TIME US Wants to Talk to Sri Lanka Tiger Tamer Nov 2 2009
http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1934060,00.html
by Amantha Perera, TIME, November 2, 2009
To many Sri Lankans, Lieut. General Sarath Fonseka is a bit of a hero. Now the equivalent of the U.S.
military’s Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Fonseka was the former army commander who helped
strategize and lead the campaign that put a decisive end to the quarter-century-long separatist war of the
Tamil Tigers. The intensity of the onslaught raised criticism around the world, including a 68-page State
Department report to the U.S. Congress that took to task the conduct of both government forces and the
Tigers. Now, what appears to be an attempt by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to interview
Fonseka about the war has raised angry protests from the highest official ranks in Sri Lanka.
According to Fonseka and other Sri Lankan officials, the DHS contacted the general on Oct. 28 during his
trip to the U.S. to visit his daughters, who live in Oklahoma. Fonseka, who holds a U.S. green card
permanent-residency certificate, was asked to show up for an interview on Nov. 4. According to Sri Lankan
Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama, Fonseka had been told by the DHS official that the objective of the
interview was to “use him as a source against Defense Secretary Gottabaya Rajapaksa.” Apart from being a
co-author of the successful campaign against the Tigers, Gottabaya Rajapaksa is also the brother of Sri
Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
(See pictures from Sri Lanka when the Tamil Tigers were still a force.)
Responding to previous international criticism, the Sri Lankan government declared that it would not
subject any of its military commanders or civilian officials who led the war to any kind of international
investigation or war-crimes tribunal. The apparent request from American officials led to a similar
dismissal. In the U.S., the DHS’s office of Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE), which reportedly
made the Fonseka request, refused to confirm or deny the allegation. ICE spokesman Brandon Alvarez
Montgomery said: “If there was an investigation, there’s nothing we can provide. Especially in cases that are
very sensitive under human-rights violations, until that person or group were fully investigated [we] would
never comment.”
(See an interview with Sri Lanka’s President.)
Foreign Minister Bogollagama said he had made his government’s concerns clear to the U.S. Ambassador to
Sri Lanka Patricia Butenis. “The U.S. authorities should not exert procedures on [Fonseka],” Bogollagama
said. “The interview should not take place.” The Sri Lankan government believes that despite Fonseka’s
status as a green-card holder, the U.S. does not have any jurisdiction over him at this point because he
entered the country on a Sri Lankan passport. “General Fonseka is a citizen of Sri Lanka and he holds a
diplomatic passport from Sri Lanka,” said Bogollagama. The minister said that Fonseka could not divulge
privileged information he knew of the war and its conduct without approval from his superiors and the Sri
Lankan government.
Defense Secretary Rajapaksa — who also happens to be a U.S. citizen — was interviewed for about an hour
on arrival by immigration officials when he was in New York City as part of Sri Lanka’s delegation to the
U.N. General Assembly sessions in October. “It happened and I was there,” said Bogollagama. “We took all
the necessary actions that were required.”
(See a story of what’s next for Sri Lanka’s Tamils.)
The report of the DHS interview request comes at a curious time in Sri Lankan politics. Fonseka has been
the subject of speculation that he may run against President Rajapaksa in the next election. Some political
observers claim that the Rajapaksa brothers are trying to sideline the general, an allegation that the Defense
Secretary has denied. “This is nothing but a despicable plot being hatched at the expense of the entire
country,” Defense Secretary Rajapaksa told a weekend newspaper amid reports of a growing gulf between
Fonseka and the government.
But on Oct. 26, Fonseka seemed to have veered away from a hard-line stance he shared with the
Rajapaksas. At a Buddhist temple in Washington, he spoke of the “need to resettle persons who are in
camps and provide security to them.” That appears to be a softening of his previous position that the peace
and-order climate in the areas reconquered by the military should not be undermined by speedy
resettlement. Sri Lanka has an estimated 186,000 internally displaced people, refugees from the war with
the Tigers. He warned that there might still be thousands of Tigers among them and that they needed to be
weeded out. He said nothing about his alleged presidential ambitions, only that “the people who really know
the victory are those who went to battle.”
— With reporting by Bobby Ghosh / Washington
Sarath Fonseka’s Ministry of Defence biography, accessed June 19, 2019
Sarath Fonseka bio Ministry of Defence 2019
www.defence.lk/main_abt.asp?fname=cds_general
General G . S . C. Fonseka RWP RSP VSV USP rcds psc
CHIEF OF DEFENCE STAFF
General G. S. C. Fonseka RWP RSP VSV USP rcds psc was appointed as the Chief of Defence Staff
by His Excellency Mahinda Rajapaksa, President of Sri Lanka and Commander in Chief of the Armed
Forces effective from 15th July 2009.
Lieutenant General G . S. C. Fonseka RWP RSP VSV USP rcds psc was appointed as the Commander
of the Army effective from 6th December 2005 and later promoted to the rank of General by His
Excellency Mahinda Rajapaksa, President of Sri Lanka and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
on 18th May 2009.
Widely admired as one of the greatest battle-hardened warriors of our time, General G. S. C
Fonseka has served largely as an illustrious infantry soldier in the northern theatre of war during his
exemplary career, particularly at the peak of the LTTE terrorism.
To his credit, when the Jaffna Fort was under siege for a long period, then Colonel G. S. C Fonseka
led troops in the famous ‘Midnight Express operation’, to rescue troops. Incidentally, the incumbent
Secretary Defence Lieutenant Colonel Gotabaya Rajapaksa too was with him and together they
rescued the lives of hundreds of troops who would always remember them for their leadership and
bravery.
His enormous contribution as Deputy General Officer Commanding to conduct operation, ‘Riviresa’
to evict terrorists and capture Jaffna town in December 1995 continues to remain a living memory
because of the dynamic leadership he jointly imparted to his fellow-soldiers, and his meticulously
planned tactical knowledge of the warfare, he has possessed. In the same vein, troops commanded
by Gen Fonseka offered stiff resistance to LTTE terrorists during operation ‘unceasing waves’ in
2000, and further consolidated the security network to Jaffna during his four-month stint as
Commander, Security Forces Headquarters, Jaffna .
General Fonseka, as a fearless infantryman was at the forefront in operations, ‘Balawegaya’ and
‘Jayasikuru,’ that led to rescue the Elephant Pass and capture Mankulam. It was none other than
the 6th Battalion of his Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment that was under siege at Elephant Pass in 1991
and reinforcements in a meticulously devised operation successfully repulsed the LTTE attack.
General Fonseka, distinguished himself by his dauntless bravery and excellent command in warfare
as well as for his common touch with his troops, sustained injuries during the operation ‘Yaldevi’
following terrorist attacks. Jaffna, finally became his second home during May 2002-November 2003
after he was again appointed the Commander, Security Forces Headquarters, Jaffna.
His awards and decorations include the Gallantry Medals, Rana Wickrema Padakkama (RWP), Rana
Sura Padakkama (RSP), Vishishta Seva Vibhushana (VSV). Utthama Seva Padakkama (USP),
Riviresa Campaign Service Medal, Poorna Bhoomi medal, North & East Operations Medal, Desha
Puthra Sammanaya and several others.
Over and above the command appointments, he has held a large number of various staff
appointments including the Chief of Staff office in the Army, the post he relinquished to take reins
as Commander of the Army.
His exciting career opportunities covered almost every sphere of military experience. He served as
Deputy Chief of Staff, Sri Lanka Army (01 July 2004 – 09 December 2004), Director General
Infantry, Army Headquarters and later on commanded the Sri Lanka Army Volunteer Force between
23 November 2003 and 15 August 2004. In recognition of his fearless leadership, he was twice
appointed the Commander, Security Forces Headquarters, Jaffna (21 April- 21 July 2000) and (05
May 2002 to 23 November 2003).
He was also the Commandant, Army Command and Staff College at Battalanda during a very brief
period. (05 February-05 May 2002). After his first tenure of office as the Commander, Security
Forces Headquarters, Jaffna, he assumed duties as the Commander, Security Forces Headquarters,
Wanni on 21 July 2000 and remained there until 12 December, the same year. Despite his busy
schedules, Gen Sarath Fonseka simultaneously overlooked the offices of Inspector of Infantry,
Quarter Master General, Director General General Staff, Army Headquarters for a short period in
2000. He was the General Officer Commanding in 22 Division, Trincomalee between 10 November
1998 and 15 January 2000.
1/2
www.defence.lk/main_abt.asp?fname=cds_general
6/8/2019
Gotabaya Rajapaksa RWP RSP psc MSc – Secretary of Defence, Public Security, Law & Order
On being promoted to the two-star rank of Major General on 23 February 1998, Major General
Sarath Fonseka became the Colonel of the Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment on 01 February 2002. Major
Gen Fonseka served as Officiating General Officer Commanding 55 Division, Mirusuvil, Officiating
General Officer Commanding , Task Force 2 in Vavuniya, Deputy General Officer Commanding
Task Force 2 in Vavuniya, Commander, 23 Brigade Pollonnaruwa, Deputy General Officer
Commanding, 51 Division, Jaffna, Coordinating Officer for Kayts and Mandativu, Commander , 27
Brigade Kilinochchi, Commander, 3 Brigade Batticaloa, Coordinating Officer Election and Security for
North and East, Deputy Commander Task Force 1 and Commander Designate Mechanized Brigade,
Officiating Commander 21 Brigade, Director Operations after his promotion to the rank of Brigadier
on 01 December 1993.
As a Colonel, General Sarath Fonseka commanded the 23 Brigade Polonnaruwa in 1993. Among
other appointments, he held included Colonel General Staff Army Headquarters, Centre
Commandant, Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment, Deputy Commandant – 5 Brigade Group, Mannar, Brigade
Commander Operation Balavegaya and Coordinating Officer for Gampaha.
As a Lieutenant Colonel, he commanded the 1st Battalion, Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment before he
assumed the office of General Staff Officer 1 (Operations), HQ 2 Division, Anuradhapura, Officer
Commanding/Chief Instructor and Deputy Commandant, Infantry Training Centre, Minneriya.
Enlisted to the Army on 05th February 1970, he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant and
subsequently posted to the 1st Battalion, Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment on 01st June 1971. He has
followed the UK-based course offered by Royal College of Defence Studies, Infantry Officers
Advanced Course (USA), Staff College Course (Bangladesh), Company Commanders Course
(Pakistan), Battalion Support Weapons Course (India), Counter Insurgency Jungle Warfare Course
(India), Commando Officers Course (India) and has represented Sri Lanka in a number of
international seminars and conferences, including the Pacific Armies Management Seminar (Japan),
Conference on fourth International Exhibition of Defence (UK) and another overseas seminar in
Geneva. In what was seen a recognition of his military maturity, he was selected to undertake an
inspection assignment in Iran in 1992.
General Fonseka, a product of Ambalangoda Dharmasoka College (1958-1965) and Ananda College,
Colombo (1966-1969) is a keen sportsman who has excelled in swimming and water polo
representing defence services and the country. General Fonseka, married to Mrs Anoma Fonseka
has two daughters, Apsara and Aparna.
General Fonseka who through his dedication, commitment and untiring military prowess succeeded
in bringing the 30-year old War for Separation to an end was promoted to the rank of General on
18th May 2009, the day, he along with Secretary Defence and other service chiefs officially
conveyed His Excellency the President of the final completion of the war.
5 years on: The White Flags Incident 2009 — 2014
by Sri Lanka Brief, Colombo, May 19, 2014
Sri Lanka Brief 5 Years On The White Flag Incident 2009 2014
5 years on: The White Flags Incident 2009 — 2014 • Sri Lanka Brief

Isaipriya in military custody (later killed) May 2009
Johannesburg
18 May 2009.
Some of the photographs form the report
Two eyewitnesses have come forward for the first time to support allegations that the Sri Lankan army executed two Tamil Tiger rebel leaders after they surrendered, carrying a white flag, at the close of the island’s civil war in 2009.
Their accounts cast fresh doubt on the Sri Lankan government’s claim that the rebels were killed by their own supporters and add to a growing body of evidence of war crimes allegedly committed by the Sri Lankan military during the conflict.
The two new witnesses in what has become known as “the white flag incident” can testify they independently saw from different vantage points the Tamil Tiger leaders accepted into the custody of the Sri Lankan military and escorted from the front line, alive.
One witness, who did not want to give his name fearing retribution against his family in Sri Lanka, worked as a bodyguard to the Tiger political leaders. Badly injured in the last month of the war, he surrendered to save his life and says he reluctantly became an informer for the Sri Lankan army.
The second witness, a government teacher, also now in London, says he was press-ganged into service for the rebels in the last months of the war. Hours before the incident, he says he also surrendered, knowing that the war was over and it was his only chance of survival. After being searched, he says he was held with others in a derelict building close to the front line. From this position he watched several groups of Tamil Tiger leaders and their relatives walk out of the war zone towards the Sri Lankan army, carrying white flags.
He admits he was surprised to see the leader of the Tiger political wing, Nadesan, his Sinhalese wife and the head of the Tiger Peace Secretariat, Pulidevan, in the first group. Officially the Tigers did not hold with surrender, issuing all recruits with cyanide capsules to wear around their necks to use in case of capture.
The former bodyguard waited for more than an hour until the military put him in the back of a pick-up truck and drove him away. Along the road he spotted soldiers taking photos on their mobile phones of corpses lying on the ground. As they went past, he recognised Pulidevan and Nadesan’s bodies. Photographs have since appeared on websites abroad showing the two Tiger leaders’ half-naked corpses, with bullet wounds and burn marks on their chests.
The “white flag” incident also involved approximately 40 other rebels believed to have negotiated a surrender with the Sri Lankan government. None of them have been seen since.
Tamil Tiger rebels conducted a vicious campaign of terror for a separate homeland for decades, using suicide bombers to kill civilians and scores of politicians, including a President and an Indian Prime Minister.
Pulidevan and Nadesan were two of the most senior rebels to surrender. In the hours beforehand, they used satellite phones to send messages to diplomats, journalists and peace mediators to ensure top Sri Lankan officials, including the country’s President, knew of their intention to lay down their arms. They had been assured that their surrender would be accepted if they raised a white flag.
However, the Sri Lankan defence ministry’s website lists Pulidevan and Nadesan as killed by troops of the 58th Division on 18 May 2009.
Sri Lanka’s government holds that the Tiger leaders were shot in the back by their own people, and say the army never executed any individuals.
Allegations the Sri Lankan army and rebels committed war crimes at the end of a brutal war are widespread. According to United Nations investigators, the last months saw repeated and deliberate government shelling of hospitals, food queues and safe zones for civilians.
A Strong Witness Of Sri Lanka’s War Crimes Was Killed
White Flag Case:Frederica’s Lies And The Illegal Bench
White Flag Case:Justice Warawewa’s judgment contradicts Wikileaks
White Flag Case: Illegal bench sentenced Fonseka for three years
WikiLeaks: Fonseka Opens Up Pandora’s Box
WikiLeaks:Fonseka Did Discuss The “White Flags Story” with US
The stocky Tamil man twisted himself nervously inside his thin black anorak, ill suited to one of the iciest days of winter, as he explained how he turned informer, betraying the very man he was supposed to protect, in order to save his own life. We endured the bone-chilling cold sitting outdoors on a deserted verandah sipping coffee in a café in Victoria Station, interrupted occasionally by the peremptory platform announcements. Indoors it was warm but there were too many people who might be listening; after all, we were talking about summary execution.
Kumaran, who doesn’t want to give his real name out of fear, had once been a Tamil Tiger rebel fighting for a separate homeland in north-eastern Sri Lanka. Now a refugee in a land where he doesn’t speak the language, he still exudes the confidence that might come from having once carried a gun. This was a man trusted enough to be the bodyguard of the political leaders of the Tamil Tigers.
In the chaos of the last weeks of the civil war in 2009, Kumaran was badly injured when a cluster bomb landed close to him. Medicine and even bandages were running out and the handful of doctors left were amputating limbs with butcher’s knives and no anesthetic. Without medical treatment Kumaran had no chance of recovery. He decided to make a run for it across the frontline – first throwing away the cyanide capsule that’s standard issue for Tamil Tigers rebels to swallow in case of capture.
Surrender
Telling the story of his escape, Kumaran is tellingly short on details. Tamil Tiger rebels were supposed to fight to the death – surrender was considered a cowardly act of self-preservation.
As soon as he crossed the frontline, two former rebels turned traitor immediately spotted Kumaran and pointed him out to the army.
“They had no choice if they wanted to live,” Kumaran said with sympathy. “They only informed on people who were very obviously fighters and would be noticed anyway,” he said, explaining why he too turned informer once in the hands of the enemy. The screams of his comrades being tortured in the detention centre were enough to turn him.
I was sitting in a deserted portion of Victoria Station across a table from Kumaran and a second Tamil man who used to teach maths in another life. They are the first eyewitnesses to come forward to speak about what’s known as “the white flag incident”. This euphemistically refers to the murder of a group of Tamil Tiger political wing leaders after they had negotiated a surrender on the last day of the war.
Frantic
Even the Sri Lankan President knew that the group planned to surrender – they’d sent frantic messages through everyone they could think of – the UN, the Red Cross, Norwegian diplomats, Sunday Times journalist Marie Colvin, intermediaries in Europe and a Tamil member of parliament. All the indications from top officials in the Sri Lankan government were reassuring – that the surrender would indeed be accepted in accordance with the Geneva Convention.
One of those surrendering was Pulidevan, whom I’d known more than a decade ago when he was a peace negotiator for the Tamil Tigers and I was the BBC correspondent based in Sri Lanka. Puli – as his friends called him – loped about in that slightly ungainly apologetic way tall men sometimes do in places where being short is the norm. He loved nothing more than to sit down on his office sofa and chew over the current political situation at rapid speed like a man starved of discussion. When I left Sri Lanka for another posting he resolutely stayed in touch.
By the final months of the Sri Lankan civil war in 2009 Puli started coming online almost daily to chat. It was a desperate cry for help. Sometimes we discussed politics, battlefield strategy and the uncertain future, but mostly he wanted to escape the daily reality of severed body parts and screaming mothers. It’s a strange thing but if you talk to someone continuously through months of war you start rooting for their survival even though rationally the chances are slim. We even discussed the fact that if he was caught trying to escape or surrender he’d likely be killed.
For the last four years I’ve been trying to piece together what really happened to Puli and the others. This meeting in Victoria Station was a huge breakthrough. It was surreal to be discussing layer upon layer of treachery on the battlefields of northern Sri Lanka amid the mundane hustle and bustle of commuters in the middle of London.
Soon we’re drawing an untidy map on my notebook to mark the frontline and the bridge across the lagoon over which tens of thousands of emaciated civilians escaped at the end – leaving behind them billowing black smoke and pounding shells. Kumaran shows me where he was positioned by the Sri Lankan military – behind an earthen embankment near a tree. The army wanted him to confirm the identity of the Tiger political leaders crossing over. Who better than their former bodyguard? It never crossed Kumaran’s mind that he was endangering them because this was clearly a well-planned and organised surrender. Senior Sri Lankan military officials were everywhere with bodyguards and walkie-talkies.
White flag
The first batch to cross the frontline carrying a white flag included the wife of the Tiger political leader. She was not a Tamil but Sinhalese – the same ethnic group as the soldiers. As they approached she was urgently screaming something in their language that Kumaran couldn’t understand – probably urging the soldiers to hold their fire. He watched the Tiger leaders cross over. They were received by the soldiers who escorted them across the bridge, moving towards a cluster of vehicles in the distance. More groups of Tigers walked past him at intervals and surrendered.
Once it was over Kumaran waited around for an hour or so before being driven away by the military. After a while Kumaran, sitting in the back of a pick-up truck, noticed a crowd of soldiers gathered alongside some open ground next to the road. They were taking pictures on their mobile phones of corpses laid out there. As they drove past Kumaran was horrified to see Puli and his boss, Nadesan, the political leader, lying there dead, their shirts stripped off their torsos.
Kumaran quickly understood that as a witness to this crime he was even more in danger than before. “I thought if they can do this to them, what can they do to me,” he recalled, his eyes filling with tears, “one of the hardest things in the hours and days ahead was to keep this knowledge inside me and not speak of it to anyone”.
Kumaran had no idea that there were other Tamil witnesses to the surrender who might also make it abroad one day. Sitting next to him is Sharmilan, who once taught maths to rows of neatly dressed school children in blue and white uniforms in the area of northern Sri Lanka under the control of the Tigers. He won’t tell me his real name or which school he worked in lest it identify him and endanger his relatives in Sri Lanka.
Sipping coffees to keep warm and keeping a careful eye on who was coming and going in the cafe, the two men are cordial but not especially chummy with each other. There’s awkward laughter all round when I ask Sharmilan if he was forcibly recruited by the Tigers. He cited the rule that every family had to give one fighter to the rebels – and goes on to explain how after only a month’s training he was press ganged into digging bunkers and disposing of dead bodies in the last year of the war.
The night before the top political leaders of the Tamil Tiger surrendered, Sharmilan had decided to make a run for it with a large group of civilians. It was still dark so the army held them in a destroyed building on the frontline waiting for dawn.
Escort
Sharmilan was surprised when he looked through the window and saw the Tiger political leaders walk by with white flags; he knew surrender was a taboo for an organization that glorified martyrdom. Sharmilan observed the soldiers receive the first group of about 15 people and frisk them for weapons before escorting them over a bridge until they disappeared from sight. In the distance he spotted not just military vehicles but also big white jeeps of the kind used by international aid organisations. Sharmilan estimates there were about five hundred soldiers in the area. He’s adamant all the Tiger political leaders surrendered successfully.
This is of course not what the Sri Lankan military says. It claimed that the Tigers were shot in the back by their own people. If this were the case it’s surprising the military never produced the bodies as evidence of the rebels’ perfidy. Instead they quickly disposed of all the evidence.
After a while a photograph appeared on the Internet – probably shot by one of the soldiers Kumaran saw. It showed the half naked corpses of Puli and his boss, Nadesan, with burn marks and lacerations on the front belly. Puli’s chest had what appeared to be a bullet entry wound while Nadesan looked as if it had been shot in the side of the face.
It appears the Sri Lankan government did not want to take senior leaders of the Tamil Tigers prisoner, especially those who were well connected and spoke English. Their detention and any legal proceedings would be subject to international scrutiny for a long time to come. This was a risk as they were witness to multiple war crimes – the deliberate bombing of hospitals, food queues and civilian safe zones by government forces. And there was the chance that alive these men could lead Sri Lankan Tamils in another chapter of their struggle. The victors wanted a definitive end to the conflict. But in their haste they violated one of the most basic norms of war. Without respect for the white flag there’s no way to protect civilians and those who decide to stop fighting.
Even with a group as disciplined and inured to casualties as the Tamil Tigers there came a point when many of its members could see no use in fighting on. The two men shivering opposite me in Victoria Station ignored the organisation’s mantra of martyrdom and chose instead to save themselves. Now by coming forward to tell their stories they’ve put themselves at risk once again.
Frances Harrison is a former BBC foreign correspondent based in Sri Lanka.This article was first published by Asian Correspondent.
A classified US diplomatic cable under the name of Patricia A. Butenis, the US ambassador to Colombo shows, the Presidential candidate General Sarath Fonseka stood by the controversial “white Flag” story published by the Sunday Leader.
The cable written on December 14, 2009 at 13.50pm by the ambassador Butenis and classified as “Confidential” recount the details of a lunch meeting she had with UNP deputy leader Karu Jayasuriya and Sarath Fonseka on December 14, 2009.
The editor Sunday Leader Frederica Jansz was given an interview by Fonseka and it was published under the name title of “Gota Ordered Them to Be Shot” – Genaral Sarath Fonseka” on December 13, 2009. Read the story here
After the story broke, the government began to portray Fonseka’s allegation as an act of treachery. The story of the massacre was irrelevant. What mattered was that by speaking out Fonseka was betraying Gotabaya, the army and the country.
A government backed campaign to publicise particularly in Sinhala, a distorted version of the story, and present the General as a traitor. The objective behind the campaign was to convince the General that his accusations were eroding his popularity and to force him to back down in the interest of winning more votes. This campaign began immediately after the newspaper went on sale with radio shows denouncing the story as an act of treachery by early Sunday morning.
It was only as the government’s denunciation campaign intensified with TV, radio, and internet sites declaring the former war hero a traitor that Fonseka’s advisors Mangala Samaraweera, Anura Kumara Dissanayake and Vijitha Herath in particular advised him to retract part of the story.
Read Frederica Jansz’s strory here
Read the full US embassy cable below;
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 COLOMBO 001139 C O R R E C T E D COPY - ADDED PASSING INSTRUCTIONS SIPDIS DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/INSB RELEASABLE TO: UK, CANADA, AUSTRALIA, SWITZERLAND E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/13/2019 TAGS: PGOV PREL PREF PHUM PTER EAID MOPS CE SUBJECT: SRI LANKA: ELECTIONS UPDATE NO. 1 REF: COLOMBO 539 COLOMBO 00001139 001.6 OF 002 Classified By: AMBASSADOR PATRICIA A. BUTENIS. REASONS: 1.4 (B, D) ¶1. (SBU) Introduction: As an air of anticipation builds in Sri Lanka in advance of the upcoming Sri Lankan elections, including a presidential election scheduled for January 26 and a parliamentary election anticipated for later in the spring, post will provide update reports as events dictate, with emphasis on the quick relay of breaking news. This is the first such update. Post will provide more in-depth analysis in separate cables. FONSEKA, UNP DETAIL ELECTION ISSUES FOR AMBASSADOR ---------------------------- ¶2. (C) At a December 14 lunch for Ambassador and DCM, to which General Fonseka also dropped in, host UNP deputy head Karu Jayasuriya said the UNP-JVP "alliance" was not a coalition, though all were for a return to democracy. Jayasuriya had a long list of complaints about media harassment by the government and Rajapaksa corruption and "family rule." As for the Tamils, the UNP leader said he believed they all wanted "regime change" because of the way they had been treated by the Rajapaksas. After Fonseka arrived, the former general discussed his interview in the Sunday Leader newspaper on December 13, in which he had accused Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa of ordering at the end of the war the shooting of any LTTE leaders who might try to surrender under flags of truce. (NOTE: These killings were detailed in the State Department Report to Congress on Incidents at the End of the War, and in RefTel, though details of the orders issued were not known to the report authors. END NOTE.) Fonseka claimed he did not know until two days later about the flurry of phone calls between Gotabhaya, the Norwegian ambassador, and the LTTE leadership regarding surrender and said he had been told details by journalists. Nevertheless, he said he took full responsibility for the actions of the men in uniform. ¶3. (C) As for Fonseka's chances at the upcoming January 26 election, he and Jayasuriya believed they could win ) if the election were free and fair. They calculated that if voter turnout were over 80 percent, they would win. This was why, they claimed, the Rajapaksas were focused on keeping turnout low. Even in the southern districts, home to both President Rajapaksa and Fonseka, the election was up for grabs because of local dissatisfaction with Rajapaksa corruption and cronyism. Finally, on the question of the desired role of the international community in the elections, Jayasuriya made a strong pitch for IC involvement to help ensure a free and fair election and level playing field. UNF CHALLENGES PRESIDENT TO DEBATE ---------------------------------- ¶4. (C) On December 13, the joint Opposition held a press conference which included Gen. Fonseka, JVP leader Somawansa Amarasinghe and UNP leader Ranil Wickremasinghe. Amarasinghe challenged President Rajapaksa to agree to a public debate with Gen. Fonseka, but there has not yet been any response from the Rajapaksa camp. At lunch with the Ambassador, Fonseka and Jayasuriya both said they did not expect Rajapaksa to agree to a debate, joking that it would be hard for him to speak without a teleprompter. PILLAYAN WAVERING -- AGAIN -------------------------- COLOMBO 00001139 002.4 OF 002 ¶5. (C) After a party meeting on December 11, the TMVP released a statement that appeared to back off earlier statements by its leader, Pillayan, that the TMVP would support President Rajapaksa. Observers have stated that Pillayan's December 2 pledge of support to the President angered many in his TMVP ranks, and that they forced him to retreat from that position. TNA WISH LIST ------------- ¶6. (C) TNA MP Suresh Premachandran told media on December 12 that his party colleagues had agreed on four main points to demand of any candidate they pledge to support. The four demands reportedly included a full account of those reported disappeared or arrested during the war; to resettle all displaced persons; to withdraw from High Security Zones and enable resettlement of these lands; and to work out a political settlement. Premachandran said a delegation of TNA representatives had met with Senior Presidential Advisor Basil Rajapaksa on December 7 to discuss these conditions, and that TNA leader R. Sampanthan had presented the list to UNP Deputy Leader Karu Jayasuriya. In a meeting with PolOff on December 11, TNA MP Pathmini Sithamparanathan implied that there were still divisions within the TNA about what issues they would push in any negotiations, and doubts about how much they could expect to demand for their support. RAJAPAKSA ORDERS POSTERS DOWN ----------------------------- ¶7. (C) The President announced on December 14 that he had ordered the police to take down any campaign-related posters, including his own, as they all violated elections law. Colombo has been blanketed with pictures of the president and his brothers, including at least one enormous full profile picture of Rajapaksa that measures some 60 feet tall. Fonseka posters just began appearing around town over the weekend of December 12-13, including one large billboard-sized poster on the road from the center of town to the parliament building. On a recent trip to Galle, EconOff sighted well over 1,300 Rajapaksa posters along the 100 km route. Not more than 20 Fonseka posters were seen on the same drive, and some of these had been either damaged or partially covered by Rajapaksa posters. The Southern Province is known as Rajapaksa's home turf. At Jayasuriya's lunch, he told the Ambassador that the Rajapaksa campaign had over 40,000 cut-outs of the President created, nearly half of which had been placed in greater Colombo. BUTENIS
by Colombo Telegraph, October 15, 2011
Although Sarath Fonseka was quoted as accusing Gotabhaya Rajapaksa of ordering Sri Lankan troops to kill LTTE leaders attempting to surrender, he quickly backtracked after heavy criticism from the president and his allies and may avoid similar accountability issues during the presidential election campaign” US ambassador wrote to Washington.
The Colombo Telegraph found a leaked US diplomatic cable from WikiLeaks database. The cable was classified as “CONFIDENTIAL” by Ambassador Patricia A. Butenis.
The cable written on 23, December 2009 says “After the president’s announcement of the formation of the committee in October, the issue of accountability for possible war crimes received little attention in Sri Lanka. Most people appeared to think either that civilian casualties were unfortunate but unavoidable consequence of war on terrorism or that, even if crimes were committed, there was little that could be done as long as the Rajapaksas remained in power.” The cable further says “ General Fonseka trust the topic onto the national scene, however, in a December 13 interview published in the local Sunday Leader newspaper, in which he said Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa had ordered troops from the 58thDivision to kill any remaining LTTE leaders, in particular Pulidevan, Nadesan and Ramesh, in spite of a reported attempt by them to surrender. This interview was immediately met by a firestorm of criticism from the government allies, accusing Fonseka of egregiously betraying his country and exposing its ‘loyal, courageous soldiers’ to war- crimes investigations and the possibility of being arrested when travelling overseas. Walking the tightrope of courting both Tamil votes and Sinhala voters, Fonseka backed off his statement two days later saying he
had been misquoted, and that he would take full responsibility for anything done by his troops at the end of the war.”
Under the subheading of “ Anti – corruption as the new accountability?” the ambassador wrote “After ten days of brutal hits on his statements about the killing of the LTTE leaders, General Fonseka may e less likely to bring up specific human rights incidents that are related to ethnic divide and instead may talk more about general political reconciliation and the way ahead.”
The Colombo Telegraph published another cable on 10th October which shows, the Presidential candidate General Sarath Fonseka stood by the controversial “white Flag” story published by the Sunday Leader. The cable written on 14th December 2009 at 13.50pm by the ambassador Butenis and classified as “Confidential” recount the details of a lunch meeting she had with UNP deputy leader Karu Jayasuriya and Sarath Fonseka on 14th December 2009. Read that cable here; http://colombotelegraph.com/2011/10/10/wikileaks-%E2%80%93-fonseka-did-discuss-the-%E2%80%9Cwhite-flags-story%E2%80%9D-with-us-ambassador/
Read below leaked US cable for full details;
VZCZCXRO3072 OO RUEHAG RUEHROV RUEHSL RUEHSR DE RUEHLM #1180/01 3571215 ZNY CCCCC ZZH O 231215Z DEC 09 FM AMEMBASSY COLOMBO TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 1058 INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE PRIORITY RUEHKA/AMEMBASSY DHAKA PRIORITY 2223 RUEHIL/AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD PRIORITY 9245 RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU PRIORITY 7500 RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 5344 RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI PRIORITY 3655 RUEHNY/AMEMBASSY OSLO PRIORITY 5269 RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA PRIORITY 0130 RUEHSM/AMEMBASSY STOCKHOLM PRIORITY 0804 RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO PRIORITY 4391 RUEHCG/AMCONSUL CHENNAI PRIORITY 9805 RUEHBI/AMCONSUL MUMBAI PRIORITY 7096 RUEHON/AMCONSUL TORONTO PRIORITY 0125 RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA PRIORITY 3967 RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI PRIORITY RUEHBS/USEU BRUSSELS PRIORITY RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 COLOMBO 001180 SIPDIS DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/INSB E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/22/2019 TAGS: PGOV PREL PREF PHUM PTER EAID MOPS CE SUBJECT: ACCOUNTABILITY: FONSEKA STIRS UP HORNETS' NEST COLOMBO 00001180 001.4 OF 003 Classified By: AMBASSADOR PATRICIA A. BUTENIS. REASONS: 1.4 (B, D) ¶1. (C) SUMMARY: The committee appointed by the president to look into allegations raised in the Department's October 21 incidents report to Congress will not issue a public report but rather a recommendation memo for President Rajapaksa's consideration. Although Sarath Fonseka was quoted as accusing Gothabaya Rajapaksa of ordering Sri Lankan troops to kill LTTE leaders attempting to surrender, he quickly backtracked after heavy criticism from the president and his allies and may avoid similar accountability issues during the presidential election campaign. Tamil MP Sivajilingam broke from his TNA colleagues and submitted his own name as a presidential candidate, saying among other things, there should be an international inquiry into the deaths of Tamils during the war. Rather than pushing accountability for possible war crimes and human rights violations, Fonseka may try to push anti-corruption as a major campaign theme, attempting to appeal to all ethnic groups. END SUMMARY. RESPONSE TO INCIDENTS REPORT ---------------------------- ¶2. (C) President Rajapaksa formed a committee in early November to look into the allegations of violations of international humanitarian law raised in the State Department's "Report on Incidents" of October 21, 2009. This committee is expected to issue their report on December 31, 2009, but Ambassador was recently cautioned by Foreign Minister Bogollagama not to expect too much from this initial action. Bogollagama said rather than a full-scale response that is released to the public, the committee would send an advisory memo to President Rajapaksa, making recommendations on what items in the report merit further action and what action might be best. The president would then consider those recommendations and decide how to proceed. Bogollagama appeared keenly interested in recent U.S. Appropriations language requiring a follow-up report to the State Department's October 21, 2009, report on incidents at the end of the war. FONSEKA OPENS UP PANDORA'S BOX ------------------------------ ¶3. (C) After the president's announcement of the formation of the committee in October, the issue of accountability for possible war crimes received little attention in Sri Lanka. Most people appeared to think either that civilian casualties were an unfortunate but unavoidable consequence of a war on terrorism or that, even if crimes were committed, there was little that could be done as long as the Rajapaksas remained in power. General Fonseka thrust the topic onto the national scene, however, in a December 13 interview published in the local Sunday Leader newspaper, in which he said Defense Secretary Gothabaya Rajapaksa had ordered troops from the 58th Division to kill any remaining LTTE leaders, in particular Pulidevan, Nadesan and Ramesh, in spite of a reported attempt by them to surrender. This interview was immediately met by a firestorm of criticism from the government and its allies, accusing Fonseka of egregiously betraying his country and exposing its "loyal, courageous soldiers" to war-crimes investigations and the possibility of being arrested when traveling overseas. Walking the tightrope of courting both Tamil votes and nationalist Sinhala voters, Fonseka backed off his statement two days later, saying he had been misquoted, and that he would take full responsibility for anything done by his troops at the end of the war. Criticism of him by Rajapaksa allies nevertheless continued unabated, with some saying that Fonseka had damaged Sri Lanka's reputation in the international community. Former Sri Lankan Navy Commander COLOMBO 00001180 002.4 OF 003 Wasantha Karannagoda, for example, said on December 23 on state media that Fonseka's comments jeopardized the Sri Lankan military's chances at obtaining coveted UN peacekeeping operations assignments in Haiti and elsewhere. ¶4. (C) UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions Philip Alston reportedly has sent a letter to the GSL requesting more information on the alleged incident involving the three LTTE chiefs. In the government's own backtracking exercise, Secretary of the Ministry of Disaster Management and Human Rights Rajiva Wijesinghe has reportedly sent a letter back to Alston clarifying that since Gen. Fonseka subsequently retracted his statement, there was no longer a need for Alston's request. Although local media has reported this development, it is unlikely that Wijesinghe's argument will stop either the UN's interest in this alleged incident or the attacks on Fonseka by the Rajapaksa camp. SIVAJILINGAM DEMANDS JUSTICE FOR TAMIL DEAD ------------------------------------------- ¶5. (C) TNA member of parliament M.K. Sivajilingam, who recently broke with his party to present himself as a candidate for the presidential elections, raised the need for an international inquiry into civilian deaths and injuries during the war as a primary theme of his campaign. The leadership of the TNA has not pressed either candidate on this publicly. TNA leader P. Sampanthan on the other hand told Assistant Secretary Blake and Post that while he was concerned with the accountability issue, he believed it was both unrealistic to expect the government to do anything about it and dangerous for the Tamil leadership in Sri Lanka to raise the issue publicly. Nevertheless, he believed it was important for the government eventually to take some steps towards accountability if it were to achieve meaningful national reconciliation. ANTI-CORRUPTION AS THE NEW ACCOUNTABILITY? ------------------------------------------ ¶6. (C) After ten days of brutal hits on his statements about the killing of the LTTE leaders, General Fonseka may be less likely to bring up specific human rights incidents that are related to the ethnic divide and instead may talk more about general political reconciliation and the way ahead. Fonseka appears to be hoping that anti-corruption emerges as a touchstone and has attempted to paint the Rajapaksas as a family-based kleptocracy, giving out hundreds of jobs to distant family members, building grand houses for themselves, extorting vast sums of money from the country, and fostering a culture of corruption throughout the government. The president, however, may be relying on his own internal polling, which we understand from sources in the president's office indicates that while a majority of voters know the Rajapaksa family is corrupt, they still would vote for him as the more experienced politician who does what he says he will do. COMMENT ------- ¶7. (C) As Sri Lanka tries to move beyond the war, accountability for possible crimes remains a significant, though secondary, issue in Sri Lanka. Whether speaking of accountability for ongoing human rights abuses or for incidents occurring during the final stages of the war, the issue had not received much attention from either the government or the public before the recent flurry of activity following Fonseka's statement. Given their possible involvement in most if not all incidents investigated, top COLOMBO 00001180 003.4 OF 003 government leaders, in particular the Rajapaksa brothers, have not pushed for greater accountability. Indeed, given the risk of exposing his own involvement, it was surprising to many that Fonseka attempted to raise this as a campaign issue, and he will probably not do so again. We are unaware of any cases in which a sitting government has undertaken wholesale investigations of its own troops or leadership for alleged war crimes, and it is probably unrealistic to expect the current Sri Lankan government to do so. Nevertheless, at some point Sri Lankans will need to find a way to deal with the accountability issue to achieve national reconciliation and lasting peace. BUTENIS

Tamil Tiger rebel leaders Pulidevan, right, and Nadesan, who were allegedly executed
Their accounts cast fresh doubt on the Sri Lankan government’s claim that the rebels were killed by their own supporters and add to a growing body of evidence of war crimes allegedly committed by the Sri Lankan military during the conflict.
Last week, The Independent published photographs of the 12-year-old son of the Tamil Tiger chief eating a snack after being captured by the Sri Lankan army. Shortly afterwards, he was shot five times in the chest, probably at very close range according to a forensics expert.
The two new witnesses in what has become known as “the white flag incident” can testify they independently saw from different vantage points the Tamil Tiger leaders accepted into the custody of the Sri Lankan military and escorted from the front line, alive.
One witness, who did not want to give his name fearing retribution against his family in Sri Lanka, worked as a bodyguard to the Tiger political leaders. Badly injured in the last month of the war, he surrendered to save his life and says he reluctantly became an informer for the Sri Lankan army.
Now in London, he says he was taken to the front by members of the Sri Lankan military on the morning of 18 May 2009, and positioned behind an earth embankment. His job was to confirm the identity of the Tamil political leaders as they walked towards the army carrying white flags. He says it looked like a well-organised surrender with hundreds of soldiers, including senior officers with bodyguards, present.
The second witness, a government teacher, also now in London, says he was press-ganged into service for the rebels in the last months of the war. Hours before the incident, he says he also surrendered, knowing that the war was over and it was his only chance of survival. After being searched, he says he was held with others in a derelict building close to the front line. From this position he watched several groups of Tamil Tiger leaders and their relatives walk out of the war zone towards the Sri Lankan army, carrying white flags.
He admits he was surprised to see the leader of the Tiger political wing, Nadesan, his Sinhalese wife and the head of the Tiger Peace Secretariat, Pulidevan, in the first group. Officially the Tigers did not hold with surrender, issuing all recruits with cyanide capsules to wear around their necks to use in case of capture.
Both witnesses say Sri Lankan soldiers went out to greet several groups of surrendering rebels and escorted them over a bridge across a lagoon to waiting vehicles on the other side.
The former bodyguard waited for more than an hour until the military put him in the back of a pick-up truck and drove him away. Along the road he spotted soldiers taking photos on their mobile phones of corpses lying on the ground. As they went past, he recognised Pulidevan and Nadesan’s bodies. Photographs have since appeared on websites abroad showing the two Tiger leaders’ half-naked corpses, with bullet wounds and burn marks on their chests.
The “white flag” incident also involved approximately 40 other rebels believed to have negotiated a surrender with the Sri Lankan government. None of them have been seen since.
Tamil Tiger rebels conducted a vicious campaign of terror for a separate homeland for decades, using suicide bombers to kill civilians and scores of politicians, including a President and an Indian Prime Minister.
Pulidevan and Nadesan were two of the most senior rebels to surrender. In the hours beforehand, they used satellite phones to send messages to diplomats, journalists and peace mediators to ensure top Sri Lankan officials, including the country’s President, knew of their intention to lay down their arms. They had been assured that their surrender would be accepted if they raised a white flag.
However, the Sri Lankan defence ministry’s website lists Pulidevan and Nadesan as killed by troops of the 58th Division on 18 May 2009.
Sri Lanka’s government holds that the Tiger leaders were shot in the back by their own people, and say the army never executed any individuals.
Allegations the Sri Lankan army and rebels committed war crimes at the end of a brutal war are widespread. According to United Nations investigators, the last months saw repeated and deliberate government shelling of hospitals, food queues and safe zones for civilians.