Civilians and the Armed Forces in the Batticaloa District
Civilians and the Armed Forces in the Batticaloa District
By University Teachers for Human Rights, Jaffna(UTHR(Jaffna))
Bulletin No. 9 - Dec 1995
Introduction:
Since we had last reported on the area 6 months ago, the presence
of the armed forces in the interior areas had been further thinned
down to facilitate a concentration of troops in Jaffna for the
ongoing operation. This meant that Paduvankarai (west of the
lagoon) with key positions like Kokkadichcholai (last controled by
the STF) had been almost entirely abandoned, together with
Vaharai, north of Valaichenai. Thus the principal task for these
forces was to control the main trunk road that leads from
Polonnaruwa through Valaichenai, and then southwards along the
eastern seaboard through Batticaloa, Kalmunai, Akkaraipattu and
Thirukkovil to Pottuvil, and the towns on the road. This road
itself and the railroad to Batticaloa were under constant pressure
from increased LTTE infiltration. Route clearing patrols were
regularly ambushed, resulting in significant casualties. Transport
was thus regularly disrupted. In terms of reaching the
destination, the trains (now 3 days a week to Colombo), when they
run, are considered more reliable than buses, which turn back at
the slightest sign of trouble. Trains too are subject to sudden
cancellations and long delays. Dons in the Eastern University who
travel 8 miles north from Batticaloa daily said that they are
either delayed or have to turn back about twice a week on the
average.
Batticaloa town itself had several new road-blocks and barriers.
Though usually calm, as one observer put it, "the LTTE is always
there in some form". As would be seen in the sequel, this form
could be of the strangest and unhealthiest sort.
The question addressed here is how has the relatively improved
position of accountability to the civilians by the Forces over the
two years up to last June, stood up to the new situation. This
will be taken up after some reports. The main context of this
bulletin is the LTTE attack on the STF post at Puthukkudiyiruppu
resulting in about 90 casualties among combatants. The incident
also provides pointers to where the civilians would stand in an
extreme military crisis. If the political approach to the ethnic
problem is to predominate over the exigencies of war, then answers
need to be found which the civilians find satisfactory. It must
be remembered that although the armed forces are under
considerable pressure, the civilians are always the helpless
victims in these incidents.
5th December:The attack on the STF camp at Puthukkudiyiruppu
We first give the story as it best fits together on the basis of
testimony available to us.
At 11.00 a.m. some women were close to the mangroves on the
eastern shore of the lagoon near Puthukkudiyiruppu, collecting
sticks. They were approached by LTTE men in STF uniform who told
them to sit down without fear and to go when told to do so.
Puthukkudiyiruppu is about 5 miles out of Batticaloa on the
Kalmunai road. It lies 1 mile north of Kurukkalmadam
(Ambalanthurai Junction). It has an STF camp which is in-between
Araipattai camp, to the north and Cheddipalayam to the south, and
is smaller than either.
For some minutes before 3.00 p.m. men in STF uniforms on both
sides of Puthukkudiyiruppu stopped vehicles and asked the drivers
to park the vehicles on the road and for everyone in the vehicles
to scoot. A part of the intention was to block
reinforcements.Fearing some calamity, the passengers left the road
and mostly went towards the sea coast (east).
At about 3.00 p.m., a van loaded with vegetables with men in STF
uniform came to the entrance of the Puthukkudiyiruppu STF camp.
The sentries reportedly first thought that these were the routine
supplies. The van was half way into the entrance when either
something about the van or some casual exchange of conversation
alerted a sentry who immediately threw a grenade into the van.
Hearing the explosion the LTTE assault party positioned on the
western(lagoon) side of the camp charged in to attack. The
explosion was the signal for them to attack, but the situation in
the STF camp was not what they were given to anticipate.
The van that went into the camp was a suicide group who were to
drive the explosive-packed van to the command centre and explode
it. In the resulting confusion, the camp would have been an easy
target for the assault party armed with RPGs and rockets. But the
command centre was intact and the STF quickly manned defensive
positions. The attackers were met with heavy fire, and according
to local sources, perhaps 25 LTTE cadre in the first wave were
mown down and several more were injured. Thereafter, it was a
gruelling exchange of fire for both sides with a steady toll of
casualties.
Both the STF camps at Araipattai and Cheddipalayam then tried to
send in reinforcements. At this point the STF at both these camps
began stopping public transport buses that were passing through.
Several buses were used in transporting reinforcements. There is
definite testimony that in two instances at least the passengers
were forced to remain in the bus and provide a shield for the
reinforcements.
What follows is the experience of passengers in one bus that was
stopped at Araipattai (Arayampathy): The Co-op bus from Batticaloa
to Kalmunai which was travelling full was stopped by the STF at
Araipattai. (The southbound buses are normally checked at
Kattankudy and are not meant to stop at Araipattai.) All the
passengers were ordered to alight while the driver was asked to
remain inside. This was about 3.00 p.m. A little later a man in
mufti ordered the passengers to get back inside. About 30 to 40
STF men boarded the bus in a rough and aggressive mood. The OIC of
Araipattai was among them. The civilians were asked to sit down
and the STF men crouched in the corridor, pressing their guns
against the stomachs of civilians with the ends of the barrels
protruding through windows. The driver was ordered to proceed
south and the STF men occasionally fired out of the window.
Passengers who had reached their destination and wanted to alight
were ordered to remain.
Just south of Thalankuda, the driver was ordered to stop. The
passengers were ordered to remain and the STF men got out leaving
two men, one each at the front and back of the bus. A short while
later there was firing from the surroundings of the bus as the STF
and LTTE fought it out. The two men in the bus also went out to
join their colleagues. The passengers lay on the floor as bullets
started coming into the bus.
Sometime later the passengers heard a voice crying out to them in
good Tamil, "Get down. Hold your life in your hand and run for
it!" They took this to be the LTTE. The passengers got down and
ran amid firing noises. As they ran Uvais(28), a native of
Kattankudy travelling to Maruthamunai, was hit in the leg. He fell
down and asked for help. His neighbour responded, "I am not a
Muslim, but I am a man. I will help you", and then lifted him,
helping him to walk. The two proceeded slowly without further
incident.(The reference to religion was a reflection of relations
between the Tamil and Muslim communities which hit an extreme low
point during the tragic events of 1990-92.) Having gone some
distance from the main road, an old woman said that another old
woman, her companion, was missing. Her corpse, posssibly together
with those of two others, was found in the bus the following day.
The remaining passengers got back to Batticaloa the next day.
Veerakutty Canagaraja(36) of Kallar was the driver of the Kalmunai
bound CTB bus choking with over 90 passengers that had left
Batticaloa at 2.30 p.m., quarter of an hour ahead of the Co-op
bus. It had gone past Araipattai STF camp without being stopped.
Just past Thalankuda church, a single shot rang out from the west
(lagoon or jungle side), bursting the front-right tyre. The
passengers screamed 'stop'! Then a second shot rang out. The
driver tried to take the bus further away from the gun man. When
he pressed the accelerator, he found that his foot was without
strength and was bleeding profusely. The second shot had struck
his foot. The bus went a few hundred yards further, and went off
the road as the deflated tyre made control difficult. Two other
passenger vans came and halted behind the bus about 3.20 p.m..
LTTE men wearing camouflage hats with leaves and branches stuck in
them emerged onto the road and deflated the tyres of all the
vehicles by firing at them. The people were asked to run. The bus
driver was carried by others and all went to Puthukkudiyiruppu
Central School where G.C.E. O. Level examinations were going on.
The principal directed them to some vacant classrooms. As the
sound of gunfire got louder the candidates continued writing their
answers while crouching on the floor. This was probably when the
LTTE confronted STF men from Araipattai who had come in the Co-op
bus using a human shield. When fighting all round became intense,
the O.Level candidates left their scripts and went behind the
class rooms. Thavarajah(36) from Puthukkudiyiruppu who was
returning home after repairing his motor-cycle at Kattankudy was
killed during this time. We have no firm testimony as to whether
the death was caused, presumably by accident when the LTTE fired
to stop vehicles, or by crossfire during the later confrontation.
The injured driver was dispatched to Batticaloa hospital at noon
the next day, in a vehicle from Batticaloa that had to turn back
because the road was closed.
On the southern side of Puthukkudiyiruppu STF camp, Abdul Cader
Najimudeen, a goldsmith with a shop in Batticaloa, had been to
Kaluthavalai in his car with his young son, and was returning. At
Ambalanthurai junction a lorry was stopped on the road and they
had the first intimation of trouble. Najimudeen asked the driver
to turn back. A passenger van had also turned back at this point
and returned south. At the Kurukkalmadam temple, both vehicles
were stopped by STF men. The van was boarded by 4 STF men who
ordered the passengers to remain inside. The car was boarded by 3
STF men, one on the front passenger seat and two on the sides of
the back with the goldsmith and his son in the middle. The van had
proceeded in advance of the car.
We piece together what happened to the van from testimonies made
available to us. About half the civilian casualties for the day
were persons in the van. The van door was closed and no one was
allowed to get down, not even old ladies. Nearing
Puthukkudiyiruppu, the van was stopped by a man in STF uniform who
asked in Sinhalese 'Ape kattiya innavathe?' ('Are [any of] our
boys inside?'). An STF man in the van said 'innava'('there are')
and proceeded to get down. He was felled by a shot. The three
remaining STF men fired from inside and ordered the driver to
move. The van was then subjected to a hail of fire in which the 3
remaining STF men and more than half the civilians in the van were
killed.
Anandarajah was a post master, a literary figure and teacher of
English, who was seated next to Miss. Kanapathipillai Mohana, a
computer student returning from classes in Kalmunai. Both were
hit, Mohana on the shoulder and legs. Anandarajah fell on Mohana.
His last words were, "I am injured. You lie down, you will be
alright". Those who knew him said, `That it was how he lived and
also died'. Puvanendran, a postal worker in Batticaloa, was also
travelling in that van with his wife, a teacher, and their little
child, who were seated in front of Puvanendran. Puvanendran was
hit and was bleeding. His wife holding their little child sat with
him after the survivors and those injured who could be helped
along, had left. No help came, and as it got dark, she ran with
her child and took shelter for the night in a deserted house where
the inhabitants had fled.
Najimudeen who was in the car said that as the car passed through
Kiran Kulam, there was an eerie silence that made him
instinctively sense trouble. Suddenly he heard gunfire. The driver
stopped the car. The STF men sprang out and escaped. Najimudeen
and the driver lay on the road, with the former holding his son
down by placing him between his legs. Najimudeen was hit in the
hand. They lay down until there was a lull in the firing. The
three then joined the survivors from the van, all of whom,
numbering about 14, took shelter in a single room in a house where
the owners had fled.
At about 6.00 p.m. a voice called out in Tamil asking those inside
to come out with their hands up. Najimudeen told the others, `if
we do not respond, they may toss a grenade inside', and went out
with his son. When outside, he discovered that it was the STF, and
told them that there were in all about 14 of them who were mostly
injured. The STF found a school bus in which all of them were
dispatched southwards to Kalawanchikudy hospital.
The foregoing indicates that the LTTE broke off and withdrew when
it realised that the objective of over-running the camp was
unattainable and subsequently the STF men came out. In Kirankulam,
the STF men fanning out in the neighbourhood were reportedly fired
at from a particular house. The STF asked the inmates to come out.
When no one came out, they opened fire. An old lady and a child
inside were injured and later admitted to Batticaloa hospital. The
house itself was set on fire by the STF. This was the only report
from the area of a house being burnt.
Several travellers wanting to reach Batticaloa and unable to pass
Puthukkudiyiruppu, went west from the main road from Ambalanthurai
junction towards the ferry point, to make a crossing over the
lagoon to Ambalanthurai. (From there they hoped to reach
Batticaloa through LTTE controlled territory and then via the
Valaiyiravu bridge and Veechukkalmunai.) The travellers were
turned back by the STF at the ferry camp. Having walked some
distance away, they received a hail of bullets in which one or two
were wounded.
The following morning Mrs. Puvanendran who had left her injured
husband in the van, went alone to the van which was surrounded by
STF personnel. She was allowed to look and did not find her
husband on the seat where she had left him. In her excitement,
thinking that he had been removed to Batticaloa hospital, she went
home to Kaluwanchikudy. It was only the next day(7th) that, having
failed to trace him in Batticaloa, her brother and brother-in-law
from Kaluwanchikudy were able to go to the van. They found his
body near the foot board - perhaps he died while trying to crawl
out. About 1.00 p.m. on the day after the incident(6th), the STF
allowed the vehicles that had been held up during the attack to
move. This was the time that many civilians and several of those
injured moved out. On the same day the bodies of about 20 LTTE
cadre left abandoned and found by the STF were handed over to the
LTTE at Kokkadichcholai by the ICRC. But the civilian dead lay
unattended.
The following morning early(7th) a parish from Batticaloa came to
Puthukkudiyiruppu to check on the welfare of the children at the
boy's home run by the Roman Catholic church. After he had
satisfied himself on this matter, the people of the area told him
of the state of the civilian bodies which were giving out the
odour of decomposition. Taking a quick look with STF permission he
observed about 12 bodies (there were in fact 16) mostly in a
crouching position. There were also two bodies opposite the STF
camp. One was of a young man from the village whose parents were
crying and the other of a married man from Kaluwanchikudy whose
wife was crying - both probably caught in the crossfire. The STF
OIC promised a tractor to first take the bodies to Kattankudy
police station. But they were then taken to Batticaloa in a
vehicle from Noah's undertakers that had come from Batticaloa in
connection with a separate funeral. The parish priest returned to
Batticaloa and gave word about the state of affairs. It was
through the Government Agent that a lorry was arranged, and the
remaining bodies were brought to Batticaloa hospital around 4.30
p.m.. Among the corpses, Duke, a doctor at the hospital,
recognised that of his mother's, whom he had hitherto been unable
to trace. A total of about 26 bodies were brought to Batticaloa
hospital. One of two or so civilians who were taken to Amparai
hospital by the STF succumbed there, giving a civilian toll of
about 30.
How the combatants behaved
On the basis of testimony recorded, the majority of the civilians
killed, died because they were used as human shields by the STF,
although the fatal firing came mostly from the LTTE. The LTTE did
take some measures to minimise civilian presence on the road
during the confrontation. But beyond this its concern for
civilians was largely token. The targeted camp itself was in an
area with a concentration of civilians.
The STF camp at Puthukkudiyiruppu is said to have a fairly good
reputation among the civilians of the area. Reports from the area
suggest that this had not been impaired by the attack. There are
no reports of the STF having gone on the rampage or wantonly
killing civilians. There was an instance of a Buffel armoured car
under pressure from the LTTE, which escaped by moving towards the
coast. On seeing this the civilians lay flat on the ground. But no
attempt was made to harm civilians.
Most of the 30 or so STF casualties were from the reinforcements.
A possible instance of the STF wantonly killing someone during the
incident is the case of Ravi from Puthur, a driver attached to the
Kalmunai CTB depot. He and his conductor Parthiban from
Araipattai, are said to have been killed. Their bus had been
stopped at Cheddipalayam and was used to transport reinforcements.
The two were waiting near the parked bus while the fighting was
going on. One report that has wide circulation said that one or
both were killed by an STF party, after this party had suffered
casualties. But we have so far been unable to pin down any
testimony.
Press reports said that the STF had received intelligence of an
LTTE attack and were prepared. This begs the question, what were
their contingency plans to reinforce camps under attack? The
seemingly casual manner in which a senior STF spokesman had
admitted reinforcements travelling in buses with civilians
suggests that there were no credible plans. Reinforcements
sometimes travelling in threes and fours using civilian shields
sounds so crazy as to suggest that the STF men were uninstructed
on how to respond.
Within two days after the event, the STF at Puthukkudiyiruppu had
used what amounted to forced labour from the village to clear the
debris and erect temporary sheds. We have pointed out in the past
that such practices readily lead in a crisis to the use of human
shields.
Responsibility towards civilian injured
When several corpses of civilians killed where brought to
Batticaloa hospital 50 hours later, word got around that two of
them at least belonged to persons who had died considerably later
than others. Both Puvanendran and Anandarajah had been alive for
some time after the shooting. The student who died later in
Amparai hospital may have been saved had she been quickly brought
to Batticaloa hospital that is much closer. It is also known from
experience (cf.Bulletin No.6) that it is futile for a local
organisation or individuals to try to rush an emergency case to
Batticaloa hospital. They have often to face long delays and
interminable questions from the security forces at checkpoints. In
the bulletin referred to, a patient bleeding from a gunshot
injury(again when the LTTE fired at a van in which a few STF men
were travelling with other passengers to get to Batticaloa
hospital) bled to death because it took 4 hours to cover the 4
miles from Thalankuda to Batticaloa.
Questions being commonly asked among the people are: Why did not
the ICRC go to the area over next two days, when the area was not
readily accessible, to look for the civilian dead and injured?
What is their relevance to civilians if they are mainly handing
over dead bodies of combatants? (Of course they are also visiting
prisoners.) They point out that only the ICRC may have the ability
to provide quick relief to the injured. Normally it is the police
who should have been the first into that area to do the needful.
It is in the context of a breakdown in the local machinery for
relief and law enforcement that organisations like the ICRC are
called upon to play a role.
The reporting of the incident
A front page item in the Island of 7th December quoting security
sources said,"29 STF commandos and at least 40 terrorists of the
`Black Tigers Group' were killed in a massive LTTE attack...The
raid was repulsed by the STF personnel forcing the Tigers to
withdraw. During the attack, three inspectors, two sub inspectors
and 24 police constables, including 12 Reserve PCs, lost their
lives..."
There was no reference to civilian casualties or to any
culpability on the part of the STF. Under such circumstances the
reader is normally left to conclude that the civilian dead had
been grouped with the LTTE and to fear that much is being hidden.
That evening (7th December) a leading TULF MP claimed in
parliament that STF personnel had run beserk killing 30 civilians
and burning houses. On the basis of this, the TULF voted against
an extension of the state of emergency.The claim appeared to
clarify what was reported in the press under the prevailing
censorship.
The STF perhaps felt the need for some damage control. The Island
of 8'th December quoted a senior STF spokesman obliquely admitting
a degree of culpability on the part of the STF; "...As
reinforcements from neighbouring STF camps in Arayampathy and
Manmunai came in these buses with the civilians, terrorists who
had monitored STF communications had ambushed the buses about two
and a half kilometres away from the Puthukkudiyiruppu STF camp.
Then they had attacked all vehicles that came along the
Batticaloa-Kalmunai Road using RPGs..." There was still no
reference to civilian casualties.
The LTTE press release from London the same day (8'th) contained
the following item: "30 Tamil civilians slaughtered by Sri Lankan
army in Batticaloa: The Sri Lankan security forces ran amok in
Puthukkudiyiruppu in Batticaloa after 40 of its members were
killed there during an attack on one of its camps by the LTTE. At
least 30 Tamil civilians in the area were slaughtered by the Sri
Lankan forces. A complete news blackout was imposed in the area by
the Sri Lankan army and no one was allowed to enter or leave the
area for the past 48 hours where the killings took place."
This "English translation of an LTTE statement" was issued three
days after the event closely following what was said in the Sri
Lankan parliament the previous day and then in an interview over
the BBC Tamil Service. Owing to the bankruptcy of the Government
media and spokesmen, the latter version would be largely believed
by those in Batticaloa itself, who were not immediately concerned
with the incident.
The young as instruments of terror
The following two incidents illustrate how the young in a society
where values have been broken down by years of state oppression
and violence are used as instruments of terror and to gather
information.
Pathmanathan is a schoolboy from Arasadytivu of well-to-do
parents, who is boarded in Batticaloa. The LTTE asked him to meet
them for extortion purposes. When he did not respond, a caller
gave him another option. If he could do the job of killing a given
member of the TELO, he would become one of them (i.e. the LTTE).
Then there would be no reason for him to meet them. Since P. could
hardly hold a revolver, he got hold of Maharajah, an O.Level
student from Palugamam living in a boarding house and studying at
Shivananda College. He had been trained and worked for the local
LTTE intelligence chief Ramanan, who had asked him to return to
school and be an informer. He had once thrown a grenade at a
police patrol in Manjanthoduwa which failed to explode. The two of
them organised Koneswaran, an O.Level student also at Shivananda,
who agreed to do the killing for money. The revolver was supplied
to Pathmanathan by Thiruchelvam, a bus conductor, and was passed
on to Koneswaran via Maharajah. The weapon was discovered by the
people of the boarding house where Koneswaran lived. They asked
Koneswaran to leave. Koneswaran returned the gun to Pathmanathan
via the same route and moved into a new residence. Pathmanathan
gave the weapon to Muraleetharan, another O.Level student at
Shivananda. One Krishnakumar from Kallady, an ex-Boosa detainee
who had supplied the weapon to Thiruchelvam (the bus conductor)
was caught by the security forces, leading to the arrest of all
those in the chain of contacts. The weapon was recovered from
Muraleetharan. Also taken in were two female attendants from
Batticaloa hospital, who had helped to hide some bombs supplied by
Thiruchelvam.
Another case is that of Ganeshamoorthy Sivadarshan(15), an O.Level
student. He was returning to Batticaloa from Paduvankarai about
early October when he was detained by the air force and beaten up,
having been suspected of LTTE involvement. The boy and his mother
maintained that he had gone to visit the Amman Temple. The air
force placed him on two months parole, where he had to sign once a
week. Sivadarshan was missing after he went to the air force on
26th November. The air force maintained that he had left after
reporting. His mother maintained that he was missing after going
to the air force. A few days later, an ambush party caught him
swimming into Batticaloa from the other side of the lagoon with a
bag of bombs.
All the students caught above have been released on parole and
sat for their O.Level examinations, except Muraleetharan who sat
his examinations with an army guard to watch over him.
Other incidents
The following gives a selection of incidents over the past 7
months.
2nd May 1995: Bulletin 6 referred to 4 persons taken by the army
to Valaichenai camp of whom 3 were later found tied up in the
jungle. The other, Kanagaratnam Krishnapillai is still missing.
26th May 1995: Vellavelly: Kandasamy Thambiratnam and Vallipuram
Thevarajah were taken into custody by the STF at 40th colony which
was witnessed by the father of the first. The two are since
missing. Having failed to trace them, Brigadier Kalupahana, who
was then in charge of Batticaloa, advised the families to take
compensation.
3oth June 1995: Poondukalchenai, near Kiran: 18 soldiers involved
in route clearing were ambushed and killed by the LTTE. A day or
two later an army patrol went into the village at 4.00 a.m. when
the people took alarm and ran. The army opened fire killing ten
villagers. Elayathamby Tharmaratnam(33) who was taken into custody
was reported missing.
30th July 1995: Kalkudah: Arumugam Jeyaganesh(15) was abducted by
the LTTE at 10.00 p.m. from his father's house. The father works
as cook at the Kalkudah police camp.
10th September 1995: Oddaimavady: Weerakoonlage Dayananda, a boy
schooling at Minneriya, and whose father Podisingho Chandradasa
works at the Valaichenai paper factory, went missing while
visiting Oddaimavady. The LTTE is deemed the chief suspect.
8th October 1995: Arumugam Ganeshan of Pethalai (off Valaichenai-
Kalkudah Rd.) was taken by the police in the presence of his wife.
Both DIG/Police in Batticaloa and the brigadier in charge denied
the arrest. About 6 days later he was handed over to the CSU
(Counter Subversive Unit of the police). The elderly married man
with a child is now deranged.
19th November 1995: Santhiveli: The LTTE attacked a route clearing
patrol of the army along the railroad. about 40 soldiers died in
the ensuing confrontation. When the army came into the village at
11.00 a.m., most of the villagers ran away. Indrani, a woman aged
24 was alone in a house. Having checked the house, the army shot
her. In another house a lady was shot dead and her sister cried
for help. Soldiers burnt the house with the dead lady. Eight of
the injured civilians, including 4 children, were later admitted
to Batticaloa hospital.
Late November 1995: Siruthayankallu: 4 children who were playing
in this interior village ran when they saw a helicopter overhead.
The gunner in the machine fired a shell injuring all four children
(two males ages 5 & 7 and two girls, ages 12 & 11).
9th December: Araipattai: Santhiramohan(30), a carpenter, while
walking on the road was called by men in uniform, assaulted and
shot in the leg. The victim lodged no complaint with anyone. He
was receiving treatment in Batticaloa hospital.
10th December 1995: Punnaicholai: The LTTE warned a man whose
daughter was to be married to a member of another militant group.
The marriage went ahead, following which the LTTE murdered the
father.
23rd December 1995:Santhiveli: 33 army personnel were killed
during an LTTE attack in the afternoon. No reprisals reported. The
`Virkesari' reported one civilian killed during the attack.
The abduction of Prof.Santhanam, Vice Chancellor of Eastern
University
An event of considerable significance that has attracted
comparatively little publicity is the abduction by the LTTE of
Prof.Santhanam, who was coming to the end of his term as vice
chancellor of Eastern University. During the `peace process' of
the early months of 1995 , Karikalan, LTTE's Batticaloa leader,
addressed a meeting of the staff in the university. Numerous
allegations ranging from malpractices to political deviations
were made, along with expressions such as 'Death would be the
minimum punishment'. Every time someone tried to speak, he was
signalled to wait. When Karikalan finished and people tried to
respond, they were given to understand that they were there only
to listen to him, and the meeting ended.
The events must also be seen in the context os the LTTE's
nervousness about`regionalism' and its utter inability to come to
terms with the Muslim question.
Prof.Santhanam was known to have been held in Kokkadichcholai and
has been seen by a few individuals who did not report any
mistreatment. The LTTE claims that he had ignored several letters
calling upon him to report to them. Some had been told by the LTTE
that Prof.Santhanam had to pay a sum of the order of Rs. 25 lakhs
for his release- a sum which his close associates say he does not
possesss.
Treatment of detainees
According to citizen's groups in Batticaloa, arrests are now far
fewer, and in town at least the methods of interrogation and
treatment of prisoners by the Military Intelligence unit is far
more professional and enlightened. Complaints about missing
persons are fairly promptly looked into, and nearly all of them
have turned out to be false alarms - in the town at least. In this
respect Colonel Dissanayake, who heads the unit, and his
assistants Lieutenants Abeysekera and Bandara, have been described
as 'very fair'. (See the case of the school boys above.) The
situation in Valaichenai is still described as very
unsatisfactory.
General behaviour of the Forces
The fact that villagers still run when they see a patrol
approaching, particularly after an incident, shows that the old
problem has still not been addressed - that of the army continuing
to be seen as an alien and hostile institution. Villagers continue
to assume that the risk of running away and getting shot is less
than that of staying at home and getting shot.
In areas that the Forces have ceased to control, the attitude
seems to be ,anything goes. An year ago the armed forces
controlled much of Paduvankarai (sunset shore). Following the
resumption of war in April and the closure of smaller camps, the
LTTE had asserted control. Since then the areas were shelled and
now they are being bombed. The case of the 4 children above who
were injured is typical. Villagers have also complained about the
use of barrel bombs. These are crude devices that are pushed out
of aircraft and are untargetable. The use is suggested by the
admission to hospital of about two female patients with extensive
skin burns.
The use of human shields by the forces, which received some
publicity during the middle of the year (eg. our Bulletin No.6 &
Macan Markar in the Sunday Times of 11th June 1995) has refused to
go away. Shortly after the resumption of war, the army route
clearing patrols used human shields in the Sittandy and Commaturai
areas. In June the army got local civilians to sit in front of
Sittandy and Morakkothanchenai army camps. These were stopped
shortly after the Batticaloa Peace Committee & MPs protested. But
the BPC had little influence in STF controlled areas. Apart from
being cowardly and reprehensible in itself, the practice of using
human shields reveals a cavalier approach to the basic rights and
dignity of civilians. It does not take much imagination to answer
the question, "How do civilians living in the vast expanses of
territory in the East, which are regularly subject to military
activity, see the Government and its forces?"
The Government and civilian security
The question is important not least in view of the Government
calling upon the civilians to return to Jaffna. The President in
her address to the nation on 6th December after the army took
control of Jaffna, said: "I invite all those who left Jaffna to
return to your homes and lands, and live normal lives in peace and
security. My Government undertakes to ensure you that..."
The situation in Batticaloa gives us some idea of the extent to
which this laudable aim could be translated into practice.
Impunity, despite improvements, remains the norm. If the Forces
come under pressure, the civilians could with impunity be
shelled, sometimes summarily killed, have their houses burnt or be
used as human shields. Why do people continue to run from the
forces? Why are people afraid to protest and meekly allow
themselves to be used as human shields? The answer is surely that
the Government is yet to take any significant positive action to
assert the rights of the people who are punished through more
violations instead of those perpetrating them. If what the
Government 'undertakes to ensure' cannot stand up in a crisis, the
pledge becomes largely rhetorical. The Tamil parties too must
share the blame for not addressing these issues with consistency
and foresight, rather than make dramatic gestures when what is
waiting to happen, happens. As regards human rights, we are far
from being out of the woods. There is no cause for human rights
monitors to relax their vigil.
The need for the vigil is not to deny the fact that there have
been notable improvements, but more so to ensure that these are
stabilised against the constant threat of relapse. The changes
which have quantitatively increased restraint among the forces in
the East, are yet to yield a qualitative transformation. This is
crucial for the Government to gain legitimacy among the people.
The cause of human rights is also imperilled by the prevailing
popular confusion about military and political objectives. The
Government, for example, is accused of having lost control of the
East, which the former UNP Government is said to have secured by
early 1993. What sort of control it was, needs to examined. There
used to be a large number of army camps that could contain a
relatively small LTTE presence, but not a huge influx of cadre
form the North. The LTTE continued to make its presence felt in
the villages through extortion and executions.
The people who managed their lives in constant fear of both sides,
did certainly not identify with the government forces. The latter
remained aliens whose massive violations targeted against the
Tamil community, particularly during 1984 - 87 and 1990-91, remain
a vivid memory. Several known offenders continue to remain at
large. The control we are talking about is therefore a stifling
one, requiring a large military presence and beset with constant
danger. How each of the army and the LTTE relate to the people was
clearly brought out by the following remark made by a civilian in
the East. He said ,"When the Tigers attack and kill the army, the
people feel good.Yet, when the army kill the Tigers, the people
are not sad".
Hence without political movement, the control referred to was at
best tantamount to the control of an occupying power. Once the
army camps were withdrawn from the rural areas, the LTTE quickly
took control with no significant political challenge to its claim
of legitimacy. The kind of control that is talked about therefore
is costly, ephemeral and meaningless in the absence of a political
process of reconciliation that restores accountability to the
people. Such a process is yet to get off the ground.