Chapter 35 | |||
Pirapaharan
By: T. Sabaratnam 35: Tamil
Blood Boils
Eyewitness Account I
was in Trincomalee on 27 November 1982 with Daily News presidential
reporter Norton Weerasinghe and photographer Sena Vithanagama to cover
the foundation laying function of the Mitsui Cement Factory the next
morning. We met Trincomalee Member of Parliament Rajavarothayam
Sampanthan at his home on 28 November morning to arrange the use of his
telephone to send the report of the event to the Daily News. Obtaining
telephone calls from provincial towns was difficult those days and only
a few top government officials, police, commanding officers of armed
services and parliamentarians enjoyed the direct dialing facility.
Others had to go through the telephone exchange which meant several
hours of waiting. Peter Balasooriya of the Sunday Island had made
arrangements with the Trincomalee Government Agent Jayatissa Bandaragoda,
one of his important contacts, thus forcing us to make an alternative
arrangement. Sampanthan
had just returned from a meeting with President Jayewardene who had come
to lay the foundation stone when we met him. “I thanked him for
canceling the Cadju Plantation Project and briefed him about a plot to
eject the poor Indian Tamils settled by Gandhyam in Vavuniya,
Trincomalee and Batticoloa. The President was very accommodative,” he
said. Sampanthan
also told us his worry about moves by Cyril Mathew and Gamini
Dissanayake to convert Trincomalee into a Sinhala-majority province.
Mathew’s mission, he said, was to discover ruins of Buddhist temples
and restore them and settle Sinhala peasants around them. Gamini
Dissanayake’s mission was to get state corporations to acquire vast
extents of state land and settle Sinhala families in them. “Both are
busy implementing the government’s agenda to make Tamils a minority
community ion Trincomalee,” Sampanthan said. The
Sinhala-Buddhist crusade to convert the Trincomalee, a Tamil majority
district, into a Sinhala majority area, as I pointed out in Chapter 33,
was started by D. S. Senanayake. Since his time Sinhala settlements were
established and Buddhist temples built along all roads connecting
Trincomalee to the rest of the country. That was the answer
Sinhala-Buddhist governments gave to the Tamil attempt to make
Trincomalee the capital of the Tamil homeland. The
Sinhala- Buddhist plan was given added thrust since the Federal Party
demanded the proclamation of the ancient Hindu temple Thirukoneswaram,
situated inside Fort Frederick, a sacred area. The demand was made in
1965 by Murugesu Tiruchelvam, a Federal Party minister in Dudley
Senanayake’s National Government. Buddhists
objected to the demand on the basis that the fort was the site of an
ancient Buddhist temple Gokanna Vihara mentioned in Mahavamsa. The
Buddhist chronicle mentions Gokanna Vihara as one built by King Mahasena
in the 3rd Century AD on the north-eastern sea coast. No
trace of it, archaeological or otherwise, had been found. But, former
archaeological commissioner Prof. S. Paranavithana, interpreted the 12th
Century donative inscription written in Sanskrit found in the Hindu
temple premises as proof that the vihara existed there. The
inscription merely records the visit of Prince Godaganga Deva to
Gokarana. The Sinhala academics, indulging in their usual etymological
trickery, an art they employ to serve the government agenda and Sinhala
chauvinism, have concluded that the historic vihara existed in
Trincomalee fort premises. (For details refer Sri Lanka Arrogance of
Power Page 76). In
their quest for Buddhist ruins Mathew’s men- Piyasena and his
officials-were not worried whether the ruins were of Mahayana Buddhism
propagated by Tamil Buddhists or not. They were also not concerned
whether the inscriptions found among the ruins were written in Sanskrit,
the language of Hinduism or not. They claimed everything belonged to the
Theravada Buddhism they professed. The
governments since mid-sixties appointed Sinhalese as the Government
Agents of Trincomalee. That facilitated the government to implement its
agenda. Some of them were honest and fair-minded men. Others implemented
the government agenda by fair or foul means. The second category
dominated the scene during Jayewardene rein. Jayatissa
Bandaragoda was the government agent of Trincomalee during 1978 to 1983.
During his time, Sinhalization of Trincomalee was speeded up. Vast
extents of land were acquired by state institutions and Sinhala families
were settled on them. A long stretch of 5000 acres along the Colombo
Road was brought under the Ports Authority. Thousands of acres of state
land was allocated to Tourist Board, Petroleum Corporation and other
state institutions. Sampanthan
told me he thanked Jayewardene for canceling the proposed Cadju
plantation in Thiriyai, north of Trincomalee. Thiriyayi is a Tamil
village with long history. Neelapanikkankulam, a tank near the village
was renovated in the 1940s and the villagers were cultivating rice in
the land irrigated by it. But their ownership of the fields was not
regularized by the issue of permits, an administrative mistake.
Bandaragoda’s officials discovered that defect and ordered in 1980 the
farmers to quit the land saying 2000 acres of their land is being
allocated to the Cadju Corporation for a cadju cultivation project. When
informed of this Sampanthan went to Colombo and met Plantation
Industries Minister M. D. H. Jayawardena. The minister expressed shock
when Sampanthan told him that they were planning to plant cadju in
irrigated rice fields. Cadju which does not require much water is
planted in marginal land. “Who
gave this order?” Sampanthan demanded. M.
D. H. Jayawardena apologetically said: Order had come from the very top. That
was how ministers and officials refer to the orders given by the
President. “I
am helpless. You talk to the big man,” M. D. H. Jayawardena said. Sampanthan
met President Jayewardene. He presented the matter in a way that would
prick his conscience. “Forget about the Tamils and the Sinhalese.
Would you like to go down in history as the first head of state who
planted cadju in paddy land irrigated by a large village tank?” President
Jayewardene ordered the cancellation of the project. In the initial
years of his reign, President Jayewardene wanted to go down in history
as a just and beneficial ruler. Let
me relate here, as a senior journalist, an order Daily News received
from President Jayewardene. He wanted his speeches reported verbatim and
in the order he delivered it. The Editor protested. “We are a
newspaper. Not a Hansard,” he said. “If we report the way you
deliver, the real story will be buried at the bottom.” President
Jayewardene’s reply was: “I am not worried about the story. I want
my speeches to go down in history.” That
is how my colleague Norton Weerasinghe, a reputed court’s reporter was
made the Presidential Reporter. His job was to take down the
President’s speech, take the proof to the President and get his OK.
Naturally, the report missed early editions and sometimes was held back
for the next day. Sampanthan
said President Jayewardene’s cancellation order was carried out. His
experience with Gamini Dissanayake was different. When Mahadivulwewa
colonization scheme was started with European Community funds Sampanthan
met Mahaweli Development Minister Gamini Dissanayake and told him that
was a predominantly Tamil village known by the name Periyavilankulam and
requested the cancellation of the scheme. Gamini Dissanayake accepted
Sampanthan’s plea and in his presence gave a written order canceling
the settlement. Sampanthan said, he learnt later, Dissanayake had told
his ministry secretary Nanda Abeywickreme to telephone Trincomalee
Government Agent Bandaragoda to expedite the settlement so that it would
be fact accompli when the cancellation order reaches him. “This
is the type of people with whom Tamils had to deal with,” Sampanthan
said. The
second matter Sampanthan brought to the notice of President Jayewardene
was the media propaganda build up against Gandhyam. That very morning
Sunday Island and Weekend had carried on page one similar stories on the
Gandhyam movement. The
Sunday Island used the story written by Peter Balasuriya as its lead
under the headline: Red Barna, Gandhyam Movement to be probed. It read: Informed sources said that President J.
R. Jayewardene will personally look into the activities of Redd Barna,
now involved in community work in the Batticoloa district. The
investigation follows a request from Minister K. W. Devanayagam. The
minister, it is understood, referred to the work of Redd Barna in the
Batticoloa district and Gandhyam in the Jaffna district and wanted them
investigated…Regarding Gandhyam, the Minister of Social Services has
been asked to make inquiries and submit a report to the Government… The
Weekend story was also written in a similar vein by Ranil Weerasinghe
and Jennifer Henricus. Their opening paragraph read: The Weekend reliably understands that a
probe was ordered by President J. R. Jayewardene after K. W. Devanayagam
raised the matter at a high level meeting. The organization which is
Scandinavian-based is being probed by the Ministry of Plan
Implementation under President Jayewardene and the other operating in
the north by the Minister of Social Services. Sampanthan
told me that he telephoned Devanayagam in the morning and he had denied
raising the matter in any meeting. “Maybe, my name is being used to
make the story appear more plausible,” Devanayagam had said. He did
not contradict the story because he thought that was the work of
President Jayewardene. “I
told President Jayewardene that there was a planned build up to crush
Gandhyam. I told him Gandhyam was doing an admirable job by
giving poverty-stricken, emaciated people a new self-respect. I invited
him to go with me and see the work Gandhyam was doing. Jayewardene
declined the invitation saying: If you say, so I accept it. There is no
need for me to go. Sampanthan
said Jayewardene’s rejection of his invitation served as an indication
that he had made up his mind to wipe out Gandhyam and subsequent events
proved his surmise correct. Burning of Boats
I
was again in Trincomalee on 2 June 1983 when organized Sinhala fishermen
attacked Tamil fishermen. I was covering the opening of a new school
building by Fisheries Minister Festus Perera at prosperous Sinhala
village Samudrapura started by the Jayewardene government when a
distressed M. Selvarajah, trustee Thirukoneswaram temple, rushed in. He
saw me and came near and whispered: Saba, trouble is starting. They have
burnt boats of Tamil fishermen last night. He reported the matter to
Festus Perera and asked him to use his influence to prevent a major
calamity. I
was able to feel the mounting tension since morning. People were
gathered in small groups intensely discussing the developments of the
previous day. I overheard remarks like ‘breaking of heads’ and
‘teaching the Tamils a lesson.” These two phrases had gained wide
currency during those days, the first attributed to Lalith
Athulathmudali and the second to the ‘the very top’ man. Fisheries
Ministry was not in my beat but Festus Perera was. He was then tasked by
President Jayewardene to build contacts with the Jaffna fishing
community and the Catholic Church. Festus Perera was one of
Jayewardene’s trusted lieutenants. He was with Jayewardene when he
clashed with Dudley Senanayake in 1972. Jayewardene had the noble
quality of looking after those who stood with him during lean times. He
rewarded him by appointing his the Minister of Fisheries when he came to
power in 1977. Covering ethnic conflict being my major assignment I kept
in close touch with him. I
joined the media group that left for Trincomalee on 1 June. When our van
entered Kurunegala town in the afternoon a group black-shirted youths
jumped on to the road and signaled the driver to halt. The driver drove
straight on to them and they jumped back. We saw an unruly mob looting
Tamil shops and burning them. We saw Tamil men clubbed by a screaming
mob. My Sinhala colleagues stood around and shielded me from the angry
glance of an unruly mob that searched for Tamils. When our vehicle
snaked out of the town my colleagues blurted out in joy: We have saved
Saba. Kurunegala
was one of the fifty-odd cities countrywide that dealt collective
punishment to the Tamils for killing two air force men that morning in
Vavuniya town. Four air force personnel went in a jeep to the vegetable
market to buy vegetables. U. L. M. Perera and W. A. Gunasekera stood
guard near the jeep while the others went into the market to do the
purchase. Four PLOTE gunmen
who had waited for them lobbed a hand grenade and then cut them with
gunfire. Then they snatched the weapons and ran. The
army retaliated in the afternoon. Army personnel in civilian clothes
rode in army trucks to the Gandhyam Farm at Kovilkulam, about two
kilometers from the town, destroyed the crops and huts and set fire to
farm buildings and vehicles. Three tractors and a van were burnt.
Terrified farmers hid themselves and saved their lives. Selvarajah
told me the burning of the boats belonging to the Tamils was instigated
by the armed forces. “The armed forces had still not come into the
open. They are getting Sinhala hoodlums to give the Tamils the works,”
he said. I
saw such an operation on the night of 3 June in the heart of the
Trincomalee town. Our media group was in the city when we heard that the
army was searching Mansion Hotel in the main Street for explosives. We
rushed to the place to cover the story. When we reached the place the
army had completed its search and they told us that they found nothing.
We were disappointed that there was no story. But
we got a more thrilling story a little later! The army moved on to a
nearby building and searched it. They took with them the two policemen
guarding the Mansion Hotel. Then we saw a mob coming out of the Market
Square. They entered the hotel and smashed up everything they found.
Then they poured petrol and set fire to it. We learnt that hotel was the
property of former Trincomalee
Member of Parliament B. Neminathan. From
then the number of attacks on Trincomalee Tamils began to mount. An
environment and regulatory framework for systematically organized
attacks on Tamils had already been created. I have already mentioned the
cold-blooded murder of Sabaratnam Palanivel, a young van driver of
Valvettithurai. Palanivel transported a group of relatives on 30 May to
Point Pedro to enable them to catch the early morning Trincomalee bus. While he was passing the Valvettithurai Army Camp around 4.30
a.m. Corporal M. Wimalaratne who was on guard duty shot him dead. Later,
an army truck was run over the dead body. Wimalaratne
was arrested and produced before Point Pedro Magistrate, the last time
an army offender was brought before the judiciary. This and the earlier
Navaratnarajah inquest irritated the army and the government.
Jayewardene followed his normal practice of getting one of his henchmen
to raise the matter in either the UNP Working Committee, parliament or
the government parliamentary group and then act on it. He does that to
show the country and the world that he was acting under pressure. In
this instance, he got the UNP Working Committee to call upon him to put
into effect all the regulations under the Public Security Ordinance to
suppress terrorism. The Island and the SUN and their Sinhala sister
papers took upon themselves the role of creating the public opinion
necessary for the introduction of drastic powers. Lalith
Athulathmudali, who acted throughout the Jayewardene rein, as the
government spokesman provided the media with the material. He was what
journalists call the newsman. He knows what news is and what is not. He
knows how to manipulate the media for government’s benefit. He was
also media friendly. He had cultivated the friendship of all editors and
selected talented reporters in all print and electronic media
institutions. Norton Weerasinghe and myself were his men in the Daily
News. To his men he gave his private telephone number. In that number
they can contact him at 5.30 a.m. Norton
and myself joined him at breakfast every Tuesday. He chose Tuesday
because he could give us the important matters that would be discussed
in Wednesday’s weekly cabinet meetings. One
day, while we were at breakfast Lalith gave Jennifer of the Sun an
interesting story. “That’s not for you,” he said after giving her
the news. “Daily News is our paper. Readers will take anything printed
in the Daily News with a pinch of salt. So I give the state media
factual stories and the ‘independent’ media the propagandist
stuff.” Lalith was a past master in flying kites to test public
opinion and planting propagandist material to create the environment for
government action. On
3 June 1983 the Defence Ministry announced: The armed forces and the police in the
North are to be given legal immunity from judicial proceedings and wide
ranging powers of search and destroy. The
Defence Ministry communiqué which contained this announcement said: Under such circumstances soldiers were
compelled to react as during a war particularly in their role of
fighting armed terrorists who had no compunction about killing
servicemen or members of the public. In view of this it has been felt
that police and the servicemen in the north should be given the freedom
of the battlefield rather than having their morale sapped through
conflicts with legal niceties. This is not a peacetime situation and the
police and the services must be provided with adequate safeguards when
attempting to control the problem. The
new immunity was contained in Emergency regulation 15A of 3 June 1983
which allowed the security forces to bury or cremate bodies of people
shot by them without revealing their identities or carrying out
inquests. The
militants answered these tough regulations with their own message: they
shot dead Thilagar, who contested the municipal election as a UNP
candidate defying the LTTE ban. Thilagar, a Jaffna Hospital employee,
was shot dead at 6.15 a.m. on 4 June, barely 12 hours after the
promulgation of the stringent laws, signifying the determination of the
militants to proceed with their armed struggle. The
Civil Rights Movement sent a telegram to President Jayewardene
protesting against the tough measures. It was signed by Kurunegala
bishop Lakshman Wickremesinghe, the president of the CRM and its
secretary Desmond Fernando. It said all measures taken by the government
should guarantee that all persons are dealt with by due process of the
law and in keeping with the fundamental principles of justice. Otherwise
the government will be flouting the principles of justice that are vital
to democracy in the very act of claiming to defend democratic
institutions. The
new regulations not only emboldened the security forces but also the
Sinhala extremist forces and hoodlums countrywide. Attacks on Tamil
homes, shops, temples and institutions increased. In the northeast,
particularly in Trincomalee, where curfew had been clamped the situation
was grisly. Several bomb attacks were reported in the first ten days of
June which resulted in one death. Tamil
newspapers published harrowing accounts of attacks by organized Sinhala
thugs during curfew hours. The security forces which provided
‘security’ to the thugs shot the Tamil victims who fled the scene of
attacks for violating the curfew! Security
forces, some stories revealed, rounded up the youths of the Tamil
villages outside the town during daytime and took them away for
‘investigation’. The gangs of thugs attacked the villages during the
nights, pillaging, burning and raping. The
situation worsened in the north and in Trincomalee in the second half of
June. In the north soldiers fired on a passenger bus proceeding to
Jaffna, killing the driver and injuring several passengers. They then
chased the passengers and burnt the bus. The press in Colombo printed
the army plant that the terrorists had attacked a civilian bus.
Amirthalingam told Parliament the facts the injured passengers had told
him and added that the security forces had killed six persons during the
first three weeks of June. The
situation in Trincomalee was worse. That disturbed the Tamils in Sri
Lanka and Tamil Nadu. Dr. S. A. Tharmalingam and Kovai Mahesan, the
president and secretary of Tamil Eelam Liberation Front (TELF) sent a
telegram about the situation in Trincomalee to a number of embassies in
Colombo. The text of the telegram read: Tamils experience pathetic situation in
Trincomalee. Killing, looting, arson now taking place under the
government declared curfew. Racist security forces behind violence. We
seek immediate intervention of friendly nations to stop genocide of the
Tamils. TELF
also called for a hartal in Jaffna to protest against the violence in
Trincomalee. It provided an opportunity for the Tamils whose blood was
boiling when the heard of the atrocities committed by the security
forces and the government against their brethren in Trincomalee. The
hartal was total. All the shops were closed. Vehicles kept out of the
road. So were people. Jaffna wore a desolate look. The police and the
army were furious. The government was frothing. Jayewardene gave the
only answer he knew. On 2 July Suthanthiran
and Saturday Review were
sealed. Dr. Tharmalingam and Kovai Makesan were detained. The Competent
Authority Douglas Liyanage justified the government action pointing out
the destruction of state property on the day hartal was observed. TELF
was not responsible for the violent acts committed that day. That was
the work of the Tamil Eelam Liberation Army, a break away group of TELO.
It was led by Oberoi Thevan. They burnt buses, attacked post offices and
other government buildings. TELA also bombed and burnt the Yal Devi
express train which plied between Colombo and Jaffna during daytime. The
situation in Trincomalle was getting worse daily. Amirthalingam visited
the city on 1 July to make an assessment of the conditions there. He
returned to Colombo the next day and sent Jayewardene the following
telegram: Just
returned after personally studying situation Trincomalee. Reports of
violence by both sides absolutely incorrect. Over sixteen people killed
all Tamils. About forty people in hospital seriously injured by cutting
and shooting over thirty-five Tamils. One hundred and fifty houses burnt
over ninety five percent Tamil houses. Nearly a thousand people dehoused
and in refugee camps not one Sinhalese. Services conduct search in Tamil
areas terrorizing people and this followed immediately by thugs
attacking the Tamil people and setting fire to the houses. In spite of
heavy loses of life and property for Tamils very few Sinhalese offenders
arrested and remanded. About eighty percent in custody Tamils. Sinhalese
offender arrested in the act or immediately thereafter released. Police
and service personnel definitely partisan. Tamils can defend themselves
if the forces are withdrawn. Forces
preventing self-defence by Tamils nd providing opportunity for attack by
hoodlums. Tamil officers sent to Trincomalee totally inadequate. Please
send sufficient senior Tamil officers and lower ranks to inspire
confidence among Tamils. Please stop massacre innocent Tamils in their
own homeland by Sinhala hoodlums with connivance of Sinhala forces.
Amirthalingam
followed up the telegram with a letter on 5 July. In it he said though
the scale of violence had diminished the tension and sporadic incidents
continued. “Even last night a Tamil person by the name of Suntharan
was cut and killed by Sinhala hoodlums. He added that the Tamil people
were living in fear. In
that letter he also told the president an incident to illustrate the
extent to which communal hatred had permeated the armed forces. He said:
The role of the armed forces in the
recent incidents in Trincomalee leaves much to be desired.The incident
when a Tamil naval personnel was assaulted by his colleagues for taking
strong action at Abeyapura junction when two Tamils were killed and
several severely wounded shows the extent to which the communal hatred
had permeated the forces. Police,
armed forces and the Sinhala public had been infected by the virus of
anti- Tamil violence. No wonder. They got their virus from their
leaders. Nancy Murray, a member of the Campaign Against Racism and
Fascism and the Council of the Institute of Race Relation, had commented
about the situation in Trincomalee in her work Sri
Lanka Racism and the Authoritarian State.
The relevant paragraph which appeared in the chapter The State
Against the Tamils Page 104 reads:: Next Chapter 36. ‘We are going to break
heads’ --
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