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SL PEOPLE WORRIED
AS TRINCO MONITORS CEASE FUNCTIONING By
D.B.S.JEYARAJ
Trincomalee and its environs continued to be caught up in a
vicious cycle of violence as various agencies engaged in sporadic
attacks and counter - attacks.. While the armed forces were at
the receiving end of Tiger - sponsored violence civilians
particularly Tamils suffered at the hands of security forces and
other sinister state - aligned elements. Adding to the tensions
was the announcement by the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission that it
was suspending duties in the district until further notice.
The SLMM decision has begun causing panic in Trincomalee.The much
maligned monitors provided a reassuring oasis of stability in a
bleak desert of violence. With the SLMM decision fears began
mounting on either side of the ethnic divide. The security forces
are apprehensive of escalating levels of tiger motivated attacks
against them. The helpless Tamil civilians are fearful of
increasing harm at the hands of the security forces and their
"lumpen" sidekicks.
If ever the ordinary people of Trincomalee needed a comforting
third party this is that time. But the SLMM has chosen to desert
the people at a crucial time. The Monitors seem to have a history
of abdicating their duties at times when people sorely need them.
In 2004 Batticaloa was under severe strain due to the rebellion
of eastern tiger commander Vinayagamoorthy Muraleetharan alias
"Col" Karuna. Yet the SLMM suspended its functions and
withdrew.Now the same thing is happening in Trincomalee.
One does understand that the SLMM is in a predicament. The Nordic
representatives from Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland and Denmark
came to the North - East to monitor what they thought was a
genuine ceasefire. Instead they have seen violations in their
thousands. Now the situation is changing for the worse.The
atmosphere is that of an undeclared war. The SLMM is being
required to monitor "ceaseless firing" instead of a ceasefire.
Monitoring a war - overt or covert - is not their mandate.
Besides there is the question of the safety of the monitors
themselves.
It was the incident at Uppuvely on Jan 17th that led to the SLMM
's decision. The monitors staying at a hotel in Nilaweli travel
along the Nilweli - Trincomalee road to their headquarters in
Trincomalee and back on a daily basis. They had done so that
morning too but later on a claymore mine had exploded at Uppuvely
on the same road.The monitors had passed through on the same
route about 90 minutes before.
Furthermore a monitor team was proceeding towards Thiriyai along
the same road when the explosion had occurred. The Police at
Upuuvely had refused to let the monitors proceed further in the
interests of their own safety. While held up at the Police the
reprts of gunfire were also heard. It was after this incident
that the SLMM announced its suspension of duties.
The Uppuvely incident was one more instance of the tragic pattern
of violence enveloping Trincomalee. About 24 Naval personnel were
travelling in a bus via the Nilaweli road. They were going from
their camp at Gopalapuram in the Nilaweli region to the dockyard
road base in Trincomalee town. The sailors had reached a point
near the Uppuvely junction or the third mile post junction from
Trinco town on the Nilaweli road. Uppuvely is predominantly
Tamil.
The naval vehicle had veered off the road and taken a short cut .
This apparently was a regular practice. The vehicle was yards
away from the Love lane - Palms road intersection when a claymore
mine attached to a parked cycle on the wayside was triggered off
by a remote - controlled device. The obvious suspects were the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.Fortunately for the navy the
explosion occurred a fraction of a second late after the bus had
almost passed the claymore - cycle. This minimised the damage.The
time was 10.05 am.
Nevertheless twelve naval personnel sustained injuries. None were
killed though the condition od three sailors is said to be
serious. Dazed security personnel hit the ground and began firing
away. Some ran here and there firing away at a non - existent
enemy. There was no enemy to fight against. This was not a
conventional ambush where guerillas trigger a landmine and then
shoot it out with surviving security personnel. It was only a
one- sided shooting spree. This was simply because the tigers had
exploded the claymore by remote and fled the scene letting
innocent civilians face repercussions.
Though sections of the media say there was a shootout and that
civilians were killed in the crossfire the reality is that all
the firing was done by the naval personnel alone. There is an
army camp at Uppuvely within a stone's throw of where the
explosion took place. But none of the soldiers participated in
the shooting spree. It was during this melee that at least six
civilians sustained serious and another ten minor injuries.
Two civilians were killed.According to eyewitness reports these
two were killed at close quarters.Reportedly an injured sailor
bleeding from his injuries was seen killing one and then daubing
his victim's body with that of his own blood. The cruelly
melodramatic gesture seemed to indicate a "blood for blood"
thirst for vengeance.
The shooting melee lasted for about 20 to 25 minutes. It may have
gone on further but for the intervention of a high - ranking
Naval officer who arrived at the scene. It was this officer who
brought the situation under control and ensured that the sailors
leave the scene with injured sailors and civilians being given
priority . This officer apparently arrived with reinforcements
from Trincomalee upon hearing of the incident. Affected civilians
are grateful to this man but are unaware of his identity.
The civilians injured and killed at Uppuvely were not tigers.
They were people who were either passing through the place or had
come to buy things or for other matters. tragically they were in
the wrong place at the wrong time.Among the places in the
vicinity was the Asian Hardware stores; Opposite to that was the
Kandeepan enterprises a telecommunications agency. On top of this
was an NGO office. Adjoining Kandeepan Enterprises was the Jeya
studio.
Most of the affected civilians were either in these buildings or
on the road when the shooting started. These buildings too were
damaged. Later on another development occurred. Naval personnel
presumably from the Gopalapuram camp arrived later and conducted
an intensive search of the area for the "elusive" tigers as if
the LTTE was waiting to be captured. Soldiers from Uppuvely also
joined them. Of course no tigers were snared but the operation
was not without its rewards.One result of this search operation
was the large- scale looting of houses, businesses and shops.
The people had all fled from the scene. Seven civilians three
women and four men were trapped but managed to hide themselves.
Again it was the intervention of superior officers who arrived at
the scene which ended the "search cum looting spree". After the
security personnel left the scene Policemen from the Uppuvely
station arrived. They took the seven civilians to the station,
recorded statements and arranged for safe return to their
homes.
The two men killed in the Uppuvely shooting were identified as
Sellathurai Selvarajah (25) of Chelvanayagapuram and Wilson
Christopher George a resident of Nithyapuri in Allesgarden,
Uppuvely. Selvarajah was a mason by profession and George a
construction labourer. Both were at the Asian Hardware stores to
buy materials when they were killed.Trincomalee Judicial Medical
Officer Dr. Gamini Kulatunge who conducted the post - mortem
stated that deaths were caused by gunshot injuries.Trincomalee
magistrate V. Ramakamalan recorded a verdict of death due to
gunshot injuries.A joint funeral for both victims was held at the
Alles Garden cemetery in Uppuvely on Jan 19th afternoon.
Seven civilians were admitted to hospital for surgery after the
Uppuvely incident. . Six of these were victims of the Uppuvely
shooting spree. They were TM Chandrasena (38), AKE Premadasa
(36),Kadiramalai Duwaraga (45), Ganesh Saraswathy (46), Sebastian
David (35) and Sivagnanam Kavitha (25).Three of the six were
women . Two were Sinhala and four Tamils. Apparently Sailors on
the shooting spree had not discriminated gender or ethnicity -
wise in targeting victims.
The seventh civilian to receive surgery was 20 year old S.
Devadharshan. He worked in a boutique at Madathady junction in
Trincomalee town. Within minutes after the Uppeveli attack there
was much excitement in Trincomalee town with naval personnel
rushing to the scene. It was at this time that some "persons" in
a vehicle had lobbed a grenade at this boutique seriously
injuring the Tamil shop employee.The Police station is in close
proximity to this shop.
Another "mystery" grenade targeting Tamil civilians had been
thrown at a Tamil residence on Jan 14th Thaipongal day too.The
family comprising Rajkumar (35) his wife Rajeswari (35) daughter
Saivithya (10) and son Vithyakaran (04) were at their residence
in the Urban Council residence quarters at Anbuvalipuram on the
Trinco - Kandy road. The family was watching TV in the evening
when a grenade was lobbed inside injuring all four. Again the
Police came out with a version that a grenade concealed inside
the house had exploded. SLMM monitors however discovered the
grenade clip outside the house.Senior DIG Mahinda Balasuria has
ordered a full investigation into the incident.
Meanwhile the magisterial inquest into the killing of five Tamil
youths at the Dutch bay beach was concluded on Jan 18th with
Trincomalee magistrate V. Ramakamalan ruling that all five had
died due to gunshot injuries. Earlier Trincomalee JMO Dr. Gamini
Kulatunga submitted post - mortem reports . The JMO stated that
all five had been shot with bullets piercing through heads,
lungs,liver, intestines and other vital organs causing
instantaneous death.The shots had been fired from above. Though
there were other injuries it was gunshots that had caused death
said Dr. Gamini Kulatunga.
Parents and close relatives of the five youths also gave
evidence. Deputy Solicitor - General De Livera and three other
state counsels from Colombo were in Trincomalee to lead evidence.
Attorney at law A. Jegasothy watched the interests of the
families of the dead students.At the conclusion Mr. Ramakamalan
delivering his order ruled "The court determines that the five
Tamil youths killed on January 2 night near the sea beach of the
east port town had died due to gunshot injuries instantaneously.
The court has come to a conclusion that an offence has been
committed in this instance. Therefore the court orders the Police
to conduct further inquiry into these deaths and to produce the
suspects before the court,"
With this official verdict being recorded and President Rajapakse
himself giving his word that the guilty ones would be punished
let us hope justice would be done. The false propaganda about the
five youths being killed through a grenade explosion has now been
disproved legally and officially. It is time for all human rights
organizations to increase pressure on the regime and urge full
inquiry and retributive justice. President Rajapakse has to be
given full support to overcome reactionary elements and pursue
justice. Let it not be forgotten that the image of Mahinda the
man of human rights and the self - respect of the nation lies in
how this issue is handled.
In what seemed to be the only silver lining in a dark Trincomalee
scenario a satisfactory decision was arrived at on the question
of the continuous hartals called in Trincomalee by Tamil and
Sinhala organizations.The Sinhala organizations called off their
hartal with effect from Jan 15th following a meeting with Senior
Police DIG in charge of North - East Mahinda Balasuriya on
Saturday 14th evening.
Thereafter on Sunday Jan 15th DIG Balasuriya met with Tamil
organization representatives, religious leaders and senior
security officials. With Mr. Balasuriya assuring Tamil reps that
he would take steps to implement decisions taken the Tamil
organizations also announced that they were calling off their
hartal.Tamil and Sinhala organizations for different reasons had
paralysed Trincomalee with their respective hartals causing
immense hardship to the ordinary people.
DIG Balasuriya is to be commended for persuading both parties to
call off the hartals. It remains to be seen as to how quickly and
effectively the assurances given by Balasuria are
implemented.According to Mr.V.Vigneswaran, President of the Tamil
Resurgence Forum in Trincomalee the assurances provided were - 1.
All government troops located near schools, temples, sea beach
and Government Technical College should be removed. 2. Police
personnel should be deployed in addition to members of armed
forces at sentries in the town and its suburbs. Police should be
allowed to check civilians passing through sentry points. 3. Home
guards should not be allowed alone on duty. Home guards should
accompany Police. Home guards should not be allowed alone to
enter Tamil areas. 4. Police and government troops should provide
in writing on the spot to relatives of a person arrested by them
the reason and where the arrested is being taken for inquiry. 5.
Soldiers of the Sri Lanka Army and Sri Lanka Navy should not
cover their faces with black clothes when they conduct search
operation and when they are on patrol. Mr. Vigneswaran further
said the DIG had asked them not to launch hartal without
informing him if there is a delay in implementing these
decisions. He also said the Forum had asked the Sri Lanka
Monitoring Mission (SLMM) in Trincomalee to monitor the
implementation of the decisions.
Though normalcy began returning to Trincomalee from Monday Jan
16th incidents like the Uppuvely attack on 17th were soon
plunging the region into turmoil and despair. With the SLMM
announcing its temporary "withdrawal" the people particularly
Tamils were feeling more and more insecure. Even the
implementation of the decision arrived at with Police DIG
Balasuriya was to be monitored by the SLMM.
Adding to Tamil fears was the announcement that more security
personnel were to be deployed in Trincomalee to fill the vacuum
created by the SLMM suspension of duties. This itself was an
ironic contradiction because the SLMM was here to monitor the
ceasefire between the LTTE and Sri Lankan government troops. For
one party to announce that it was filling the gap will be
unacceptable because the security forces cannot be regarded as
neutral or independent. They are a party to the conflict and
cannot be seen as impartially carrying out their duties.
Another development increasing Tamil insecurity is the move to
train and arm 600 homeguards from the district. In a blatant
racist move all 600 were to be from the Sinhala and Muslim
commuities. This is seen as something clearly detrimental to
ordinary Tamil civilians. Already some lumpen Sinhala elements
aided and abetted by sections of the armed forces have run amok
in Trincomalee.
Even a BBC crew filiming the "Sinhala" hartal was not spared with
club wielding mobs threatening and demanding films taken of the
patriotic hartal. Most of the young men were in shorts and tee -
shirts and quite drunk before noon. The terrorising of the BBC
crew was done in the presence of Police and Army personnel who
did not interfere at all.If this is the plight of the BBC crew
with two British, one Indian and two Sri Lankan nationals then
one can imagine the problems to be faced by Tamil civilians in a
kingdom of armed homeguards.
It is imperative therefore that the SLMM resume operational
activities as soon as possible. While understanding and
sympathising with their predicament it is also of importance to
emphasise that the SLMM should be at work as long as the
ceasefire is "officially" in force. The SLMM must revise its
stance in the larger interests of the ordinary Trincomalee
civilians. The SLMM has admonished both the LTTE and the security
forces for prevailing tensions and violence in Trincomalee and
urged both to regulate themselves. Let us hope then that the
monitors resume duties after the full import of their action
sinks into all concerned parties.
Even as this article is about to end there comes bad news again
from Trincomalee. According to preliminary reports three naval
personnel and a Policeman were injured when a bomb was thrown at
a navy jee pon Thursday Jan 19th at about 4 pm in the Gandhinagar
area of Anbuvallipuram . The incident occurred near the
Anuradhapura junction along the Trincomalee - Kandy road about
two miles away from Trinco town. In a replay of what went on in
Uppuvely on Jan 17th enraged security personnel had gone on the
rampage spraying the surrounding area with gunfire.
Ten civilians were injured. One was Sinhala , two Muslims and
seven Tamils. Their names and ages are - Chandrasekara (38) ,
Nawas (42), Mashoor (73), Benedict (38), Vinotharajah (28) ,
Kamalathas (48), Pakiarajah (24), Arulraj (30), Ravichandran (37)
and Jeyachandran (34). A shop in the area was also damaged. Many
Tamils have been detained for questioning.
With the LTTE stepping up violence through direct and indirect
means the North - East is continuously on the boil. Trincomalee
with its strategic importance and ethnic mixture will feel this
impact acutely. It is therefore of the utmost importance that the
SLMM resumes duties and helps to alleviate at least some of the
tensions and insecurity felt by the people.
More importantly the LTTE must be made to realise that its
deplorable conduct of launching attacks and running away leaving
the innocent people at the mercy of infuriated security personnel
cannot continue in this fashion.
At the same time the atrocious behaviour of security personnel in
the North - East including Trincomalee cannot be condoned and
deserves condemnation. Ultimately however it is the
democratically elected President of Sri Lanka and his government
that has to bear overall responsibility for the cruel
victimisation of innocent civilians irrespective of ethnicity and
habitat. Sadly Mahinda is yet to realise his responsibilities and
take meaningful action.
(ENDS)
CONCLUDED
DBS Jeyaraj................... Jan 20th 2006
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