| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 20, Dated May 23, 2009 |
|
| CURRENT
AFFAIRS |
|
cover story |
|
The Man Who
Destroyed Eelam
Prabakaran had everything: territory, international support and
committed fighters. Senior journalist SHYAM TEKWANI, who has covered
the LTTE and Sri Lanka for almost three decades tracks the alarming
rise and astonishing fall of a man who sought to live to fight another
day, but found only death at the hands of his nemesis.
MORE VIVIDLY THAN anything that came afterwards
in the Sri Lanka
war, I remember his first
handshake. The hand was
soft, the grip delicate and
limp. On that occasion in
Madras, as he contentedly claimed
credit for assassinating the Tamil Mayor
of Jaffna and later, the slaughter of 13 Sri
Lankan soldiers that ignited the conflict
following the anti-Tamil riots of 1983,
Velupillai Prabakaran’s dainty handshake
seemed in harmony with his soft voice.
A few more meetings and a couple of
years later in 1987 — after successfully
evading a media ban to reach the frontlines
in Jaffna — I found myself reporting
in the company of Prabakaran’s
ragtag troops in their war against the Indian
Peace Keeping Force (IPKF). In the
bougainvillea-lined mud tracks, while attempting
to photograph his boys gunning
down the Indian soldiers in an
ambush, I was transfixed by the memory
of that handshake as I watched the blood
seep from an ill-fated jawan’s head and
mingle with the Jaffna dirt.
The other memory is his startled
expression when I congratulated him on
his newborn towards the end of a long
discourse on Eelam. Soon after his fleeting
pause, it became clear that he had lost
interest in going on and on with his vision
of Eelam. He was less voluble, withdrawn
and then abruptly left the room. It was left
to the master’s voice, Anton Balasingham,
to cautiously quiz me on how and what I
knew of the addition to his leader’s family.
These two memories define, at any
rate for me through all my experiences
over the last 25 years in Sri Lanka, the
man who has finally destroyed the dream
he almost made true. Both the memories
give a certain insight into the mind of the
man. First, deceive all into believing the
contrary about your capabilities — deception
is the core of all his strategy.
Second, never trust your own shadow —
paranoia dictates his behaviour. These
traits contributed to the amazing rise —
and eventually the astonishing fall — of
the leader of the most ruthless terrorist organisation in the world.
To suggest that Prabakaran worked to
a master plan in building and shaping his
image of invincibility and developing the
organisation from a ragtag bunch of boys
into the outfit that inspired awe and envy
would be to bestow upon him the title of
a genius — which he is not. From the
beginning, he adopted a twofold strategy
— consisting on the one hand of an ‘international
political campaign’ by galvanising
the diaspora and international
opinion in his favour and on the other by
bleeding the economy and weakening the
state through acts of terror. His success in
sustaining the conflict for over a quarter
century came from a combination of his
own cunning and the lack of purpose,
unity and determination in his enemies.
| PRABAKARAN ADOPTED A TWOFOLD STRATEGY -
GALVANISING THE INTERNATIONAL TAMIL
DIASPORA IN HIS FAVOUR AND WEAKENING THE
STATE THROUGH ACTS OF TERROR |
THE PROPAGANDA CARPET BOMB
“Today we're engaged in the first war in
history — unconventional and irregular
as it may be — in an era of e-mails, blogs,
cell phones, Blackberries, instant messaging,
digital cameras, a global internet with
no inhibitions, cell phones, hand-held
video cameras, talk radio, 24-hour news
broadcasts, satellite television. There's
never been a war fought in this environment
before.” That was former US Secretary
of State, Donald Rumsfeld in 2005
referring, of course, to his woes stemming
from the unnecessary war in Iraq.
If propaganda wins wars, then the IPKF,
which saved Sri Lanka from becoming
another Lebanon, fell victim to a weapon
far more effective than the deadliest conventional
weapon in Prabakaran’s jungle
arsenal — his propaganda tool, the media.
Central to Prabakaran’s guerilla
strategy — over two decades before
Rumsfeld made his observation — was a
powerful communications network and
a sympathetic media. Hence, his exclusive
interviews to handpicked influential publications while he was enjoying the
hospitality of the Indian government in
Madras during the mid-80s, when I first
got to shake his hand. From the outset, it
was not difficult to win the support of
the media, particularly in the West.
Prabakaran played his underdog cards
adroitly with the help of his advisor
Anton Balasingham and his Australianborn
wife, Adele and the LTTE’s media
headquarters in London.
In November 1986, on the eve of the
SAARC summit in Bangalore, the police
under instructions from the Chief Minister
MG Ramachandran, raided and seized
arms and sophisticated communications
gear from the assorted Eelam groups
operating out of Tamil Nadu. Prabakaran
went on a much publicised fast-untodeath
in Madras quoting Mahatma
Gandhi, whom he said he was emulating
in peaceful protest for the return of the
equipment. He demanded the immediate
return of – not his rocket launchers, SAM
missiles and AK-47s — but his lifeline to
the world, his wireless sets. By this time,
he had the media eating out of his hands
and the romanticisation of Prabakaran -
already in motion — now entered the
process of deification. Everything was
returned to him in good order along with
a glass of fruit juice that he sipped to declare
his victory.
|
| Tiger’s pride Prabakaran posing
with his soldier 'cubs'
in a safehouse |
|
| Battlelines Prabakaran at a
strategy meeting with
his aides in Jaffna |
|
| Light moment Sharing a joke with
Yogi, a close aide |
Less than a year later, I walked into a
scoop in the Jaffna peninsula. IPKF Mi-24
helicopter gunships were on the attack
in Chavakachcheri, an LTTE stronghold.
People around me were killed, most of
them civilians. And my cameras were
the only media instruments witnessing
the deaths. A week later, when I surfaced
in Colombo and rushed to the phone in
my hotel room to break the exclusive
story, I was dismayed to find that the
attack was already the big story in the
media. Prabakaran had already beaten me to it — even though there was no
electricity to light up his bases in the
jungles. Even as the body count in the
damaged market area was in progress,
his ‘boys’ had radioed their souped-up
version of the ‘bombing’ from their
jungle hideouts to their ‘media’ headquarters
in London from where a telex
was sent out to every major international
publication. Photographs of death and
destruction from an assault during Operation
Liberation (or Vadamarachchi
Operation) by Sri Lankan gunships six
months earlier were circulated as
evidence of the Chavakachcheri attack.
The LTTE’s powerful communications
network transmitted daily situation reports
(sitreps) from Jaffna to its media headquarters in a Western capital where
the sitreps were distributed as press
releases though telex machines (later
with the introduction of fax machines
and the internet, it was able to readjust
its media budget) to media and governments
in Western capitals. Printed material
was was a prime means of LTTE
propaganda till the early 1990s, when the
group went to great expense to publish
multilingual and expensively produced
four-colour booklets and pamphlets
with profuse illustrations. These publications
were distributed to the local and
international media and select government
organisations.
The LTTE’s high degree of familiarity with modern telecommunications
enabled it to occupy a very definitive
niche in the international public eye, in
spite of the fact that it is party to a
conflict in a small south Asian nation,
largely ignored by the West, and the fact
that its acts of violence have impacted
only Sri Lanka and occasionally India.
The reason counter-terrorism practitioners
began to focus their attention,
after 9/11, to Sri Lanka is Prabakaran’s
global reach. His group is an integral
part of the international terror network.
Tactical and technical contagion is a fact
of terrorist tactics. From hostage-taking,
to hijacking to car-bombs, new methods
have been quickly absorbed and copied
among terrorist groups worldwide. Witness the Taliban’s use of civilians as
human shields during the Pakistani-led
assault in Buner district last week.
Years before the world heard of Osama
bin Laden or al Qaeda, Prabakaran was
pioneering a new method of guerrilla warfare
— the suicide bomber. Innovations in
the use of Improvised Explosive Devices
(IEDs) and the rampant use of child soldiers
and new media technologies — were
quickly copied as regular methods of warfare following the invasion of Iraq in 2002.
Prabakaran has successfully operated
in volatile environments where his
ability to change has been the group’s
linchpin not only of effectiveness, but
also of survival. While Prabakaran has
had ample motivations for change —
technological developments, counterterrorism
measures, and shifts in people’s
reactions to terror attacks — the change
has not occurred automatically.
| CADRES WERE FED ON A DIET OF ACTION MOVIES.
THE THRILL OF ADVENTURE FOR YOUNG RAMBOS-
IN-THE-MAKING IS A MESMERISING EXPERIENCE. IT
INVESTED POWER THEY COULD NEVER DREAM OF |
AS ADAPTIVE AS A CHAMELEON
Prabakaran’s ambition to sever the island
in two has been the only constant in his
life. Sustaining that for 30 years required
a continuous evolution and a firm hand.
The practices he adopted were based on selectively chosen models appropriated
from a range of religious and political
traditions and rituals for a variety of
political and publicity goals. The flavor
of the 1980s, for him, was Marxist rhetoric.
When his oft-repeated desire for a
single party socialist government in his
imagined Eelam drew gasps of horror,
the Lenin portrait in his den was summarily
removed and Marx was forsaken
in all conversation. He then abandoned ideology to aggressively build the cult
around his persona. An adoring media
lent as zealous a hand as his followers to
help build his cult to mythical proportions
— tales of his marksmanship,
valour and genius became commonplace.
Soon, taking an oath in his name
by his cadres, celebrating his birthday,
and displaying his portrait everywhere
became mandatory. Adele introduced
the concept of feminism to recruit girls.
In her words, “Nowhere in the world has
male chauvinism been eradicated and it
certainly has not disappeared from the
Tamil society. However the male cadres
show a great deal of respect, appreciation
and pride in the women combatants’
achievements.” From Hinduism, he borrowed the practice of deifying his
martyrs and erecting shrines where
people were expected to make offerings
and pray on a day designated as holy.
Western military traditions provided
him a model to build his army while
Hollywood, apart from inspiring movies
of bravery and heroism, taught him to
produce slickly produced audio-visual
presentations for profit and for goodwill.
IN HIS OWN IMAGE
Acutely conscious of the power of propaganda
and his image as the most lethal
weapon in his arsenal, Prabakaran
ensured that everybody in his group
understood how to use it. Cadres were not to interact with anyone outside the
fold. His photograph — and only his —
would be the single image that hung on
the walls of all denizens in his territory.
Every street corner would have his
speeches or Eelam national songs playing
from the loudspeakers at all hours
every day. Every offer of a ride in the
Balasingham’s air-conditioned SUV, with
Adele at the wheel, in the Jaffna peninsula
perforce meant listening to
Prabakaran blaring from the only cassette
she would insert into the music
player.
|
| Another side
Prabakaran and
Madivadini at their
wedding in Tamil Nadu
in 1984 |
|
| Food for fight
Snacking at one of his
safe houses in Jaffna |
|
| Powerful trio Prabakaran,
Adele and Anton
Balasingham in
Mullaitivu |
Calendars, posters, CDs, DVDs, newspapers,
magazines, radio stations, TV
stations — he had them all out years before
the world had heard of the al Qaeda
propaganda machinery. And while the
word ‘web’, at any rate for most of us in
south Asia in 1993, triggered images of
the common house spider, the LTTE had
its first website running on the server of
a university in the United States. This
conveniently coincided with an increasingly
unfriendly media following the
assassination of Rajiv Gandhi. A computer
academy funded and run by
professionals from among the diaspora
in the Vanni region ensured that the
‘brains trust’ of the LTTE kept abreast
with the latest know-how.
A wing of the group (Internet Black
Tigers) is credited with the first ever cyber
attack (1997) known to the world when it downed the networks of Sri Lankan
embassies across the world for a fortnight.
In the same year, it was able to hack into a
university in the United Kingdom, steal
legitimate email IDs and solicit funds for a
fictitious hospital in Colombo. And as
recently as last week, a group calling itself
Kalai Amman Electronic Warfare Unit
hacked into the Sri Lanka Army website
and defaced its home page. Social network
sites were quickly adopted and a search on
YouTube yields several hundred videos of
the group.
During one of our initial photo
sessions (in the early 1980s), Prabakaran
was awkward, uncertain of what was
expected of him and very receptive to
being directed. When it was suggested
he change into combat fatigues, he went
one further and emerged from the room
with his pistol fully loaded. Within seconds,
framed by his bodyguards and a
huge cut out of a Tiger, with a huge portrait
of Lenin in the background, he was
in his elements and an hour later eagerly
asked for copies of his performance. Several
photo sessions later and in Jaffna
while fighting for his supremacy against
the IPKF, he reveled in playing the role of
actor and director with consummate
ease. He would tease a twinkle into his
eyes with as much ease as a flash of fury.
There was bluster in his voice, preparedness
in dealing with questions and
animation in his conversations but his
grip had lost none of its daintiness.
He would play to the gallery with
sardonic witticisms, refrain from any
response in English, ponder a bit to
deliver a quotable quote and strike the
pose that struck him as just right for the
occasion. In one of his hideouts during
the IPKF operations, he called for his
leopard cub and while bantering with his
friend and deputy, Yogaratnam Yogi,
posed gleefully for the camera stroking
his pet — much like a prosperous
zamindar back from a hunt.
It was essential to his strategy to get
the message across that he had a committed
following — and that this commitment
came from man, woman and
child. The cyanide pill was the emblem of commitment — which he generously
arranged for me to photograph as his
boys gamely posed with them around
their necks. (It is another story that
while every instance of a cadre biting
into the vial during the course of assorted
battles captured headlines, there
was barely any mention of the many
more who threw the vial away for safety).
While Prabakaran majestically posed
for the camera with his ‘cubs’ (as he called
the children he recruited), there were a
few restrictions: He did not like being
photographed while satiating his enormous
appetite for food. No photographs
of his female cadres and none of his dead
and dying. These sanctions were lifted
after the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.
Prabakaran quickly developed a media
unit – photographers and videographers
– which documented every battle and assassination
that the group conducted.
This served two purposes — as a teaching
aid, it came closest to the real thing
next to classroom simulations. Besides, it
provided archival material for the history
books that would be written once Eelam
became a reality. This obsession for a
visual record proved disastrous for the
LTTE — it led the investigators of Rajiv
Gandhi’s murder right to its doorstep.
| WHILE PRABAKARAN MAJESTICALLY POSED FOR
THE CAMERA, THERE WERE A FEW RESTRICTIONS.
HE DID NOT LIKE BEING PHOTOGRAPHED WHILE
SATIATING HIS ENORMOUS APPETITE FOR FOOD |
Visiting the group’s training camps in
the peninsula after Rajiv Gandhi’s
murder, the first thing I noticed were the
baby-faced boys, some not even in their
teens. Their field training began with an
oath on their leader: “To achieve Tamil
Eelam, my life and soul, all this, I sacrifice.
We’ll be very faithful and trustworthy
to our elder brother, Mr Prabakaran,
the leader of our revolutionary organisation.
I now begin my training. The thirst
of Tigers is Tamil Eelam.” This was also
repeated at the end of the day when their
flag was lowered down the mast.
Their history lessons were an endless
litany of hatred against the enemy — only
comprising rapists, butchers and racists
— and the glories of ancient Tamil kingdoms
and kings. Classic indoctrination.
The classroom instructions centred
around battlefield strategies (on a blackboard
with a piece of chalk and some war
movies), case studies (reconstructed with
videos and photographs) from their
previous battles and assassinations and
finally a film from an extraordinary video
collection of B-grade Hollywood action
movies. Rambo was the popular choice.
In the prevailing environment of anxiety
and hopelessness, Prabakaran was
crafty enough to whip up hatred and give
a machine gun to his potential recruits
among the boys and girls. The romance
of the gun, for a teenager fed on a limitless
diet of action movies, hatred for the
identified enemy, a sense of purpose and
an assurance of immortality, is an aphrodisiac
far more potent than the promise
of seventy-two virgins in paradise.
| THE IPKF DEPLETED HIS MANPOWER AND
PRABAKARAN HAD TO TURN TO THE GIRLS TO
REPLENISH HIS FORCES. THE TASK OF INDUCTING
THEM WAS ASSIGNED TO ADELE BALASINGHAM |
The thrill of adventure for a 12-year
old Rambo-in-the-making is a mesmerising
experience. It invests in him
power he could never dream of. The only
occasion when I accepted their offer of
testing a Kalashnikov was instructive. I
fired into the horizon across the sea. As
we sauntered away feeling like real men
after a few rounds, I suddenly froze in
horror. I became aware of my posture
and swagger, feeling invincible and indestructible
— and realized that, despite
the stiffness in my shoulder caused by
the weapon’s recoil — my arms and legs
moved exactly like Rambo, like in the
movie I had watched with them in their
classroom. If I, a 30-something man of
the world, could feel this magical glow of
indestructibility shield me from death, it
was not difficult to imagine the effect on
a 12-year old who knows no other life
than the one under Prabakaran’s incantations.
The added incentive was that as
a cadre, bed and board were provided for
on a priority basis in any hamlet that one
walked into, brandishing the gun.
If this was not motivation enough,
there was then the promise of immortality.
Poems and shrines were built in
the memory of those who submitted
their lives for the cause.
BEHIND THE LINES
One of the essential experiences of embedding
yourself with the LTTE was the
interaction with the wild-looking boys, bare-footed and ragged. They were your
mates, guides and guardians during the
tour of the frontlines and combat zones.
When you lived alongside them, shared
food and experiences under fire, you
tended to bond with them. Survival
often depended upon this sense of comradeship.
Camaraderie, which relaxed
their adherence to the strict code of discipline
they were sworn to as they pulled
out a deck of cards to kill time between
attacks, could lead to bias — however
much one guarded oneself against it –
especially when in skirmishes in the
jungle your camera kit and their Kalashnikovs
got entangled.
But you never met the same lot ever
again. They were either killed before
your next trip or rotated to another
location. It was rare to learn anything
about them through querying the new
batch — since each of them operated
under a nom de guerre. One looked for a
familiar face on the sea of posters and
cutouts of martyrs scattered across the
peninsula. Likewise, the innumerable
shrines that kept multiplying between
visits — shrines in honour of the valorous
and where people went to pray with
their incense sticks and flowers. There
would be an odd sighting or two or a
rare letter from some family member
sharing their grief of their dead son.
Occasionally, a smartly dressed, wellfed
stranger would approach you on the
street in New York, a wedding in London,
a restaurant in Paris or in the shadows
of a temple corridor in Thanjavur
and identify himself as being a member
of the party you accompanied on such
and such a trip. Or you would recognise
a face in the papers — making the wrong
kind of news in a country which had
granted him citizenship.
|
| On guard LTTE cadre
guarding the
waterfront from the
ramparts of the
destroyed Dutch fort |
|
| Civil control Cadre
at their checkpost
controlling civilian
movements in their
territory in Kilinochchi |
|
| Killing time Cadre
with a deck of cards— a rare anomaly in a
group famed for its
iron discipline |
|
| Taking stock Prabakaran in his
safari-suit with the
Balasinghams |
ADELE BALASINGHAM AND THE
FREEDOM BIRDS
The Freedom Birds — as the girls were
now called — were the ace up
Prabakaran’s sleeve. With the IPKF
steadily depleting his manpower among
the rank and file, Prabakaran had to turn even more to the girls and children to replenish
his forces. The task of inducting
the girls was assigned to “Auntie” Adele
Balasingham. Girls, at this point, were
banded together as the Students Organisation
of Liberation Tigers (SOLT) and
were used in peripheral roles as befitted
their status in Jaffna society – in servitude,
ushering in crowds at an event,
distributing pamphlets, reciting poems
extolling the greatness of their National
Leader or singing paeans in honour of a
recent suicide bomber. Adele’s task was
made easy by the prevailing oppressive
caste and class system and the alleged
atrocities of the IPKF. She offered the
guarantee of emancipating the girls from
the traditional role of Tamil women by
fighting shoulder to shoulder with the
boys in pursuit of their freedom. A few
months after the murder of Rajiv
Gandhi, during a conversation in Jaffna,
she would proudly claim: “The most historic
development for the Jaffna woman
in recent years is her confidence.”
Following the death, by cancer in 2007,
of her husband Anton Balasingham, the
self-described theoretician, chief negotiator
and political advisor to Prabakaran,
Adele continues to actively work for her
leader quietly and away from the media
glare from her base in London.
THE DEPUTIES
Gopalaswamy Mahendraraja, better
known by his nom de guerre Mahathaya,
Prabakaran’s extremely popular deputy,
could have easily been mistaken for
Prabakaran by anyone whose only awareness
of the LTTE leaders was based on a
perfunctory glance at media photographs.
They were built alike and
sprouted thick moustaches. In
Prabakaran’s presence, Mahathaya was almost
hunched in servility, respectful and
barely uttering a word until spoken to. His
transformation on the battlefield, however,
was amazing.
| YEARS BEFORE THE WORLD HEARD OF OSAMA BIN
LADEN OR AL-QAEDA, PRABAKARAN WAS
PIONEERING A NEW METHOD OF GUERRILLA
WARFARE - THE SUICIDE BOMBER |
Mahathaya’s silence was compensated
by Yogi‘s loud voice. It was with
Yogi that Prabakaran seemed to share an
easy relationship. Laughing and joking
over a Chinese lunch, the two seemed to be best buddies. Yogi strutted with his
convent-educated English — much in
the manner of a subordinate who wants
to appear as an equal in the presence of
people he seeks to impress; Mahathaya
was diffident and respectful in the presence
of authority, his leader. On the
battlefield, as I joined the motley bunch
Mahathaya led against the advancing
army, I could barely associate him with
the deputy who almost scraped in
servility in the presence of his boss. Yogi
was the well-scrubbed, smooth and oily
politician, Mahathaya the dutiful and
popular army commander.
When Mahathaya marched into Trincomalee
at the head of a big army of
freshly uniformed cadres along with Yogi
to watch the back of the last IPKF soldier
disappear from view in March 1990, they
took to the podium to thank the big
crowds the LTTE had corralled at the
town’s stadium. Yogi included the media
in his thanksgiving and singled out a couple
of us by name as those who had
fought as much as they for their struggle.
Barely over a year later, with Rajiv murdered
and the investigation clearly pointing
to the LTTE as his killers, Yogi’s first
reaction upon greeting me in Jaffna was
a bitter utterance of “yellow journalist” accompanied by a ferocious mouthful of
spit at me, while Balasingham and
Adele watched in grim silence. World
opinion was beginning to weigh heavily
against them. Their nerves were clearly
on edge.
Prabakaran denied any role in the
assassination of Rajiv Gandhi and instead
set into motion an elaborate exercise to
disprove Dhanu’s (Rajiv Gandhi’s killer)
link with the LTTE. Meetings were set up
with her ‘parents’, neighbours, and ‘friends’ all over the peninsula. At the end of the
long day, after a snack of hot vadas at their
thatched roof headquarters near Jaffna
town, when my increasing skepticism of
their charade began to get the better of
their gentle persuasiveness, Balasingham
and Yogi pushed back their chairs and declared
the meeting over. The parting shot
was as astounding as it was petty — pay
for the vadas you just ate. When I awoke
the next morning, the bicycle I depended
on to traverse the peninsula was gone.
Their fabled public relations machinery was beginning to crack and yet unknown
to the world, trouble was brewing within.
A year later, in a move that stunned his
followers, Prabakaran struck against
Mahathaya who he had anointed as his
deputy during the war against the IPKF in
1987. Accusing him of treachery and collaborating
with the Indians against him,
Prabakaran placed Mahathaya in custody,
liquidated most of Mahathaya’s troops
and decisively crushed a potential rival to
his supremacy as leader. Mahathaya was executed after a prolonged period of
torture in December 1994. Yogi, whose
loyalty too came under suspicion, was
consigned to the doghouse to expect a
similar fate. After years in anxious oblivion,
he reappeared as head of the LTTE’s
History Division on Black Tigers Day, the
commemoration of suicide bombers, in
July 2006. He spoke on the occasion and
asked, “Weren't bombs made to blow up
and kill men? So why is there such a cry
when only a man becomes a human
bomb?” He was subsequently rehabilitated to his current position as military
advisor in the Vanni. Balasingham and his
wife Adele rose even more higher in their
leader’s estimate. The Balasinghams —
who posed no threat of any sort to their
master — became the face of the organisation
across Western capitals and were
an essential part of all negotiating teams
at various times.
THE TAMIL ‘STATE’
Prabakaran’s moment of triumph in
ejecting the IPKF (March 1990) out of his
domain, powered him with greater confidence.
He felt vindicated in his belief
that Eelam was a reality within his grasp.
His surviving boys had gained invaluable
experience during the thirty months of ‘vanquishing the fourth-largest army in
the world’; the girls had proved their
worth and were now battle-hardened;
recruiting was never easier, his stock
with his donors, the Tamil diaspora, was
at its peak; and the media doted on him
as their new darling.
| PRABAKARAN IS SEEN AS A MEGALOMANIAC WHO
HIJACKED THE GRIEVANCES OF THE TAMILS TO
GRATIFY HIMSELF. THE SWITCH FROM GUERRILLA
TO CONVENTIONAL WARFARE WAS DISASTROUS |
It was at this point that he tightened
the security around him and set about the
task of constructing a state within a state.
He reintroduced taxation on his population,
decreed the LTTE flag as the Tamil
national flag, set up courts, police stations and ‘ministries’ that oversaw agriculture,
education, rehabilitation and economic
development. But his main preoccupation
was in developing a conventional armed
force. Military traditions — a formal ranking
system, uniforms, gun salutes,
parades, ceremonial funerals of flagdraped
cadres killed in action — became
the norm. Sarongs and flip-flops gave way
to smartly pressed uniforms and spit-andpolish
boots. Twenty years before he
acquired the half-a-dozen ZLIN-143 aircraft
to boast of being the only terrorist
group in the world to possess an air wing,
I was led to the LTTE’s “ordnance factory” in
Manipay in 1985 to witness and photograph
the aircraft his “aeronautical engineers”
were assembling. The fact that it had a 200cc motorcycle engine to power it
did not mask his intent to attempt building
a conventional Armed Force, with its
land, air and sea wings. “Geographically”,
he stressed at the very beginning, “the
security of Tamil Eelam is interlinked with
that of its seas."
He then turned against his benefactor,
the Sri Lankan president, Ranasinghe.
Premadasa, who had colluded with him
to evict the IPKF and kept him on his toes
until Prabakaran had him killed by a
suicide bomber three years later in1993.
THE DIASPORA
In his annual Heroes Day speech — that
he delivers a day after his birthday —
Prabakaran, in November 2006 made his
first direct appeal to the diaspora in funding
the ‘Final War’ he had launched in July
after the European Union joined a growing
list of countries that had proscribed
the group. Funds were drying up. “We
express our gratitude to the Tamil Diaspora,
our displaced brethren living all
around the world, for their contribution
to our struggle and ask them to maintain
their unwavering participation and support.”
This was in marked contrast to
rebuking them for being “quitters” and
“losers” in the late 1980s. Donations,
however, have not always been voluntary.
|
| Martyrs gallery Civilians paying
homage to suicide
bombers on Black
Tigers’ Day |
|
| Female squad Black Tigers at a
parade in Mullaitivu |
Following the crackdown on the LTTE
by Canada and The European Union in
2006, the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police released a report on their 4-year
investigation (Operation Osaluki) into
the Canadian fundraising efforts of the
Tamil Tigers. The report revealed that
the LTTE subjects Sri Lankan Tamils living
in Canada and other Western countries
to intimidation, extortion and even
violence to ensure a steady flow of funds
for its operations.
COSTLY MISTAKE
When Rajiv Gandhi was on the political
comeback trail in May 1991, Prabakaran
wasted no time in executing a pre-emptive
strike. He dispatched his homegrown
poet, Kasi Anandan — who had
only a year ago thrilled the victorious
LTTE cadres at a gathering in Trincomalee
with his description of the IPKF as the
Italian-Parsi Killing Force — to lull any
apprehensions that anyone might have
about the former Prime Minister’s
security. The ruse, clearly, worked.
Except that Prabakaran’s fool-proof
plan did not count on having his photographer
killed with the evidence against
him intact on his body. The murder of
Rajiv Gandhi by the world’s first woman
suicide bomber set in motion a process
that has finally come to destroy his
ambition. India proscribed the group and
though it took the United States six years
to follow the lead and the 9/11 attacks to
give the proscription some teeth, the new
security climate induced other passive
supporters of the LTTE in Western capitals
to ban the outfit in their countries.
With international opinion against
him, Prabakaran retreated into his
hideouts, eased himself out of the media
spotlight, only granting even rarer access
to international media to lamely deny any
hand in his dastardly act. He now began
wearing the black thread of his cyanide
vial outside his shirt in an ostentatious
display of his commitment to the cause.
The holster with his pistol now found
place outside his camouflage shirt signaling
that he was no more ‘Thambi’
(younger brother) or ‘Anna’ (elder
brother) to his followers nor merely the
National Leader of Tamil Eelam but the
Supreme Commander of the LTTE.
The recently released photographs
from the treasure trove of albums that the
Sri Lankan troops found in the fleeing Prabakaran’s house are very instructive.
The black string holding the vial of cyanide
has disappeared in a number of images
where he is with his family. Neither
is his son, equally portly, seen to be wearing
one even with his combat fatigues.
HUMAN SHIELDS
From the very beginning it was apparent
that he would make ‘people’ his buzz word. First, declare he was on the path
he had chosen for their sake, to liberate
them. Second, attack the enemy over the
shoulders of civilians to provoke an
enraged counterattack that would kill
innocents and garner him publicity at
low cost. Finally, shield himself from
attacks by closing all their exits at the
point of his guns.
The bulk of LTTE’s attacks against
the IPKF were initiated around the core
strategy of using civilians as shields. The
IPKF helicopter gunship attack in
Chavakachcheri was one such classic example. The LTTE positioned its gunmen
in the most crowded part of the town —
the market — to fire provocatively in the
directions of the choppers that were
flying at a safe distance from ground fire.
At the Chavakachcheri morgue where
families of victims were hurling anti-Indian
abuses at me, a middle-aged woman
took me aside. Apologising for the hostility
of the mourners, she muttered, “Hitler
killed not his own people, but Jews. But
Prabakaran is killing Tamil people.” Civilians
as human shields clearly appears to
be a central part of Prabakaran’s strategy
to escape from his present entrapment.
| FOR SOMEONE WHO PIONEERED THE USE - AND
MASTERMINDED REMARKABLE INNOVATIONS - OF
SUICIDE BOMBERS, PRABAKARAN’S BLACK TIGERS
SEEM TO HAVE REACHED A DEADEND |
THE DESCENT
How then did an insurgency, that seized
legitimate political grievances as a foundation
for terrorism and sustained
martyrdom by quasi-religious zealotry,
fail in its objective?
From being credited as the world’s
most successful and ruthless terrorist to
losing nearly all of 15,000 sq.kms of
territory in two years requires some
doing. Both Prabakaran and the government
of Sri Lanka have had their turns
grabbing and then losing territory.
In July 2001, marking the anniversary of Black July of 1983, Prabakaran staged
stunning attacks on the Sri Lankan Air
Force base and the Bandaranaike International
Airport in Colombo, wiping out
half the country’s civil aviation fleet, in
addition to a few military aircraft. With
Sri Lanka’s army in a deadlock, the navy
restrained and the air fleet neutralized,
the success of this attack, once again,
placed Prabakaran at the upper end of
the plank that Colombo and he had been
see-sawing upon for two decades.
Barely two months later, the planes that
brought the twin towers crashing down in
New York on September 9, laid the
ground for the emergence of a new world order where the world was divided into
the good guys rooting for a global war on
terrorism and the bad guys who attacked
governments in pursuit of their evil goals.
The seed was thus sown for Prabakaran’s
decline and the slow destruction of Eelam.
He was beginning to get undone by an
event thousands of miles away and over
which he had no control.
It was not that Prabakaran did not
attempt to adapt to the new world order.
To shift the spotlight away from himself,
he declared a ceasefire, came out of
hiding, without his moustache and his falling hair dyed brilliantly black, sued for
peace under Norwegian facilitation and
announced his first press conference in a
dozen years. His many websites removed
all material that would be deemed offensive
(virtual training camps where one
could learn to forge a passport or make a
bomb, for example) in the new environment,
and wore safari suits to mould himself
in the image of Nelson Mandela, the
statesman he was quoting profusely on his
sites and in his conversations.
His first and only international press
conference (April 2002) at his administrative
headquarters in Killinochchi was a
disaster. His experience with the media, confined to a few one-on-one interviews
with select journalists, had not prepared
him for this. He seemed bewildered and
clearly out of his depth facing a mixed
pack of journalists whose two-day
uncomfortable wait was alleviated only
by the non-stop screening of LTTE propaganda
videos. His image makeover, as a clean-shaven, safari-suited statesman,
failed to impress anyone. Announcing his
idea of peace involving the Norwegians
as peacemakers, he first fumbled and
then chose the safer option of avoiding
all questions — mostly related to the
murder of Rajiv Gandhi and his own demand
for a separate state - and passed on
the microphone to his interpreter Balasingham.
Balasingham declared that his
leader was the President and Prime Minister
of Tamil Eelam and that he and Mr
Prabakaran were the "same'' and that he
was the LTTE leader's “voice.” This set the
tone for what was to follow.
After six rounds of talks for peace
between September 2002 to March 2003
across four countries,
Prabakaran was back
to what he had perfected
over the years
since the Thimpu
talks in 1985 —
stonewall, provoke
and renege on an
agreement and fully lay the blame for the
breakdown of talks on the other party.
| SHOULD PRABAKARAN BE FORCED TO FEED ON
CYANIDE, IT WOULD MEAN THE DESTRUCTION OF
HIS FANTASY AND THE ORGANISATION HE HAS SO
BRUTALLY CULTIVATED AROUND HIMSELF |
The from-the-very-beginning futile exercise
took its toll on three of the four LTTE
delegates. Balasingham, the “chief negotiator”
was gravely ill and had to remain in
Europe along with Adele for his prolonged
treatment. Karuna Amman (Vinayagamoorthy
Muralitharan), Prabakaran’s
commander in the East, was being
wooed by peacemakers to part ways with
his leader. Meanwhile, the global war on
terrorism was increasingly being read as
the global war on Islamic terror, which
meant the international community was
too preoccupied to bother about non-
Islamic outfits like the LTTE.
The CFA (Ceasefire Agreement) went
into cold limbo. Skirmishes broke out and
violations of the agreement accumulated.
The Scandinavian countries comprising the Sri Lanka Monitoring
Mission recorded
3,830 violations by the
LTTE against 351 by the
Government of Sri Lanka between 20
February 2002 and 30 April 2007.
In March 2004, Prabakaran tried
averting the crisis he saw coming his way
by summoning Karuna to Jaffna on an
official pretext. Karuna had learnt his
lessons from the Mahathaya experience.
He ignored the summons and split the
seemingly monolithic outfit, taking with
him a big chunk of the battle-hardened
fighters he had trained. With the East in
turmoil, Prabakaran saw his Eelam beginning
to shrink. Months later, the
tsunami further breached the LTTE’s wall
of impregnability, damaging its bases
along the northeastern coast.
Chandrika Kumaratunga, then heading
the government after having survived
a suicide bomber attack, quickly learnt
from Prabakaran’s successful diplomatic
offensives. She dispatched her Tamil
Foreign Minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar,
to world capitals on a mission to get the
international community to act against
the LTTE’s interests in their respective
countries. Kadirgamar was beginning to
notch up diplomatic successes, having
got the United Kingdom to proscribe the
group in 2001. He was killed by a LTTE
sniper in August 2005 just when he
seemed on the verge of getting some
more countries to proscribe the group.
And when the elections came the
following year (2005), Prabakaran compounded
his earlier mistakes. He ensured
— by forbidding Tamils to cast their vote
— the victory of somebody who, he
believed, was yet another politician even
more infirm of purpose than his predecessors
and therefore of immense value to
his plans, little realising that he would
finally be meeting his nemesis in the Rajapakse
administration. Peace is inimical
to Prabakaran’s existence. The new government
started office, as all new governments
in Colombo were wont to do, with
a call for peace. After one round of ceasefire
talks in 2006, Prabakaran was back to
business. His woes of the three previous years in his new avatar of ‘statesmanpolitician’
were proving to him that he just
was not cut out to be a man of peace.
In his 2006 November annual speech,
after his attempts to assassinate the
Chief of the Army and the Secretary of
Defence in Colombo, he rued, “We postponed
our plan to advance our freedom
struggle twice to give even more chances
to the peace efforts, once when the
tsunami disaster struck and again when
President Rajapakse was elected.”
He set out to reassert his authority
over the East — and faced an army that
was well-armed and well-trained and
motivated as never before and one that
was working with unprecedented intelligence
provided by his breakaway
commander, Karuna. Prabakaran lost the
East — and from there on, he lorded over
an unending series of military defeats.
From among the many reasons being
attributed to his incredulously rapid
downfall, the one that would without any
trouble resonate with those who have
dealt with Prabakaran would be his sense
of supreme self-importance. He is seen
as a megalomaniac who hijacked the legitimate
grievances of the Tamils to gratify
his vision of himself and failed to see
that the switch from guerilla band to
conventional army would be disastrous.
For the sanguinary among us — the
chief reason for his downfall was the
failure of his legendary Black Tiger
suicide bombers and his celebrated
Intelligence chief, Pottu Amman.
For someone who pioneered the
use — and masterminded remarkable
innovations — of suicide bombers,
Prabakaran’s Black Tigers seemed to
have reached a dead-end. President
Chandrika Kumaratunga was the first
miracle of the Eelam war — as the first
ever survivor of a Black Tiger attack, at
an election rally in December 1999.
Then came the failures in 2006 that
cost him everything — General Sarath Fonseka, Commander of the Sri Lanka
Army became the second survivor of a
suicide attack in April. Prabakaran’s
trusted tool of political persuasion, the
Black Tiger, was beginning to let him
down. And when Gotabaya Rajapkse, the
Secretary of the Defence and the brother
of the President escaped a suicide attack
in December, it was curtains for
Prabakaran. The last two failures led to his
destruction. Clearly, Prabakaran was facing
a short supply of efficient Black Tigers.
He was desperate enough to use recruits
whose mental aptitude didn’t match
their ferocious commitment. A woman
bomber sent to kill the Tamil Cabinet
Minister, Douglas Devananda, in his
Colombo office in November 2007, triggered
her bra bomb when she discovered
her target was not available for the day,
killing herself and the Minister’s secretary.
MEETING HIS MATCH
The other factor that led to his precipitous
defeat is that Prabakaran did not count on
the troika (the President, the Army Chief
and the Defence Secretary) calling his
bluff. His elaborate deceptions of invincibility
had begun cracking — first, with the
exit of Karuna and then by the steady
inroads that the specially trained units of
the Sri Lankan Army’s commandos were
making. The chronic political oneupmanship
in Colombo over the Eelam
war between the two national parties —
the UNP and the SLFP — which had contributed
largely to the growth of the LTTE
and the prolongation of the war, was contained
by the Rajapakse administration.
The Rajapakse brothers pulled out a page
from the Bush counter-terrorism doctrine
— niceties be damned.
With international assistance — material
and moral — for the war on terror
pouring in from China, Pakistan and the
US, the defence budget was increased
dramatically; state of the art equipment
procured, and counter-terrorism and
counter-insurgency training enhanced. By
mid-2006, Canada and the European
Union joined the growing list of countries
proscribing the LTTE. This clogged
Prabakaran’s supply lines and fund collection and contributed to diminishing his
ability to fight back the surge of a newly
professionalised force. In the Rajapakse
brothers, Prabakaran finally met with an
enemy as ruthless and unswervingly committed
in their goal as he.
As he presides over the destruction of
his dream, Prabakaran must already be
plotting his next move even as he plans
his escape from the ever-shrinking space
he is left with to hide in. Staying alive,
going back to the basics and brushing up
on Sun Tzu. His financially formidable
supporters among the diaspora will be
told that it is only territory that has been
lost and as long as they are behind him
he will deliver unto them the dream he
has been promising them. Until then,
Eelam will, like Khalistan, continue to
live on in the virtual world.
His long-term objective, however,
will be to foil every effort made by
Colombo to redress Tamil grievances
and also ensure that he, and only he,
remains the sole leader of the Tamils. No
moderate Tamil leader or group will be
allowed to take his place. Any attempt to
nurture a new leadership will be foiled
by assassinations and acts of terror —
just as he had, in the mid-80s, done the
biggest disservice to the Tamil cause by
systematically wiping out the leaders of
the other militant Tamil groups that
existed and decimating their organisations
in a move to emerge as the sole
representative of the Tamil cause. Elections
will be prevented by violence.
Prabakaran will patiently wait for complacency
on Colombo’s part and any
ensuing security lapses to stage devastating
acts of terror. In essence, he will
start all over again and could potentially
claw his way back if allowed to.
The key to ensuring that Prabakaran
goes down the same road and fades away
as Idi Amin did lies in the sincerity, determination and tenacity of the Rajapakse
government (and every other that follows
it). Rolling back every discriminatory law
and practice against the Tamils and guaranteeing
them equal rights and
opportunities would need to be its first
priority. Ignoring the Tamil diaspora,
however much it may rankle, would not
be beneficial for Colombo. Colombo only
has to remember that the rise and dominance
of Prabakaran was largely dependent
on Colombo’s policies and attitudes.
| PRABAKARAN WILL PATIENTLY WAIT FOR A SLIP
ON COLOMBO’S PART AND ANY ENSUING SECURITY
LAPSES TO STAGE COUNTER-ATTACKS. HE COULD
POTENTIALLY CLAW HIS WAY BACK IF ALLOWED |
As an immediate goal, Prabakaran will
be counting on the few Black Tigers lurking
in Colombo to blow up at least one
of the troika. This would give him a
respite, however brief, and save him from
biting into the vial he sometimes carries
around his neck.
And should he be forced to feed on the
cyanide, it would mean the absolute
destruction of his fantasy and the organisation
he has so brutally cultivated
around himself. His death would splinter
the group, leaving his surviving lieutenants
scrambling for the throne and the
vast financial empire Prabakaran has industriously
built across three score countries.
His son and heir apparent, Charles
Anthony, is not considered a serious contender
for the top job.
In this hour of unprecedented defeat,
the bluster and the belief in his personal
immortalitywill not have dimmed. IwonderifPrabakaran’shandshakehaschanged.
For an answer to that, over to the friendly
Arakan rebel inMyanmar or the sympathetic
politician in Europe, whose extendedhandwelcomesPrabakaranashore
as he searches for a sanctuary. In all likelihood,
Prabakaran — with all his chips
down—would impress his saviour with a
firm, masculine shake of the hand.
The author is a former photo-journalist,
currently teaching media and international
relations at NTU, Singapore
WRITER’S EMAIL
shyamtekwani@hotmail.com |