. The family nicknamed the young one "durai", or master.
Pirabaharan did his first two years at school in the eastern town of
Batticaloa (Mattakalappu), where his father was posted, and then joined the
Chithambara College in his home town of Valvettithurai, in Sri Lanka's
northern tip, after Velupillai got transfer.
He was an active, at times mischievous, student and rated average in
studies. That caused a lot of worry to his father who, like all Tamils,
valued education immensely. At the end of his 7th standard, Velupillai took
along his son to Vavuniya, where he was posted, so that the boy would remain
under his watchful eyes. He later brought Pirabaharan back to Valvettithurai
(VVT for short) for further schooling. The doting father also arranged for a
tutor to coach his son after school hours.
Pirabaharan's neighbors and schoolmates remember him fondly. "Pirabaharan
would actively help out the family during religious functions and happily
run errands for neighbours and relatives".
Pirabaharan was an able and enthusiastic assistant to the family during the
annual get-together for his grandfather's death anniversary. When the
ceremonies were over, he would carry lunch for relatives who had failed to
make it.
VVT, where Pirabaharan spent much of his early years, was a small and
closely-knit coastal town of some 10,000 Tamils with one catholic church and
3 Hindu temples. One of them, dedicated to Lord Shiva, was a virtual family
property of the Velupillais, and the young Pirabaharan would land there to
lend a helping hand during all major festivals. VVT's menfolk were civil
servants, traders, fishermen or simply smugglers, thanks to the winding sea
coast and the proximity to India.
Boats would sail to Rangoon, Chittagong, Rameshwaram, Nagapattinam and
Cochin laden with both legitimate cargo and contraband.
VVT was politically conservative and more receptive to the relatively
moderate Tamil Congress. It was among the few places in Jaffna where the
Federal Party did not organise its "satyagragha" campaign in 1961. Otherwise
VVT shared the traits of other Tamil areas. Its residents, like Tamils
elsewhere in Sri Lanka's northeast, were greatly influenced by India's
independence struggle, and photographs of such Indian leaders as Mahatma
Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Swami Vivekananda and Subash Chandra Bose adorned
many homes.
August 15, India's independence day, was celebrated in the town with pride,
and Tamil newspapers and magazines of Jaffna which would come out with a
special supplements to mark the occasion, were read with avid interest in
VVT.
Velupillai was a popular man who would hold endless discussions with friends
on the worsening ethnic relations in the country, lamenting the fate of
Tamils. The exchange of views would be in Tamil and English, and although he
did not understand every word, Pirabaharan was often present by his father's
side and listened attentively. This was his preliminary introduction to
politics and to the world of Tamil-Sinhalese conflict. It was perhaps during
these discussions that Pirabaharan picked up the habit of being a patient
listener.
But school did not interest him, other things did. Pirabaharan was
fascinated by the life and times of two Indians: Subash Chandra Bose and
Bhagat Singh, in that order. Bose's brief forays into spiritualism, his
innate militancy, his willingness to take on Mahatma Gandhi, his carefully
planned escape from India, his fight against the British with the
hastily-formed Indian National Army and almost everything the charismatic
Bengali nationalist did made him Pirabaharan's hero. He would return to
books on Bose repeatedly, gripped in particular by his one war like slogan:
"I shall fight for the freedom of my land until I shed the last drop of
blood".
Then there were the military exploits of Napoleon, the teachings of Swami
Vivekananda, the story of Mahabharata, and the religious discourses of the
saintly Kirupanandha Variyar, who came to VVT once a year from Tamil Nadu.
Pirabaharan was himself quietly pious, in line with the family, and his
favourite deity was Lord Subramania.
There were also political meetings in VVT which Pirabaharan attended and
where speakers detailed Sinhalese atrocities and called for building up
Tamil resistance.
Someone told Pirabaharan about a Hindu priest at Panadura town who was
caught by a Sinhalese mob during the 1958 riots, tied to the cot on which he
was sleeping, doused with kerosene and burnt to death. "Ours was a
God-fearing society and the people were religious-minded. The widespread
feeling was: when a priest like him was burnt alive, why did we not have the
capability to hit back?", Pirabaharan would ask one day.
The future guerrilla fighter related such stories to his school-mates. His
love for the catapult, while the other boys were more interested in sports,
was legendary and took him to the world of marksmanship.
His earliest victims were chameleons, squirrels and birds which he felled or
killed with pebbles. Some birds which did not die were taken home. When he
didn't have a catapult, he would hang any object from a tree and shoot
rubber arrows at it - or simply throw a stone in the air and try hitting it
with another stone before it came crashing down.
Interests & Friends in Younger Days
His father did not take kindly to Pirabaharan's many friends dropping in at
home. So Pirabaharan remained essentially a loner in his earlier days, shy
of girls and always restless. When he was alone, he would recite dialogues
from the Tamil movie "Veerapandia Kattabomman", imagining himself to be the
legendary warrior..... He also learnt the rudiments of judo and karate, and
his family, noticing the boy's interest for anything to do with fighting
skills, began teasing him as "veeravan", or the brave one.
One of his friends was Sathasivam Krishnakumar (Kittu), who would emerge as
the LTTE's feared military commander of Jaffna. Pirabaharan and Kittu would
experiment filling empty soda bottles with chemicals pilfered from school
and exploding them. Once Pirabaharan and his friends attached a lighted
incense stick to a pack of incendiary chemicals and kept it in the school
toilet. The "time bomb" exploded just when they expected it to. " We burst
out laughing", a Chithambara school product recalled. "The principal
suspected us but none of us admitted making it."
Simultaneously, as the 70's produced the first pangs of militancy,
Pirabaharan began preparing for the battles that he perceived lay ahead. he
would tie himself up, get into a sack and lie under the sun the whole day.
He would also go and spread himself on chilli bags. He even inserted pins
into his nails.
As in other Tamil areas, the introduction of "Standardization" pushed the
students and youths in VVT, angry at what they thought was a brazen attempt
by the government to legitimise racial discrimination, to reject the
traditional parliamentary politics for militancy. Pirabaharan was losing
whatever little interest he had in education and increasingly spoke to
friends about "Sinhalese oppression".
An elderly VVT resident who knew Pirabaharan and his family closely
recalled: "We advised the boys not to protest and to keep studying. But I
couldn't convince even one person after standardisation". Pirabaharan
drifted, like many of his contemporaries, to the Tamil Student League (TSL)
and the Tamil Youth League (TYL), which organised street protests against "standardisation"
as well as the 1972 Republican constitution.
TYL acted as the youth wing of the Tamil United Front (TUF). Pirabaharan's
earliest contacts outside of his immediate circle were the members of the
two leagues, most of whom were elder to him. The included Thangathurai and
Kuttimani, both of whom were from VVT, and a cousin who went by the name of
"periya" Sothi.
By then, Pirabaharan had been absenting himself from home, initially for
days and then for weeks. The young man bristled with energy as he tore
around Jaffna in shorts, meeting new people discussing Tamil politics, the
ancient Tamil kingdoms in India and Sri Lanka, and the possibility of an
armed struggle a la Bose.
"Once he began speaking, it was very difficult to stop him. He would go on
and on", a former Pirabaharan's aide said. In 1972 he was wounded in the leg
when a bomb he was making with Thangathurai and others under a palmyrah tree
burst prematurely. It earned him the title "Karikalan" ( man with black
legs), and when police began looking for Pirabaharan,, they made it a point
to scan young men's legs in a bid to identify the elusive rebel.
In 1973, when the police cracked down on TYL activists following the arrest
of Sathiyaseelan, detectives visited Pirabaharan's house looking for him. He
was already under suspicion for an assassination attempt on Jaffna Mayor
Alfred Duraiyappah at a carnival...
But Pirabaharan had bolted by then and sailed to India with at least four
others, including Kuttimani and Thangathurai. He eventually made it to
Madras with Periya Sothi and hired a small house at Kodambakkam with the
help of T.R. Janardhanan, a local politician who had written a book on the
Sri Lankan Tamil ethnic crisis earlier.
Janardhanan remembers Pirabaharan as a shy and quiet young man with big
piercing eyes who always appeared to be itching for action. But the latter
hardly had any money on him and life in Madras was not easy. Janardhanan was
a bachelor willing to pay host to Sri Lankan Tamils who dropped by, and
Pirabaharan used the opportunity for free meals and political discussions.
But Pirabaharan was restless and was soon tired of being with Periya Sothi,
who appeared content staying in Madras. Chetti, a Jaffna youth, had by then
escaped from a prison in Sri Lanka, and he too eventually made it to Madras
and took up residence in the city's Mylapore area. Chetti was also a man of
action, and naturally he and Pirabaharan forged an instant friendship.
Periya Sothi didn't like the new found camaraderie between the two, and
complained to any willing listener that Pirabaharan was getting into bad
company. Pirabaharan countered that Periya Sothi was just "cooking and
eating in Madras" and that he (Prabha) was perfectly aware of Chetti's
criminal record. "But Chetti and his people are active", he told friends.
"As for me, I will never, never lose my identity".
Thangathurai and Kuttimani also tried to dissuade Pirabaharan from joining
hands with Chetti. But he turned down the advice, virtually snapping his
relationship with the VVT duo, and sailed back to Jaffna to be with his new
comrade-in-arms.
Formation of the Tamil New Tigers
Pirabaharan was now completely underground, cut off from his family although
he managed to retain contacts with select relatives. The months in India had
made him a lot tougher. In Vedaraniyam, a Tamil Nadu coastal town and a
known landing point for Sri Lankan Tamils who came by boat, Pirabaharan and
Thangathurai and the others had led a hard life.
The group was often hungry and would eagerly look forward to the "prasadam"
distributed at the local temple. Cheap curd rice was the only food they
could afford to buy. There were times when Pirabaharan and others would take
sleep-inducting tablets in a desperate bid to beat the hunger.
By the time Pirabaharan landed in Jaffna, the 1974 International Tamil
Conference had ended on a bloody note. And Sivakumaran, the darling of Tamil
youths, had committed suicide, giving Pirabaharan the first practical
example of what cyanide could do. Pirabaharan had been impressed by
Sivakumaran's exploits and had wanted to meet him.
Now he was also cut off from Thangathurai and had to prepare new hideouts
since the earlier ones were known to the police.
In October 1974 Prime Minister Srimavo was to visit Jaffna, and Pirabaharan
and Chetti decided to give her a hot reception. The duo went on a violence
spree, exploding bombs at half a dozen targets, including the Kankesanthurai
police station, Jaffna's main market etc. The explosions did not cause much
damage, but as anticipated triggered panic.
Chetti was re-arrested a short while later, putting further strain on
Pirabaharan. Chetti had earlier robbed a cooperative store in Jaffna and
quietly bought a car, and gave conflicting answers when friends asked him
about his new lifestyle.
Pirabaharan once again found himself in financial strain after police caught
Chetti, and had to go through the process of forging new contacts and
securing fresh hideouts for the second time in less than a year. It was a
task he did admirably well, although it took him time to realise that he had
been cheated by Chetti.
Pirabaharan survived those days on wild fruits and food that his close
associates shared with him. "I used to secretly give him helpings from our
kitchen", said a former LTTE member who was not underground then.
Pirabaharan, however, never strayed from the cause for which he had fled his
home. The constant search for shelter and hiding places never stopped him
from preaching Tamil politics with passion.
Once he suffered an attack on jaundice, but he would not go to a doctor;
miraculously, and to his friend's surprise, he recovered. But otherwise
Pirabaharan remained his old self.
There would be no stopping him if he began a monologue on the Indian
independence struggle and Tamil history. And if he was desperate for money,
he would request friends to cycle up to VVT and borrow cash from
sympathisers. He himself avoided going to his home town. But despite all the
hard work, Pirabaharan remained an unknown entity in Jaffna until
Duraiyappah was gunned down.
A day before the assassination on July 27, 1975, Pirabaharan walked into a
friend's house armed with an unloaded and almost rusted revolver, a bundle
of matchboxes and some assorted materials. The friend watched in amazement
as Pirabaharan began collecting the tip of the matchsticks and making
pellets out of them.
"Can you shoot with this?" the friend asked mockingly. Pirabaharan, his mind
engrossed in the art of making bullets to kill, replied without any visible
display of emotion: "Keep quiet. See what happens tomorrow".
The next day, Pirabaharan set out at dawn. The friend had no idea where he
was headed to. But when he heard that Duraiyappah had been shot while
visiting a temple, the friend guessed rightly -and easily- who could have
been responsible....
Although three accomplices who took part in the killing were arrested,
Pirabaharan - like the phantom he had adored - remained one step ahead of
his pursuers. He would never be caught, never face police torture and never
see the insides of a prison in Sri Lanka. He spoke little and gave nothing
away even by way of hints either about his movements or future plans....
The "boys" although admired, did not enjoy many sympathisers in Jaffna those
days. Most Tamils abhorred violence.
Pirabaharan had warned his friends not to sleep in their houses after the
killing, but they had ignored the advice. Pirabaharan himself made no
mistake on that score. His constant companion was a revolver which he kept
under the pillow when he slept.
He also asked his friends to be constantly armed- it did not matter even if
the weapon was only a kitchen knife or chilli powder. The Tamil New Tigers's
armoury was limited to two revolvers, one of it bought with stolen money.
Pirabaharan's obsession with safety was such that he would not met anyone,
including possible recruits to the militant movement, if there was anything
even remotely suspicious about them. There were others he met without
revealing his real identity.
Beginnings of the LTTE
Pirabaharan had torn and destroyed all his photographs in the family album
before leaving the house. But there was no guarantee that the police did not
have a picture of him.
Now Pirabaharan made new contacts, many of which proved long-lasting. He
however declined to go to India to escape the police dragnet. Tamil politics
was slowly but inevitably moving towards a confrontation with Colombo.
In 1976, S. Subramaniam, who then headed a small militant group of his own,
teamed up with Pirabaharan. In subsequent years, Pirabaharan would get many
more associates, but Subramaniam alias Baby, would remain an invaluable
asset and loyal friend.
On March 5th, Pirabaharan led a raid on the People's Bank at Putter in
Jaffna and escaped with 500,000 rupees in cash and jewellery worth 200,000
rupees. The money would into building the LTTE, which was founded on May 5th
and for its secret training camps in the forest of Killinochi and Vavuniya.
Pirabaharan was at Vaddukoddai where the TUF transformed itself as the TULF
and declared its intention to fight for a sovereign state of Eelam,
electrifying Tamil politics. Amirthalingam was the hero of that convention
and was referred to as the "Thalapathy" (general) of the Tamil struggle.
Pirabaharan knew him and respected him. After the July 77 elections, which
the TULF swept in the Tamil areas, their relationship blossomed. Although
his interest in political work was minimal, Pirabaharan used to quietly meet
Amir and other TULF leaders at their homes. Pirabaharan was slowly coming
out of the shell he had confined himself to all these years.
The LTTE opened 1977 by gunning down a police constable on February 14 at
Maviddapuram in Jaffna. On May 18, two more policemen were shot near Inuvil,
about 4 miles from Jaffna. LTTE activists approached them on bicycles,
opened fire and went away pedalling- a method that was to slowly become a
LTTE trademark in Jaffna.
Simultaneously Pirabaharan began building the LTTE by recruiting and
training trusted young men at an out-of the way place called Poonthottam,
some two miles from Vavuniya town. Around the same time, Thangathurai opened
another training camp in Mullaitivu district.
Pirabaharan had already prepared a logo for the LTTE with the help of an
artist in Madurai during one of his clandestine visits to Tamil Nadu. It
showed the head of a roaring tiger, paws outstretched, with two rifles and
33 bullets set against a circle ringing the tiger's head. The Tiger was the
insignia of the ancient Tamil Chola kingdom, and Pirabaharan was visibly
enthusiastic when the logo was first shown to him.
He went on to form a five member central committee of the LTTE, putting
himself as a member of the leadership council. He charted a constitution
which all members were expected to sign and accept. It called for the
establishment of a casteless Tamil society by armed struggle, warned members
against tainting their loyalty to the LTTE with family ties or love affairs.
Training would take place either in the farm at Poonthottam , with a huge
cardboard cut-out of a man, or in forest areas where a tree with some
natural clearing would serve as the target... the Tiger supremo was not only
a good shooter; he was also a meticulous planner. If a bank was to raided,
he would put the place under watch for weeks, if necessary for months. The
planning for the operation would be done in a systematic way. He would take
the lead role in the discussions, but share operational secrets only on a
need-to-know basis. Before a major operation got under way, Pirabaharan
would tense up, walking up and down with his hands clasped behind. He did
not like to or accept defeat.... His philosophy was: Never say die.
Collaboration with EROS for training
In 1977, he was joined by Uma Maheswaran, and suddenly the world to open up
for the Tigers. Until then almost all entrants to the LTTE were obscure
young men. Uma was different. He was not only older to Pirabaharan by some
10 years, but he was also secretary of the TULF's Colombo chapter and a
known orator.
In London, EROS had already sent two batches to Lebanon for learning
military warfare from the PLO. The bitter internal rivalries that were to
mark the Tamil struggle in later years were absent then. So EROS
functionaries decided to open up the training to others as well, the LTTE
included.
One of the first three Tamils to go to Lebanon was Arul Pragasam, alias
Arular. He reached Kannady, also in Vavuniya, in 1976 with a view to settle
down and establish a base to woo the educated class into joining the EROS.
He was followed from London by Shankar Rajee, another founder member who
established the first contacts with the LTTE.
Arular, with his Kannady farm barely 20 miles from Pirabaharan's hideout,
met the LTTE leader several times beginning September 1976. With his degree
in engineering and newly-acquired knowledge in Lebanon, Arular passed on to
Pirabaharan ideas about making explosives. In turn, Pirabaharan agreed to
provide incendiary chemicals to Arular.
Once a LTTE courier carrying nitric acid to the Kannady farm was caught by
the police after he could not give credible explanation about his presence
in the Vavuniya forest. Arular, who came rushing from Jaffna on hearing
about the arrest, told the police that he had ordered the acid to pour it
into snake pits. Mercifully, the police were convinced by the explanation
and released the courier. But Pirabaharan would not leave any evidence; at
the first opportunity he had the police station raided and all documents
related to the arrest were taken away. The courier promptly escaped to Tamil
Nadu...
In normal times... Pirabaharan avoided handling a rifle. He was fascinated
by revolvers and possessed one all the time. He would never miss an
opportunity to practice with that. Pirabaharan was an excellent marksman who
could repeatedly get the bull's eye. At times, the guerrilla-in-making would
even ask visitors for a friendly shooting match.
One such request was made to Shankar Rajee, who initially hesitated, saying
he was not familiar with Pirabaharan's .22 revolver. But Pirabaharan
persisted and asked Rajee to exhibit his skill on an empty "Milk Maid" can
placed on a mud wall some 20 feet away.
Rajee who found the LTTE training camp vastly different from the Fatah camps
he had been to in Lebanon and Syria, fired first. The bullet grazed the can
and toppling it. Pirabaharan walked up to the fallen can, picked it up and
replaced it on the wall. He returned to where Rajee was standing, turned,
took aim and fired. It was bulls' eye.
Rajee was naturally impressed. If he was inquisitive about the source of
Pirabaharan's marksmanship, he found the answer: "I saw in the room a "Teach
Yourself Shooting" book published in London. It was evident that whatever he
knew, it was self-taught".
TULF - LTTE understanding
In 1977, the Tigers were considered close, and even sympathetic, to the TULF,
much to the chagrin of the EROS and other left-wing Tamils who thought that
Amir and Co. were nothing more than a bunch of bourgeois politicians.
As violence by the militants continued even after the general elections, the
TULF got worried. Amir called a meeting of the LTTE leadership at his
residence at Moolai village in November 1977. Seven of LTTE men, including
Pirabaharan, Uma and Baby attended.
Amir spoke slowly but firmly. The TULF, he reminded the Tigers, had won the
elections and should be given a chance. The killings, he added, had gone up
and should be put on hold at least for the time being. "I am not asking you
to give up violence, but you should cool down," he said.
Pirabaharan was silent. In fact none of the LTTE members responded by way of
argument. Amir was the superstar of Jaffna in 1977 and no one dared to upset
him.....
3 months later, Bastiampillai and 3 other policemen were gunned down in a
stunning attack by Chellakili at a LTTE forest hideout. Uma was there too,
but played no role in the killings, simply watching the men die from the top
of a tree where he was hiding.
A section of the LTTE decided to claim responsibility for all that the group
had done for the cause until then. Uma had by then become chairman of a
reconstructed nine-member central committee. Pirabaharan had himself
proposed his name; although it technically meant that Uma was the numero uno
in the LTTE, the effective military leadership remained in the hands of
Pirabaharan.
The government, alarmed at the escalating violence in Tamil areas, hurriedly
issued the Proscription of the LTTE and other similar organisations
Ordinance, outlawing all Tamil militant groups. In May, the police issued a
list of 38 "wanted" men. Heading the names was V. Pirabaharan. He was no
more an unknown commodity.
Amir was bitter about the LTTE claim. He could not stomach that a relatively
unknown bunch of young men was trying to overshadow the TULF. His anger was
compounded when party colleagues made their displeasure known. "You said the
boys were under your control," he was repeatedly told. "Now see." An angry
Amir called for Uma and made his displeasure clear to him.
In the summer of 1979, the 11th World Festival of Youth and Students was
held in Havana. The LTTE came out with a pamphlet outlining the Tamil
struggle in 6 languages- English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese and
Tamil - for distribution at the Cuban capital. The TULF had been invited to
the jamboree, and the LTTE decided to take advantage of it. But luck ran out
for the Tigers. A London-based LTTE emissary who was to carry them to Cuba
was denied visa by the Cuban embassy at Madrid and he returned to London,
from where the pamphlets were posted to the festival secretariat at Havana.
Pirabaharan remained more or less aloof from this publicity blitz. He
remained content with what he thought was more important - recruitment,
training, and collection and storage of arms and ammunition.
In 1978, the LTTE had been joined by Kittu, Mahatthaya and Raghu. All three
were from VVT. Raghu had wanted to be a policemen, but was rejected because
he hailed from VVT.
By 1979, the Tigers had spread their fangs to eastern province, where
Charles Lucas Anthony, a young firebrand catholic, was to prove an
invaluable addition from Trincomalee. The new members were asked to sign and
express their allegiance to the LTTE constitution. Preliminary training got
underway almost at once.
Beginnings of Uma - Pirabaharan rift
On December 5 1979, the LTTE raided the People's bank and decamped with 1.2
million rupees after killing two policemen and wounding a third. The police
launched a vicious crackdown which forced scores of militants to flee to
Tamil Nadu. Pirabaharan was one of them.
The security hunt scattered the "boys" and seriously disrupted their
network. But the LTTE used the opportunity to send trainees to Lebanon to
master what the EROS had learnt. The Tigers paid 100,000 rupees to EROS for
despatching 16 men to Lebanon; the PLO also pressed the LTTE to send cadres
for training. The LTTE leadership council decided to send four members -
including Chellakilli and Uma - in the first batch. Uma, in keeping with his
status as the group's chairman, decreed that Pirabaharan could travel later.
None of the four who were picked to go to Lebanon had passports. But a
sympathetic Tamil Nadu MP helped them to get Indian passports.
The passports were taken to London to get Syrian visa with the help of the
PLO mission there; but to the LTTE's horror, the British customs seized them
after a courier who had hidden them inside a Tamil typewriter could not
explain why he had them. The LTTE couldn't care less. It promptly got four
more passports made in Madras.
Eventually, however, only Uma and another LTTE activist made it to Lebanon
via Paris, where the Tigers had to stay one night at a railway station
because his contact failed to turn up on time from London. The training
ended within 3 months. But the Tigers were not happy. Pirabaharan had
desired that the trainees bring back some arms. Uma failed to do that. On
top of it, Uma complained that the training was lousy. The financial aspect
of the trip also sparked a major row between the LTTE and EROS, in
particular between Pirabaharan and Rajee.
Pirabaharan thought that the LTTE had been cheated and wanted Rajee to
present himself before the LTTE's central committee. Rajee refused. Amir
intervened after this dispute showed no signs of abating. The matter was
finally settled when Rajee agreed to cough back 285 pounds to the LTTE. That
incident was to remain a sore point in Pirabaharan's dealings with Rajee for
a long time.
It was around this time that Pirabaharan and Uma began to quarrel. One of
the main cause of their differences, which was to have far-reaching
consequences for the future of Tamil militancy, centred around Urmila.
Pirabaharan suspected Uma having sex with Urmila ( a militant cadre) , which
in the LTTE's book was a serious crime.
When Pirabaharan drew up the LTTE constitution, he had made it very clear
that he considered family life and love affairs as impediments to
revolutionary politics. When the first word about the alleged Uma-Urmila
affair reached his ears, Pirabaharan did not believe it. But when he did, he
promptly asked Uma to quit the LTTE along with Urmila. Uma declined.
In interviews years later, Pirabaharan never mentioned Urmila by name and
simply accused Uma of having violated the LTTE's conduct code. "It was a
problem between an individual and the Tiger movement," he said in 1984. "I
am in no way responsible for the problem. It was Uma who created the
issue.... A leader of a revolutionary movement should commit himself totally
to the discipline of the organisation. If a leader violates the basic rules
and principles, then there will be chaos and the organisation will crumble."
But the break - up did not come about quickly. It was bitter and
protracted....
Anton Balasingham's Entry into the LTTE
It was then that the London representatives of the LTTE decided to bring
into the Tiger fold a Sri Lankan Tamil who lived in London. The man was a
Marxist, had a firm footing on ideology, was committed to the cause of Tamil
independence and was eager to play a more active role. Until then, he was
operating from his council flat, writing Tamil and English pamphlets for any
Sri Lankan Tamil group which approached him. And almost everyone did: the
LTTE, the GUES (which was the student wing of EROS) and the Tamil Liberation
Organisation (TLO), which claimed to be the biggest expatriate group of
Tamils. The man who the LTTE now sought was Anton Stanislaus Balasingham.
Balasingham was a former journalist who had worked for the "Veerakesari",
the Colombo-based Tamil newspaper which in 1978 published the LTTE's first
public statement and was noted for its coverage of events in Sri Lanka's
northeast. He had later joined the British High Commission in Colombo as a
translator, before moving to London where he enrolled at the South Bank
Polytechnic. He was living with a young Australian woman Adele when the LTTE
approached him with an unusual request: Would he go to Madras and take
ideological classes for LTTE members and perhaps, in the process, help the
Tigers overcome their internal differences? Balasingham agreed.
Balasingham was not unknown to the LTTE leadership. The first LTTE document
in Tamil, published in 1978, had been authored by him. He had also penned
the pamphlet for the Havana summit. The LTTE would suggest to him what it
wanted; Balasingham would prepare a draft, which would be sent to Uma for
corrections and modifications, and then published as a LTTE document.
In 1979, he had written the LTTE's first major theoretical work, called
"Towards Socialist Tamil Eelam". It first came out in Tamil and then in
English, and was an instant hit among the Jaffna intelligentsia. Balasingham
was naturally held in high esteem. When he flew into Madras in 1979, there
was excitement and expectancy.
Bala was effusive. He shook hands politely with Pirabaharan, Uma and others
when they were introduced at his hotel room. He carefully examined a
revolver which Pirabaharan displayed to him, saying it had belonged to the
slain police officer Bastiampillai. Bala returned it to Pirabaharan with a
smile, and announced that he was ready to hold classes for the LTTE.
Somehow Uma and Bala remained distant from each other, although both shared
a keen interest in Marxism. On the other hand, Bala developed an instant
rapport with the younger Pirabaharan. And this only further fuelled the
Uma-Pirabaharan fissures, defeating one of the main purposes of approaching
Bala in the first place.
Bala was irked by Uma's questions at his classes. Uma was no doubt well
read, but he also had the habit - which was to later cause him enormous
problems with Indian officials - of asking too many questions. If Uma was
not satisfied with what Bala said- and this happened quite often - he would
make his distaste very evident. Bala knew that Uma had been superimposing
his thoughts on documents which he prepared in London. Pirabaharan, in
contrast, was a sound listener and asked virtually no questions.
One reason for Pirabaharan's behaviour was his near total disinterest in
Marxist politics and ideology. He was a practical man, solely interested in
ways to build up his militant group. If he was ill, he never bothered; if a
colleague was sick, however, he would make umpteen requests about his
health. If a friend dropped in at the camp without notice and demanded food,
Pirabaharan would not hesitate to run out, hunt a wild hen and cook it with
pleasure.
His interest in reading - he would often request friends to read out long
articles for him - was confined to military matters; dialectical materialism
was not for him. Occasionally, he would get immersed in Tamil novels and
magazines and , much to others' surprise, even in the children's "Ambulimama"
(chandamam) magazine.
But he would listen to Bala attentively. Bala, in turn, was impressed by the
young man's ability to put together a group of Eelam and his determination
to wage an armed struggle. A Jaffna academic who met Pirabaharan at Vavuniya
around the same time too came to a similar conclusion - a practical man but
without any grasp of ideology which "Towards Socialist Eelam" was seeking to
convey. "I don't know all that," Pirabaharan said of socialism. "But I want
all these caste differences to go."
Pirabaharan was furious when the academic argued that it was important to
politicise people before taking to the gun.... When the academic persisted,
Pirabaharan commented with undisguised contempt: "You (arm chair)
intellectuals are afraid of blood. No struggle will take place without
killings. What do you want me to do? You people live in comfort and try to
prove me wrong. So what should I do? Take cyanide and die?"
The Growing Rift
Killings, Pirabaharan thought, were important, even necessary, in a
struggle; it also helped revolutionaries to steel themselves. ..... He did
not kill without any reason; but if he had to kill, he would not hesitate.
It was not unnatural then that Pirabaharan finally decided to do away with
Uma.
After Bala flew back to London, Pirabaharan kept pressing the charges
against Uma. The latter presumed that Bala was prodding him to do so.....Uma
.... maintained that his differences with Pirabaharan arose over the LTTE's
attitude towards the TULF, which Uma thought had become ineffective after
the 1977 elections.
Uma did not leave the LTTE; he was expelled by the central committee on
Pirabaharan's request. But Uma the politician would not give up easily. He
continued to pose himself as the leader of the LTTE, further infuriating
Pirabaharan. S.Sivashanmugamurthy, a Uma confidant, disappeared with some of
the LTTE's arms. Pirabaharan reacted fast, taking away weapons from other
hideouts to prevent them from falling into Uma's hands.
Pirabaharan was very angry. The LTTE constitution barred splitters or
ex-members from forming new groups. Here the man who was named chairman of
the LTTE by none other than Pirabaharan was calling himself the real
LTTE....
But if Pirabaharan thought Uma's betrayal was the end of the problem, he was
wrong. Uma's exit had not been smooth; not everyone had been happy with
Pirabaharan's insistence that Uma should be sacked ....
A new five member central committee was elected, but Pirabaharan demanded
that he be given overriding say in the organisation. Not everyone agreed.
One group decided it had enough of underground existence and went off to
form a "Tamil Protection League". Another demanded that the LTTE should
transform itself into a mass organisation. At one point it seemed that the
only man prepared to side with Pirabaharan was Baby Subramaniam.
This was too much for a man who had left his house in his teens to fight for
Eelam. He was seeing the slow but sure disintegration of a group he had
formed and nursed with great care....
Expulsion of Uma Maheswaran
After a while, Pirabaharan, pain written large on his face, contacted
Thangathurai, Kuttimani and Nadesuthasan of the TELO at a relative's house
at Thirunelveli, Jaffna. "I left you as a "Thambi" (younger brother). I have
come back as a thambi", he told Thangathurai, his kinsman from VVT...
Thangathurai was willing to embrace him. But the opinion within the TELO was
divided. At least three men, including Sri Sabaratnam, did not want
Pirabaharan in the TELO. Kuttimani suggested that Pirabaharan should be
given some arms and asked to operate independently. Thangathurai took the
final decision. Much to the chagrin of others, he made Pirabaharan
responsible for a TELO military training that had been planned for in Tamil
Nadu. The LTTE would later describe Pirabaharan's association with the TELO
as a "working alliance" between the two groups.
Pirabaharan went about contacting his old Tiger buddies; his charisma
brought back some of those who had broken ranks only weeks earlier. The
depleted LTTE group which gathered around Pirabaharan was soon in possession
of more than 10 revolvers, two AK-47's, two G-3 rifles and one 9mm pistol.
It had earlier bought some used weapons from former Indian army soldiers in
Tamil Nadu.
Armed with that, Pirabaharan and company threw in their lot with the TELO...
(In March 1981) the TELO pulled off the Neerveli bank robbery, and at the
end of the bloody ambush, which left two policemen dead, the group was
richer by a staggering 8.1 miilion rupees. The operation was commanded by
Kuttimani.
The heist sealed Kuttimani's fate. On April 5, he, Thangathurai and Jegan
were arrested while trying to escape to Tamil Nadu. Pirabaharan was lucky.
He was to have left them on the sea front, but the job was entrusted to Sri
Sabaratnam at the last moment. The trio's unexpected arrest again brought
out the best in Pirabaharan. Without wasting time, he began shifting the
hidden arms to new dumps. Some of the places were raided by the police just
after the weapons were moved out.
Simultaneously, the police began cracking down on suspected militants and
their sympathisers, partly to finish off the TELO and partly to maintain
peace during the District Development Council (DDC) elections proposed for
June 4.
But Uma had other ideas. Uma had claimed to be the inheritor of the LTTE
legacy after splitting with Pirabaharan. But he had come under pressure from
friends both in Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu to end the dispute with Pirabaharan
by giving up claim to the LTTE's name.
Uma had already moved in that direction, associating himself with a Tamil
magazine called Pudhiya Padai (New Path). It was edited by Sivasanmugamurty,
an ardent leftist and his trusted lieutenant who would eventually become the
deputy in the People's Liberation Organisation Tamil Eelam (PLOT). Uma was
then bitterly opposed to the TULF for deciding to take part in the DDC
elections and angry with Amir who, he thought, had a soft corner for
Pirabaharan.
Uma was determined to sabotage the DDC polls. On May 24, the PLOT shot a UNP
candidate, A.Thiagarajah. One week later, a PLOT gunmen - probably Uma
himself - opened fire at a TULF public meeting near Jaffna town, killing two
policemen. The killings unleashed massive anti-Tamil riots in Jaffna and
elsewhere in Sri Lanka. Police and the military went berserk, and one of the
buildings which went up in flames in Jaffna in the violence was the town's
public library.
One of the hundreds who saw the monument of Tamil glory burnt down with its
invaluable collections was Pirabaharan.
Shift to Madras
Now Pirabaharan's main worry was when to escape. Since the arrest of
Thangathurai and Kuttimani, life in Jaffna had once again become nearly
impossible. He was avoiding his normal hideouts, afraid that they might be
known to the police. After the Neerveli robbery he had trekked to the
forests in Mannar, to the west of Vavuniya, with Sri Sabaratnam and remained
there for a while. Later, back in Jaffna, he began to sleep where he could,
even in thickets and fields, and avoided moving about during the day.
Annamalai Varatharaja Perumal offered to help and arranged a safe house on
Pirabaharan's request. Perumal rented a house and asked his mother to stay
there. The Tigers paid the rent. Pirabaharan never stayed there, but would
frequent the place when he liked.
But the police heat continued, and on June 5 Pirabaharan sent Raghu, one of
his most trusted colloquies, to Shivaji Lingam, a TELO activist at VVT,
requesting a safe house. Shivaji arranged for one without delay. It was
located near the VVT army camp, but no one suspected it.
Pirabaharan came that night with some 10 others, armed with one G-3, one
AK-47, one SMG and one shotgun. The group also possessed revolvers. The
house was spacious enough to accommodate the entire lot and had its own
bath; so no one had to step out for any reason. But Pirabaharan's intention
was not to stay. He asked Shivaji if a reliable boatman would take him and
his friends to Tamil Nadu.
Until 1983, no Tamil militant group had a boat of its own. The "boys" were
ferried by friendly and at times unsuspecting boatmen, who were known as "Ottis".
The Ottis were masters of the Palk Strait, commanded a thorough knowledge of
both the weather and the movements of customs and navy boats.
There were tough men and most militants feared them. Each ride to Tamil Nadu
cost about 100 - 200 rupees, although some Ottis charged nothing. Later many
Ottis joined the militant groups.
A boat was arranged for Pirabaharan and his group on June 6. That night, the
entire lot moved out of Shivaji's hideout. Just as they were stepping out, a
rifle held by someone who was still inside the house misfired. The bullet
got embedded in the bed.
Pirabaharan, with his penchant for secrecy, was furious. He calmed down only
after being assured that sound could not have travelled very far.
There was another dangerous moment when the group set out again. An army
jeep cruised that way without headlights. Everyone, Pirabaharan included,
went flat just in time until the jeep passed by. Pirabaharan got up, looked
towards the direction of the vanishing jeep and resumed walking to the
shore. Within minutes, he was on his way to India.
Life in Tamil Nadu was no bed of roses. Pirabaharan's men, with the booty
from the Neerveli loot gone with Kuttimani's arrest, found the going tough.
But a small group of Tamil Nadu politicians and friendly forest guards
helped Pirabaharan to open a training camp for some 25 men after clearing a
forest strip in Madurai.
A retired Indian Air Force officer imparted training to the Sri Lankans.
Only revolvers and shotguns were used for firing sessions since the group
was low on ammunition for the automatic weapons.
Pirabaharan and others led a low-key life, spending the least amount of
money on food. Their treasurer Iyer, demanded and kept meticulous account
for every rupee spent. The upper limit on expenses for a single individual
for a day was 12 Sri Lankan rupees.
In Jaffna, meanwhile, the PLOT raided the Anaikottai police station in July
and the People's Bank at Killinochi three months later.
On Oct 15, Charles Lucan Anthony, alias Seelan, who was the most
high-profile LTTE hit man in Jaffna after Pirabaharan, ambushed an army jeep
on the Kankesanthurai road, killing two soldiers. It was the first attack on
the Sri Lankan army by Tamil militants.
In 1982, Uma's right-hand man Sivashanmugamurthy was shot dead by a gunman,
believed to be Seelan, at the Chitra press in Jaffna, where Pudiya Pathai
was published.
Uma sailed to Tamil Nadu a bitter man, accompanied by two men who had sided
with him during his earlier fight with Pirabaharan: Somasundaram
Jyotheeswaran alias Kannan and Thuraiarajah Sivaneswaran alias Kaka. But
Pirabaharan was more than ready. He was not the one to stand any opposition.
Sivashanmugamurthy's murder had already led to trouble in Madras. Kandasamy
Padmanabha, who had broken away from EROS, had issued a statement in Madras
condemning the slaying .
Pirabaharan and Sri Sabaratnam drove in a car to Pathmanaba's house, but the
latter was not in. Pirabaharan's men, however, insisted on checking the
house and whipped out a pistol when they were denied entry.
Arrest of Uma and Pirabaharan
Now if Uma wanted a fight, Pirabaharan was more than willing to give him
one. Pavalar Perum Chitranar, an Indian Tamil who supported the Eelam
campaign, tried to patch up the differences between Uma and Pirabaharan but
failed. By the time the two came face to face, Pirabaharan had formally
renounced his links with the TELO following a leadership tangle and become
the undisputed leader of the LTTE.
On May 19, Uma and Kannan were about to board a motorcycle outside a
restaurant at Pondy Bazar in Madras when the latter saw Pirabaharan and one
of his old hands, Raghavan.
Both Uma and Pirabaharan whipped out their revolvers almost at the same
time, but it was the more agile Tiger chief who fired first. Pirabaharan let
go at least six rounds. Uma, however, managed to get away. Kannan was not as
lucky; he suffered five wounds and was bleeding when he was arrested.
Pirabaharan and Raghavan also tried to flee, but ran into a crowd and were
caught by policemen who had rushed to the scene. Uma was tracked down near a
railway station six days later and overpowered, but not before he had fired
at the policemen who pinned him down.
All hell broke loose immediately. The Tamil Nadu police had two of Sri
Lanka's most wanted men and quickly slapped a variety of charges against
them.
It wasn't 1973 when Sri Lankan officials could fly to Madras and take back
Kuttimani in handcuffs. The arrests of Pirabaharan and Uma, both of whom had
by then established contacts with sections of Tamil Nadu politicians, were
different.
The Sri Lankan government was, of course, delighted. Sri Lankan Deputy
Defense Minister T.B.Weerapitya announced one million rupees as reward to
the Tamil Nadu police for making the arrests. Pirabaharan's arrest was a
major setback to the LTTE, several of whose members were then in Tamil Nadu.
For once, the Tigers were foxed. Without consulting Subramaniam, the eldest
of them, the others - including Kittu, Pandithar, Pulendren- decided to do
something dramatic to prevent Pirabaharan's extradition.
The plan was to get on to the roof of the LIC building in Madras, the
tallest skyscraper in the city, and threaten mass suicide if their leader
was not freed. When Subramaniam heard of the weird scheme, he was aghast.
"Forget this idiotic idea," he said angrily. "It is my duty to have
Pirabaharan released. I'll get it done somehow."
Baby, as Subramaniam was widely known, went about the task methodically.
Until then, he had been the LTTE's unassuming public relations man in Tamil
Nadu, meeting contacts, educating them about the Tamil struggle in the
island and slowly building up a support network in the state which would
sustain the Tigers even when they took on the Indian army years later.
Pirabaharan, even when he was in Tamil Nadu, stayed in the background, not
exposing himself unnecessarily. Baby pleaded with Nedumaran to do something.
The latter hardly needed any prodding.
Nedumaran, who had split from the Congress(I) and formed the Tamil Nadu
Kamaraj Congress (TNKC), organised an all-party meeting in Madras on June 1
which urged the Tamil Nadu government and New Delhi not to deport Uma and
Pirabaharan. The DMK did not take part in the meeting, but chief minister
MGR sent a representative. Subramaniam attended as an observer.
Karunanidhi was not silent, however. Only the previous year he had organised
massive street protests to denounce the anti-Tamil riots in Sri Lanka. Now
he campaigned against the extraditions, alleging that Pirabaharan and Uma
would be executed if they were sent to Colombo.
Arch rival MGR realised the political stakes and asked the police to cool
off. His Man Friday in the police force, K.Mohandas declared that his men
were neither interested in the prize money nor in extradition.
Release on Bail
In Jaffna, news of the arrests was received with shock. S.C.Chandrahasan, a
lawyer and son of the legendary leader Chelvanayagam, returned home to find
Pirabaharan's father waiting for him. Veluppillai wanted Chandrahasan to go
to Madras and ensure his son's safety.
In Madras, Chandrahasan met Karunanidhi, whose DMK was then an ally of Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi. Karunanidhi rushed an emissary to Gandhi who
promised that Uma and Pirabaharan would not be forced back to Sri Lanka.
Sri Lankan Inspector General of Police Rudra Rajasingham, a Tamil, had to
fly back a disappointed man after arriving in Madras with a fiat to bring
home the wanted men.
On August 6, a Madras court released the accused on conditional bail and
ordered them to stay in different cities in Tamil Nadu and keep the police
informed of their whereabouts. Pirabaharan was assigned Madurai and Uma
Madras. All the places had sympathisers to host them.
It was the beginning of a very fruitful period for Pirabaharan. Madurai was
not new for him. He had been there in 1981 when he with the TELO. Most of
them had sided with him after he revived the LTTE.
He decided to stay with Nedumaran. One sub-inspector and two constables were
to guard him. But Nedumaran wielded influence and the police were generous
to turn a blind eye when Pirabaharan stepped out of Nedumaran's house to
make new friends, renew old contacts or even travel out of Madurai.
Madurai provided Pirabaharan ample time to go through all that he had
achieved and what he had failed to since taking to militancy almost a decade
earlier. It was time for introspection and for reading and preparing for the
years to come. It also gave him a good insight into the Indian polity; how
it functioned and how it could be subverted if one had the right links.
Nedumaran had reasons to be impressed. He remembered seeing Pirabaharan in
Jaffna in 1981, but the latter had not revealed his identity then. Naturally
he was shocked when he came face to face with Pirabaharan in prison. "For
several reasons I did not tell you (who I was)", Pirabaharan told him. It
was a plus point for a man who believed in secret work.
Some LTTE members, including Baby and Chellakili, lived in the TNKC office
in Madras and kept in touch with Pirabaharan. The Tigers often went without
food or sleep, but never hesitated to heavily spend on newspapers, Indian
and foreign magazines and a wide spectrum of leftwing literature. They also
bought glossy books and journal on arms and ammunition. Baby was the most
meticulous of all and acted as a father figure.
In the meantime, Pirabaharan began experimenting with a code language in a
major way. He had tried it in other forms earlier in Jaffna, giving each
Tamil alphabet a number. "It is for safety," he had told friends.
Now, in Tamil Nadu, with more heads put together, the code looked a lot
tougher to understand or decipher. An Indian who witnessed the
experimentation mistook the secret language to be Chinese or Japanese.
Money remained a problem. Pirabaharan and his associates usually managed to
survive on bread and jam. It meant Pirabaharan had to suppress his love for
non-vegetarian food, crabs in particular. Nedumaran often encountered the
Tigers with hungry looks on their faces, but they would shy away from
admitting the truth when asked if they had had food.
When Pirabaharan was not dreaming about Eelam or discussing with Nedumaran
ideas on a Tiger flag and uniforms, he would relish Tamil literature,
particularly books on and by Subash Chandra Bose, Fidel Castro and Che
Guevara. He even had a Che book translated from English into Tamil so that
he could go through it without help.
He was not overtly religious, but would occasionally walk up to the historic
Meenakshi Amman temple in Madurai. He dressed crisply but simply and
expected others to do so. He shaved everyday and scolded those who did not.
His motto was talk little and hear more.
But otherwise he treated his colleagues with respect. There was no bullying,
when he talked, others listened. No wonder he continued to be called "thambi"
(brother), while Uma was and liked to be addressed as "thalaivar' (leader).
Attack on Chavakachcheri Police Station
Pirabaharan's main interest was in setting up centres in Tamil Nadu where he
could provide old and fresh recruits training in the use of arms and teach
them the rudiments of guerrilla warfare. If the bases existed in India, so
much the better. There would be no raids from Sri Lankan authorities, if
there was trouble he could count on friends in Tamil Nadu for help.
He opened safe houses in Sirumalai, Pollachi and Mettur where fellow Tigers
were taught about the use of walkie-talkies and the handling of arms.
Pirabaharan confided to fellow Tigers that his earnest desire to see at
least 100 young people in LTTE uniforms in Jaffna. But Pirabaharan was not
the one to stay in Tamil Nadu indefinitely. After seven months in Madurai,
he decided that Jaffna awaited him. He asked Nedumaran if he could leave.
When he got the consent, the LTTE leader simply disappeared one day while
travelling from Madurai to Madras.
The police first refused to believe that the man who was to be under
surveillance had escaped to Sri Lanka. They launched a manhunt for him in
Bangalore and Pondicherry. By then Pirabaharan was already in Jaffna.
The Tamil peninsula hadn't changed much. Unidentified men had shot two Tamil
youths after taking them away from their Jaffna homes barely a week after
the Uma-Pirabaharan shootout in Madras. The bullet-riddled bodies of the two
men who were considered LTTE sympathisers were found in a rice field nearly
10 miles from Jaffna town. The killers were widely believed to be from the
PLOT.
The killings shocked the Tamil community. Since the murder of Sundaram in
January 1982, people had been speaking in whispers about "boys" killing
"boys". The Uma-Pirabaharan clash was bad enough. But killing two Tamils in
cold blood in Jaffna was a shocker.
The killings only fuelled Pirabaharan's anger. After Uma and Pirabaharan
were let out on bail, Perum Chitranar had tried to bring them together
again. Pirabaharan had issued a statement through his lawyers that
"hereafter there should be no division among us. Both groups should get
together."
He and Uma also gave separate assurances to lawyer Chandrahasan that they
would not fight anymore in India. Perum Chitranar reminded Pirabaharan about
the situation in Tamil Nadu when Dravida Kazhagam had split and the Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam was formed. DMK leader C.Annadurai had declared that
despite the break, both parties would be like a double barrel gun.
Pirabaharan and Uma, Perum Chitranar emphasized, should be like the DK and
DMK.
The LTTE supremo agreed to let Uma have a group of his own, but under no
circumstances should he claim himself to be a Tiger leader. Before he left
for Madurai, Perum Chitranar extracted a promise from Pirabaharan and Uma
that they would never try killing each other. Perum Chitranar and
Pirabaharan never met again.
In Pirabaharan's absence, the LTTE had been keeping the Sri Lankan security
forces intermittently busy. On July 2, the Tigers ambushed a police patrol
at Nelliady, a small town 16 miles from Jaffna, and shot four Sinhalese
policemen and seriously wounded three others.
Two months later, the LTTE attempted to blow up a naval convey at Ponnalai
during a visit to Jaffna by President J.R.Jayawardene, but the mine only
damaged the causeway.
The most daring LTTE operation came on October 27, 1982. A group of eight
Tigers led by Seelan arrived at the Chavakachcheri police station in a
hijacked mini bus, armed with one G-3, one repeater rifle, two revolvers,
one SMG and grenades.
The police station was well guarded and considered impregnable. Accompanying
Seelan were Aruna, Shankar, Pulendran, Raghu, Mahathaya, Santhosam and
Bashir Kaka. This in effect was the LTTE hardcore in Jaffna at that time.
As the bus reached the police station, Seelan and Raghu burst into the
double story building, firing at the guards outside. One of them died
instantly. The Tigers then sprinted towards the first floor. Seelan was at
his military best, springing from room to room, shooting one policeman
hiding under a table and destroying communication sets.
Shankar and Santhosam attacked the residential wing at the police station's
rear. Aruna and Bashir Kaka cleaned the armoury of two SMG's, nine riffles,
one pistol, 19 repeater guns and two shot guns. In the melee, a police
suspect who went berserk after hearing the firing was also shot. One
policeman jumped out of the balcony and broke his leg after suffering the
bullet wound. Two constables saved themselves by hiding in a toilet.
But one policeman fired back and got three victims- although none of them
died. One bullet pierced through Pulendran's shoulder, another hit Raghu and
broke his right hand bone, and the third went through Seelan's knee cap,
seriously wounding him. He was carried back to the van by Aruna.
It was a serious blow to the Tigers since Seelan, the number two in the
LTTE, acted as the commander when Pirabaharan was away. He was one of the
best shooters in the Tiger ranks and a trusted associate of Pirabaharan. He
was a tough man but fainted that day due to excessive loss of blood. He was
later sent to Tamil Nadu for medical attention.
There was no military operation by the LTTE until February 18, 1983 when
Pirabaharan and Seelan were back in Jaffna. That day, LTTE gunmen shot a
Sinhalese police inspector and his driver at Point Pedro.
Though the only effective group in Jaffna by the end of 1982 was the LTTE,
the police were clearly worried. The army was assisting the police in
anti-military operations, but not a single key LTTE member had been arrested
or killed though their popular base was negligible.
The police intelligence was paying no dividends; in fact such was the police
network that LTTE cadres hesitated to buy more than two food packets from
shops in order not to provoke suspicion.... The army chief of staff in
Colombo Major General Tissa Weeratunga who only three years earlier had
achieved remarkable success in Jaffna, confessed that the situation had
changed dramatically. "We are not on top," he told David Selbourne in an
interview. ".... They choose the time and place.We can only be reactive".
The officer's predicament was understandable. Despite the injury to Seelan,
the Chavakachcheri attack had been a complete success and proved what a
small committed group could do. After the attack, authorities closed down 16
outlying police stations in Jaffna.
One reason for the militancy was the recurring anti-Tamil violence and the
government's failure to accept demands for regional autonomy. The TULF, the
moderate Tamil political force, was being increasingly viewed by those who
had voted for it as opportunist and willing to strike a deal with JR while
the "boys" were fighting it out.
The TULF was already split, and though the breakaway TELF did not enjoy mass
support, its formation was itself significant. But the average Sinhalese,
fed on government propaganda, considered the TULF secessionist and
responsible for the violence in the island's north.
When JR proposed a "national government" in December 1982, one month after
prolonging the life of parliament for six more years, the TULF, with nothing
else to do, jumped on the proposal. It said the "national government" would
provide an "opportunity" for negotiations to seek a permanent solution to
the fundamental problems of the Tamil people". Few Tamils were impressed.
Naturally, Amir, once the darling of Tamils, was reduced to defending his
actions in Public. In October 1982, Jaffna was gripped by a stinging general
strike called by the TELF and the General Union of Eelam Students (GUES) to
protest JR's visit. "Eelam people are very hospitable but not to invaders,"
said a poster stuck on the Jaffna hospital.
On February 22, the LTTE shot at TULF MP M.Alalasundaram at his Jaffna house
for allegedly carrying on a smear campaign against the Tigers, provoking a
strong condemnation from Amir. He did not die at that incident. There was
more violence in March, including an ambush of two army vehicles at
Killinochi which left five soldiers wounded....
Decline of TULF
The Tigers understood the mood in Tamil areas. So when the TULF decided to
take part in the local government elections in May 1983, the LTTE decided to
confront Amir head on.
The previous year Pirabaharan had had a meeting with the TULF boss in
Madurai over the situation in Sri Lanka. But there was no way the guerrilla
committed to Eelam was going to let the politician get away with the laurels
of another election victory.
By then the LTTE had gone further international. In March, the group
circulated a document at the Non-Aligned summit in New Delhi, justifying
it's armed struggle. And at home, the LTTE issued hundreds of open letters
in Jaffna in response to the TULF's election campaign, urging the people to
boycott the municipal council polls.
On April 29, gunmen on cycles shot K.V. Ratnasingam, the principal UNP
candidate at the hustings, at Point Pedro while he was cycling home. Two
hours later, three youths shot S.S. Muthiah also a UNP candidate. Later that
evening, gunmen stopped the van of a UNP nominee from VVT, pulled out his
guard and gunned him down.
In all cases, the assassins left behind notes saying the victims had been
sentenced to death for defying the LTTE's call not to fight the elections.
After this all UNP and Tamil Congress nominees withdrew from the contest.
But the arrangements had already been made by the government to have the
elections.
The Tamil voters gave a stunning verdict on the election day. Almost 90% of
the population in the north stayed away from the ballot box. The TULF
received barely 2% of votes in Point Pedro and VVT, Pirabaharan's hometown.
The TULF got less than 10% votes. There had been 80% polling in the DDC
elections the year before.
About an hour before the balloting ended, Seelan crept behind a wall and
hurled a grenade outside a voting center at Kandarmadam in Jaffna and also
opened fire, killing one soldier. Without wasting time, Chellakili removed
the T-56 assault riffle of the dead soldier. Seelan then called off the
attack and the Tigers, as usual, melted away.
It was another perfect job, and the furious Sinhalese soldiers went on a
rampage, setting fire to and destroying 64 houses, three mini buses, nine
cars, three motorcycles and three dozen bicycles in a span of three hours.
Death of Seelan
July 1983 brought bad luck to the LTTE. On July 15, a mini bus and two jeeps
loaded with troops arrived at Meesalai, near Chavakachcheri (10 miles from
Jaffna town), following a tip off that the much-wanted Seelan was there. He
was indeed there, enjoying the coconut water when the soldiers reached the
village.
The troops were, however, immediately spotted and two boys ran to warn
Seelan. The latter lost no time. He stuffed his SMG into a bag and ran out
of the house where he had been camping. It was afternoon. Two other LTTE
members, Aruna and Ganesh, also set out with Seelan on bicycles. Aruna had a
gun and Ganesh carried a few grenades.
But the soldiers spotted them and opened fire. The three flung their
bicycles and began running across rice fields. But it was difficult for
Seelan to keep pace with the others; his knee injury, suffered during the
attack on Chavakachcheri police station, had not healed and it pained him
immensely as he tried to keep up with Aruna and Ganesh. The bullets were
already beginning to graze him when he decided to give up the fight.
Wounded and fatigued, and unable to run any further, Seelan asked Aruna, his
childhood friend from Trincomalee, to shoot him and escape with the SMG.
It was a bombshell for Aruna. He was being asked to kill the LTTE's de facto
number two. Aruna argued that Seelan needed to run only a little more to get
into a village. But Seelan insisted that he could not take it any more and
ordered Aruna to kill him right there.
"Shoot! I am telling you, shoot!" screamed Seelan, standing in a rice field
and barely managing to escape from being hit further. The soldiers were
inching ahead cautiously.
"What are you staring at?" Seelan asked, when Aruna hesitated. "Shoot me so
that I don't get into their hands alive. This is my order. Shoot and run".
Aruna picked up his riffle and aimed at Seelan's face. He saw tears in the
eyes of the man who was staring at death. Aruna hesitated once again.
"Shoot!" Seelan implored. "I beg you please shoot".
Aruna placed the barrel on Seelan's forehead, just above the center of the
eyes, and fired. Seelan collapsed dead.
Anand, who had been watching the scene with disbelief from a distance, was
himself wounded immediately afterwards. When Aruna picked up Seelan's SMG
and resumed his run, Anand confronted him with a similar request: shoot me
and escape! This time Aruna did not waver.
Seelan's death was a terrible blow to the LTTE. Sri Lankan security forces
were jubilant when the body was identified. In the past two years Seelan had
done more for the LTTE than perhaps anyone else. He had been wounded twice,
but had returned to the battle field. He was a hardened Pirabaharan
loyalist. Many readers might know that Pirabaharan named his son "Charles
Lucas Anthony", Seelan's original name.
Pirabaharan was at a hideout in Neerveli with Kittu, Chellakili and
Pandithar discussing the financial position of the LTTE when he got the news
of Seelan's death. Pirabaharan was silent for a while. "It was impossible to
make out what his feelings were. But he was thinking hard," Kittu recalled
later.
Ambush at Thirunelveli and Genocide'83
Pirabaharan would of course wreak vengeance. There was no way Seelan's death
would go unpunished. Indeed, the death was going to trigger a chain reaction
which would alter the very course of Tamil militancy.
On July 20, the Sri Lankan government issued a ban on press reporting of
Tamil militant activities. The TULF declined the same day to attend an
all-party meeting called by Jayawardane on the ethnic strife, saying it was
preparing for its convention at Mannar on July 23 and 24.
TULF had no longer control the "boys" it had once encouraged.... Chellakilli
and Kittu drew up a plan to ambush a military convoy at Thirunelveli, close
to the Jaffna University. The chosen spot was a narrow road which had been
dug up to lay communication lines. Pirabaharan approved of the site and
Chellakilli's plan after seeing the spot for himself. Virtually the entire
LTTE brass- Pirabaharan, Kittu, Chellakilli, Iyer, Victor, Pulendren,
Santhosam and Appaiah among others- was to take part in the carefully
prepared operation.
The army was living in a world of its own. Having succeeded in eliminating
Seelan, it was looking for Chellakilli, not realising what he was upto.
On July 23 night, an army patrol codenamed "Four Four Bravo" and comprising
15 men moved out of the Gurunagar camp, near Jaffna town in a jeep and a
half truck. It reported at 23.28 hrs that it was moving towards Urumpirai
and it was all very quiet.
Moments later, the patrol neared Thirunelveli, where the Tigers lay in wait.
Chellakilli, Victor and Appaiah had placed detonators on the road and had
been giving final touches when the patrol neared the site.
No one appeared to be watching them. A few curious residents had earlier
peeped out of their windows; but Chellakilli and Victor, who were dressed in
army uniforms, had shouted rapidly in Sinhalese. The ruse succeeded. The
fear of the army simply drove the curious ones into their homes and the few
houses which were still lit hurriedly switched off their lights.
It was Chellakilli who set off the mine. There was a thunderous explosion
and the jeep went flying in the air before landing with a heavy thud. The
waiting Tigers immediately opened fire from an assortment of SMG's, G-3's
and riffles, and lobbed scores of grenades and petrol bombs.
Most soldiers were killed as they scrambled out of the truck, firing their
weapons. Pirabaharan let go his G-3 at the truck from behind a wall. But one
soldier managed to crawl beneath the truck and fired at the wall.
Pirabaharan had been assigned the task of finishing off survivors in the
truck since the mine was originally meant to destroy it; why Chellakilli
exploded it under the jeep no one knew. The ambush was brief and bitter, and
ended with the massacre of 13 soldiers - the biggest loss for the Sri Lankan
army at the hands of Tamil militants.
The victorious Tigers gathered around Pirabaharan after the attack, talking
excitedly. Pirabaharan congratulated everyone for a job well done. Suddenly
it struck Kittu that Chellakilli, who had planned the ambush and driven the
attack group to the site, was missing. Victor ran towards a shop where
Chellakilli had taken up position. Chellakilli's body lay there bleeding. A
bullet had pierced his chest.
It was the second major setback to the LTTE within a fortnight. The group at
Thirunelveli fell silent as victory gave way to gloom. But they had to move
because one of the soldiers had managed to escape and would be alerting the
base headquarters. The soldiers' weapons were dumped into a getaway van and
so was Chellakilli's body, which was finally laid to rest not far away as it
began drizzling.
Back at their hideout, Pirabaharan broke down. He had been silent in the
van. Now he began to wail. Seeing him, almost everyone began crying. It was
the first and last time Kittu saw Pirabaharan cry. |