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Midweek Review

Playing politics with LTTE dead

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British Tamils display the LTTE flag at Maaveerar commemoration in London. (Pix courtesy Tamil Guardian)

Adele

The London Maaveear commemoration would have been complete if the organizers invited Adele Balasingham, the Australian wife of LTTE theoretician, the late Anton Balasingham, one-time employee of the British HC in Colombo. Balasingham was laid to rest in Dec 2006 in the UK. Adele became notorious as a white woman guardian tying cyanide capsules around the necks of young Tiger female cadres as a passing out ritual. She is believed to be living scot free in the UK despite consigning so many, possibly underage Tamil girls to a certain horrible death. Such are the hypocritical standards the British continue to set around the world, while mouthing for human rights in countries that the West dislikes and horrors of Palestine precipitated and perpetuated by London is no exception.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The recently concluded Maaveerar Naal (Great Heroes’ Day)/Maaveerar Vaaram (Great Heroes Week) commemorations underscored the continuing deep divisions within the Tamil community over the conduct of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) during the war.

The organizers of the main commemoration at Nallur, Jaffna, left out the name of the late LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran’s one-time Deputy the late Gopalswamy Mahendraraja aka Mahattaya out of the heroes’ list displayed therein. Prabhakaran was 54 at the time of his death on May 19, 2009 whereas Mahattaya was 38, when he was ordered to be executed by the LTTE leader on Dec 28, 1994.

In fact, Mahattaya, who had been arrested in Aug 1993, interrogated over a period of 16 months and then executed and buried at an undisclosed location in the north never received such tributes bestowed on other members. Mahattaya wasn’t the only one to be dealt with that way. According to Maaveerar Naal organizers, the total number of LTTE dead at the end of the conflict stood at 24,379 (Nov 27, 1982 to May 19, 2009). And Mahattaya hadn’t been among those listed personnel.

Having conducted the first Maaveerar Naal commemoration in the Mullaithivu jungles on Nov 27, 1989, the LTTE expanded the event in 1991 to cover a period of seven days (Nov 20-27). Until Prabhakaran’s elimination on May 19, 2009, his speech delivered at the conclusion of the week remained the highlight of the whole ‘show.’ The Island dealt with the issue and related matters last week (Eelam conflict: In memory of fallen combatants, Nov 29, 2023 edition)

Remains of first LTTEer killed buried in Madurai

A little known fact is that the remains of the first LTTE cadre killed in combat, Sathiyanathan alias Shankar, a native of Kambarmalai near Valvettithurai, had been cremated at the Keeraththurai crematorium in Madurai. Perhaps India should disclose the details as to how many Sri Lankan terrorists (Except for EROS, who were more like the Tigers, none of the other groups resorted to things like suicide bombings) killed in various incidents had been buried there.

It would be pertinent to mention that Shankar, who had received gunshot wounds during a confrontation with the Army in the Jaffna peninsula was moved across the Palk Strait to Tamil Nadu where he succumbed to his injuries. Shankar died on Nov 27, 1982 in the presence of Prabhakaran, who was living there at the time under Indian protection.

Mahattaya’s alleged crime was conspiring with premier Indian intelligence service Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) to eliminate Prabhakaran who ordered former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination. The LTTE assassinated Gandhi on the evening of May 21, 1991, at Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu.

Maaveerar organizers also left out suicide bomber Dhanu alias Anbu alias Kalaivani who blasted Gandhi at Sriperumbudur soon after the Congress leader arrived there for a public meeting. Gandhi was campaigning for the general election. Another person who hadn’t been included in the Heroes’ list was Sivarajan alias Packiachandaran alias Raghuvaran aka One-Eyed Jack as referred to by some Indian media because of a glass prosthesis he wore in place of an eye he lost in a battle, who masterminded Sriperumbudur assassination.

Packiachandaran, and another, committed suicide on Aug 19/20, 1991, at Konanakunte, near Bangalore, when Indian security forces surrounded their hideout. However, a section of the Indian media, at that time, reported several other LTTE operatives, who also took their own lives at Konanakunte, near Bangalore. At least a dozen LTTE operatives died in the Indian crackdown. They were buried there.

Perhaps, those who had been relentlessly demanding full disclosure of the circumstances Sri Lanka brought the war to a successful conclusion in May 2009 should also seek to establish whether RAW engaged Mahattaya in a conspiracy to assassinate Prabhakaran. Did Mahattaya cooperate with RAW? Did Mahattaya switch his allegiance to RAW in the wake of Gandhi’s assassination or the treachery as alleged by the LTTE happened years before?

It would be pertinent to mention that RAW had been accused of using members of various Tamil groups to carry out clandestine operations. No less a person than incumbent Member of Parliament Dharmalingham Siddharthan is on record as having said TELO (Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization) assassinated his father V. Dharmalingam and M. Alalasundaram, both Jaffna district MPs, at the behest of RAW.

Dharmalingham told the writer in the 90s that TELO cadres abducted the two lawmakers on the night of Sept 2, 1985 and killed them. According to Dhamalingham, that had been the Indian strategy meant to influence Tamil politicians in line with New Delhi’s overall plan vis-a-vis Sri Lanka.

The Tamil community here and Diaspora seemed to be quite unable and unprepared to come to terms with ground realities. Can Mahattaya be forgotten just because the LTTE called him a traitor? Can those accusations be proved? Some believe Mahattaya got into trouble after India charge-sheeted 41 persons in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. That group excluded Mahattaya. Of the 41 persons, Prabhakaran, Intelligence Chief Pottu Amman alias Shanmughanathan Sivasankaran and Deputy Chief of the LTTE Women’s Intelligence Wing Akila were not tried as they could not be apprehended. Twelve LTTE operatives died (some committed suicide. Others killed by Indian security forces) and the charges against them abated and the remaining 26 stood trial at Poonamallee court near Chennai.

Judge V. Navaneetham on January 28, 1998 declared all 26 guilty under Section 120-B (conspiracy) of the Indian Penal Code read with Section 302 (murder) of the IPC and provisions of the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act. By then Mahattaya was dead.

Another London Maaveerar commemoration

The British flag is raised at the onset of the event.

British Tamils commemorated Maaveerar Naal/Maaveerar Vaaram at ExCel convention centre in London on Nov 27, 2023. They declared the event 36th Maaveerar commemoration. The organizers played Prabhakaran’s 2008 Maaveerar speech to the crowd. Six months after that speech, Prabhakaran was killed on the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon where the LTTE’s conventional fighting capability was brought to an end.

The British Parliament was represented at the event by several members, including Elliot Colburn, MP for Carshalton and Wellington and Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Tamils (APPGT).

The Tamil Guardian in a report headlined ‘British Tamils commemorate Maaveerar Naal’ posted on Nov 27, 2023, quoted Colburn as having said that he would continue to “push for peace, justice, truth and accountability for war crimes.” The MP added that the APPGT would work to join the USA and Canada in sanctioning those responsible for war crimes and who are still in positions of power today.

Both Colburn and another invitee Bob Blackman, the MP for Harrow East, appreciated the appointment of former Premier David Cameron as UK’s Foreign Secretary. (Cameron was recently in Dubai to promote China’s flagship project Colombo Port City. Controversy surrounds his role in the China project with questions being asked whether he was paid by those promoting Colombo Port City. That issue should be dealt with separately).

Maybe we should ask the world to try Britain for war crimes, beginning with, for example, for what they did here in the aftermath of the Wellassa rebellion, especially for putting to death all males above the age of 12, torching everything the people of that region had. And what about the divide and rule policy of theirs here that clearly led to the present day disharmony. Then what about being the main cause of the calamity in Palestine? Let us also not forget what they did in places like Libya, Iraq, etc., in the recent past. The world also cannot forget how they conquered the west and even Australia, where aborigine numbers dropped from millions, when they arrived there, to less than 200,000 now. Mind you they did all that carrying the Bible and the cross. Someone might say look at the wonderful system of schools they left behind in Sri Lanka, it was certainly not for the love of dark Lankans. Some say it was because they just could not abandon or hide so many children they fathered here to local women. So no wonder they also accommodated many of them later in Australia.

In spite of the LTTE remaining on the British list of proscribed organizations, the Maaveerar organizers displayed the LTTE’s flag and some participants were seen dressed like LTTE women cadres. The commemoration resembled a military-type event with the participants saluting in LTTE style.

The British obviously continue to promote the despicable separatist agenda here though the Sri Lankan military finally eradicated the LTTE completely. Unless, of course, the present government does something utterly foolish on the advice of their friends in the West like the way they blindly signed the Ceasefire Agreement prepared by the Norwegians, with the LTTE secretly, without any whetting. A proper background check on those who had been shedding crocodile tears for the LTTE in the UK and elsewhere would reveal the vast majority of them brazenly exploited the war here to secure political asylum in the UK.

Actually, those who really believed in Eelam never sought refuge in the West. That is the bitter truth the Tamil Diaspora do not want to accept under any circumstances. The situation in other countries is very much similar with organized Tamil groups taking advantage of political party systems to encourage further migration of their brethren to those countries.

At the ExCel convention centre event, a lamp was lit by Prabhananthan, the son of the late LTTE senior commander, ‘Brigadier’ Sornam, in memory of LTTE cadres killed. The senior commander was among those killed during the final phase of the ground operations on the Vanni east front. Sornam, as the LTTE Commander in Trincomalee, ordered the closure of the Mavilaru sluice gates in mid-2006. Sornam believed that he could successfully deploy artillery pieces in the East but the battle for supremacy, in Trincomalee, ended with the LTTE experiencing a debilitating setback.

It would be interesting to establish altogether how many Tamils reached the UK since the conclusion of the war and the number of new British Tamils of Sri Lankan origin.

Among the LTTE dead were hundreds of cadres killed in combat with the Indian Army during its deployment in Northern and Eastern provinces in Sri Lanka (July 1987-March 1990) as well as those perished in fighting with other Tamil groups. It would also be necessary to ascertain how many died in internecine fighting among different separatist groups over the years, particularly during 1982-1990 period when Tamil groups, other than the LTTE, joined the political mainstream.

Asked to comment on the continuing controversy over Maaveerar Naal commemoration, the Executive Director of the National Peace Council Dr. Jehan Perera said: “The government’s refusal to permit the commemoration of the LTTE dead is seen as suppression by the Tamil people. They continue to feel that they are not treated justly by the Sri Lankan state. The tolerance shown by the government for the JVP’s commemoration of their dead has not been shown for the commemoration of the LTTE dead. This is due to the concern that the latter will be a rallying point for a renewed struggle. Sri Lanka needs a political settlement accepted by the Tamil people, so that the commemoration of the LTTE dead will not be seen as posing a danger to the unity of the country.”

Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu, the founder Executive Director of the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA), asserted that Maaveerar commemoration could be allowed like the JVP but not to celebrate death.

Thaminili on RAW conspiracy

‘Thiyunu Asipathaka Sevana Yata’ (In the Shadow of a Sharp Sword), Sinhala translation of ‘Oru Koorvaalin Nizhalil’, life story of high ranking LTTE cadre, the late Subramaniam Sivakamy alias ‘Col’ Thamilini dealt with several contentious issues.

The book launch took place at the Sri Lanka Foundation (SLF) on May 13, 2016. ‘Oru Koorvaalin Nizhalil’ was launched on March 19, 2016, in Kilinochchi, a one-time LTTE bastion.

Her husband, Jeyakumaran Mahadevan, British national of Sri Lankan Tamil origin, earned the wrath of an influential section of Tamil politicians, as well as the Tamil Diaspora, for facilitating the releasing of the book. Thamilini passed away at the Maharagama cancer hospital in October 2017.

Thamilini who had served the LTTE for nearly 20 years compared the disappearance of Mahattaya in1993 after being accused of working for the RAW and the rift between Prabhakaran and battlefield commander, Karuna, credited with spearheading successful conventional fighting units in the Vanni region.

According to Thamilini, both occurrences severely disturbed the organization and caused irreparable damage. Prabhakaran accused Mahattaya of conspiring with RAW to assassinate him at the opening of a memorial hall built at Kodikamam, in memory of those who had perished during the 1991 assault on the strategic Elephant Pass Army base.

The LTTE claimed that RAW planned to use a Tiger working for the Indian spy network to kill Mahattaya immediately after he shot Prabhakaran, thereby paving the way for an Indian plant to take over the Tiger leadership. The operative was identified as Kiruban.

Having declared that she had been present at Irupalai political school when charges were read out before those accused of the conspiracy, Thamilini claimed that RAW planned to do away with both Prabhakaran and Mahattaya, simultaneously, thereby facilitating Kiruban taking over the LTTE leadership. Kiruban had been freed by RAW to execute the operation while the agency propagated that he escaped from their custody.

The LTTE Intelligence, according to Thamilini, executed scores of cadres, including those holding senior command positions, for being allegedly involved in the conspiracy. The executed included a Susilan, who had driven away a tank, captured during the LTTE attack on the Pooneryn Army base, in early Nov. 1993, to the LTTE-held area.

Thamilini declared that the way the organization had moved against Karuna reminded her of the Mahattaya episode and the circumstances under which the LTTE wiped out rival Tamil organizations. Thamilini questioned the validity of accusations, including conspiracy against the leader, misappropriation of funds and sexual misconduct directed at various personnel, over the years. One of the major charges directed at Mahattaya had been that he was lenient towards those under him and sought to use them against the leader.

What Thamilini didn’t say was that Prabhakaran in 2003 made an abortive bid to take Karuna into custody by requesting the then government to fly the dissident Tiger to Kilinochchi. Karuna declined to get onboard though the SLAF sent a helicopter to pick him from somewhere in Batticaloa.

Political background

At the time Prabhakaran took Mahattaya into custody in August 1993, D.B. Wijetunga served as the President in the wake of a Tiger assassin blowing up President Ranasinghe Premadasa in Colombo on May Day of the same year. The country was heading towards national elections – parliamentary and presidential polls in Aug and Nov 1994, respectively. (The writer had an opportunity to meet Mahattaya on January 08, 1990 along with several Colombo-based Indian journalists and veteran local journalist, the late Rita Sebastian, at Koliyakulam, a farming village a little distance away from Omanthai. Mahattaya was assisted by Yogi, the then public face of the LTTE. The writer undertook a perilous motorcycle ride with an LTTE cadre through a jungle path as the Indian Army patrolled the main roads.). The Island reported the conversation (‘LTTE pledges to eliminate pro-Indian Tamil groups’, January 10, 1990 and ‘In Tiger country’, January 14, 1990)

The possibility of Prabhakaran suspecting President Premadasa making an attempt to convince Mahattaya to sue for genuine peace, too, cannot be ruled out. Regardless of tough measures and precautions taken by Prabhakaran to avert any such eventuality, the possibility of the President making a bid to end senseless bloodshed cannot be ruled out. Did such suspicions influence Prabhakaran’s decision to eliminate President Premadasa in an attack very much similar to that of Gandhi assassination? The whole scenario should be examined against the backdrop of Mahattaya having an opportunity to meet President Premadasa in Colombo as the leader of the PFLT (People’s Front of Liberation Tigers) political wing of the LTTE during direct talks between the two parties (May 1989-June 1990).

The execution of Mahattaya took place close on the heels of Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga’s victory at the Nov 1994 presidential election. By then, the LTTE had taken control of the Vanni region though there were few isolated military bases in coastal areas. The Kandy-Jaffna A9 road north of Omanthai had been brought under LTTE control right up to Kilinochchi and it remained in their hands till the first week of January, 2009, when the then Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka’s Army routed the LTTE and finally killed him on the banks of Nanthikadal lagoon with his last band of trusted carders accompanying him nearly, five months later on May 19.

The LTTE never raised its ugly head again. Even a thousand Maaveerar commemorations will not make any difference. However, the public will have to be wary of efforts to grant what Eelamists couldn’t win through military means.



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Midweek Review

July 09: An inexcusable overall security failure and exceptional contingency plan

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A massive throng of people inside the President's House after mobs forced Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee on 09 July, 2022

Ulugetenne

The Sri Lanka Navy, on 04 June, commissioned SLNS Samudravijaya, formerly United States Coast Guard Cutter Decisive. It is the fourth mothballed US Coast Guard cutter transferred to the SLN through the US Excess Defence Articles Programme. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake attended the ceremony at the Colombo Port. The US Embassy in Colombo, in a statement issued on the same day, quoted Defence Attaché Lieutenant Colonel Matthew House as having said: “Few partners have demonstrated the commitment to maintaining and operating these vessels as successfully as the Sri Lanka Navy. The outstanding condition and operational performance of SLNS Samudura, SLNS Gajabahu, and SLNS Vijayabahu are a testament to the professionalism and technical expertise of Sri Lankan sailors. Their stewardship of these vessels helped build the confidence that made this fourth transfer possible.” The first of the four vessels SLNS Samudura was commissioned on 19 February, 2005, during Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga’s tenure as the President. Milinda Moragoda, Economic Reforms and Science and Technology Minister of the previous UNP-led UNF government, played a significant role in acquiring that vessel. SLNS Samudura boosted SLN and participated in numerous operations, including the high profile hunt for LTTE floating warehouses, during the Eelam War IV. But, the US refrained from transferring any more big ships during the war though on the then Navy Commander Vice Admiral Wsantha Karannagoda’s request to provide intelligence and Washington obliging, made the successful hunt for LTTE floating arsenals in the last stages of the war possible. The transfer of the second vessel took place 19 years after the end of the war. Ex USCG Sherman was commissioned 06 June, 2019, as SLNS Gajabahu (P626). The third vessel was transferred to the Sri Lanka Navy on October 26, 2021, as the country was heading towards an unprecedented economic crisis. That vessel was commissioned as SLNS Vijayabahu at the Colombo Port with the participation of President Ranil Wickramasinghe and US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Julie Chung on November 20, 2022. Ironically SLNS Gajabahu, one of the ex-US vessels prominently figured in the contingency plan to save President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, but whose downfall was engineered by the US.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The moment President Gotabaya Rajapaksa decided to take up residence at the President’s House (Janadhipathi Mandiraya), Fort, in the first week of April, 2022, the Navy had no option but to prepare a thorough contingency plan, in case the regime change project posed a realistic threat to the life of the President.

The President, in consultation with senior military officers, made his move within 48 hours after violence erupted outside his private residence at Pangiriwatte, Mirihana, on the night of 31 March, 2022. That decision seemed realistic and sensible at that time.

But, in the wake of the disastrous overall armed forces response to the coordinated violence unleashed by the regime change project on 09 May, 2022, in the aftermath of the Temple Trees ordered attack on Galle Face protesters, the top brass must have recognised the urgent need for total overhauling of security strategy. But, unfortunately, that hadn’t been the case. With violent crowds overwhelming the armed forces, deployed to block them, rapidly approaching the President’s House, those who had been at the makeshift Operations Room there were stunned.

In hindsight, the President’s decision to remain at the President’s House, regardless of the near failure on the part of the armed forces to repulse the raid on Temple Trees, on 09 May, seemed unwise. The rescue operation could have gone wrong and the war-winning President Mahinda Rajapaksa could have ended up in the hands of an angry mob.

Perhaps, the conspirators envisaged the President’s move, from Pangiriwatte to the President’s House, situated walking distance away from the Galle Face protest site, where they could draw additional strength.

The failure on the part of the government to take tangible measures, in the wake of the President’s House becoming the sole target on that fateful day, is a contentious issue that needs to be properly investigated. Don’t forget that the court case filed over the 09 May attacks on the residences and properties belonging to SLPP politicians, and some supporters ,was later withdrawn. The Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government never investigated the 09 May incidents.

Exactly two months after the mobs almost succeeded in breaking through defences at Temple Trees, on the night of 09 May/10, where Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa was residing, they mounted the assault on the President’s House.

In the wake of the 09 May mayhem, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa named Lt. Gen. Vikum Liyanage as the Commander of the Army. He succeeded General Shavendra Silva who served as the CDS but was out of the country when all-out mayhem was unleashed by the Aragalaya mobs on 09 July, 2022, to oust the sitting government.

In spite of a direct and growing threat to the President’s House, on 09 July, 2022, the President felt confident in meeting the challenge. The President issued a directive to the Secretary, Ministry of Defence, General (retd.) Kamal Gunaratne, to shift the Operations Room from the Defence Force Headquarters, at Akuregoda, to the President’s House. Having shifted the Operations Room on 08 July, 2022, to the President’s House, as directed by the President, the top brass prepared to face the challenge.

Maj. General K.B. Egodawela, who served as an Additional Secretary (Administration) to the President, from the day the President moved to the President’s House, till he vacated on 09 July, 2022, in his memoirs ‘Aragalaya: Adarayen Prachandathwayata’ (From Love to Violence) revealed that though the top brass opposed the shifting of the Operations Room they carried out the directive. While the President felt that the top brass could collectively work at the President’s House to bring the situation under control, Gen Gunaratne proposed that the President should move to Akuregoda Defence Forces Headquarters, according to Egodawela. In fact, Gunaratne, who had been with Gotabaya Rajapaksa from the very beginning of the sinister campaign, strongly opposed the President’s decision to remain there.

Obviously, the President’s House pathetically failed to ascertain the scale of the protest and the rapidity with which protesters overwhelmed troops deployed outside the President’s House stunned the top brass. Had they swiftly reached consensus on Gen. Gunaratne’s suggestion, perhaps the 09 July regime change operation could have been thwarted. The armed forces could have resorted to tougher measures to prevent a march on Akuregoda Defence Forces Headquarters had the President agreed to move there.

Within two hours after the protest, targeting the President’s House began, video footage provided by drones indicated that troops couldn’t hold the rampaging mobs any longer. According to Egodawela, the top brass had been prepared to remove the President, even without his consent, by landing a helicopter in the Colombo harbor or by ship. Finally, they resorted to the second option. As the President and First Lady Ayoma got into a vehicle and took the rear exit into the adjoining former Navy Headquarters, mobs entered the President’s House. Another vehicle carrying several other persons followed.

The then Navy Commander Vice Admiral Nishantha Ulugetenne who had been with the President at the President’s House got into the vehicle carrying the President. Had they stayed at the President’s House for 10 more minutes, the consequences could have been devastating. https://island.lk/gotabayas-escape-from-aragalaya-mob-in-rti-spotlight/

Egodawela, who had been with the President from the very beginning of the presidential term, alleged that the raiders planned to kill the President and several others and display their bodies. The author quoted an unidentified intelligence officer as having told him that the raiders wanted to display the bodies the way LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran’s body was shown.

Perhaps shifting the Operations Room from Akuregoda Defence Force Headquarters to the President’s House had been a risky move that, in a way, facilitated the regime change operation. The rationale in bringing those who had been tasked with countering the impending threat to one place (President’s House) to be with the target (Gotabaya Rajapaksa) seems unbelievably a dicey move. The President had been influenced by what he described as inordinate and unforgivable delay on the part of the Akuregoda Operations Room to carry out timely evacuation of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa on the night of 09 May from Temple Trees. Most probably, the President wanted to oversee the 09 July counter operation personally. But, in hindsight, the decision to shift the Operations Room from Akuregoda to the President’s House obviously hadn’t been a clever move.

SLN preparations

When mobs threatened to overwhelm the President’s security at Pangiriwattta, on 31 March, additional police and STF contingents were brought in. They were followed by the Navy and Air Force. The Army arrived at the scene, subsequently.

As pointed out by the President himself, the situation at Temple Trees, on 09 May, had been far worse and the combined police and armed forces response revealed that they hadn’t taken precautionary/counter measures, even after the Pangiriwatta fiasco.

At the time of the incidents, the overall Temple Trees security deployment included about 60 elite Special Boat Squadron (SBS) personnel deployed within the premises and were supplemented by seven SLN platoons. The Army also moved in to strengthen Temple Trees defences but the mobs pressed on till troops fired blank ammunition.

The top brass, directing counter measures from Akuregoda Defence Force Headquarters, had to act swiftly and decisively to evacuate those at the Temple Trees or face the consequences. As there hadn’t been any other alternative place of living proposed, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, wife Shiranthi and their eldest son Namal were escorted to nearby former Air Force Headquarters and from there flown to the Trincomalee Navy base. VA Ulugetenne, over the phone, issued instructions to the relevant officer in Trincomalee to make arrangements as two helicopters carrying the group took off from the helipad on the top of the former Air Force Headquarters. The helicopters departed around 04 in the morning.

They had stayed at Trincomalee Navy House for about a week and, as requested by the Navy, paid for their stay because by then Mahinda Rajapaksa had resigned. Perhaps, they could have taken refuge at the Panagoda Army cantonment or at Saliyapura, home to the Gajaba Regiment, but, at the end, sought the protection at the Trincomalee Navy base.

Ironically, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, too, had to take refuge at the Trincomalee Navy base, exactly two months later. Ever since the President moved into the President’s House, Fort, the Navy had been on their toes to meet any eventuality. The daunting task of arranging evacuation by sea fell on the shoulders of VA Ulugetenne, who, meticulously, planned the operation with his staff.

Having informed the President of the contingency plans, VA Ulugetenne stationed two Advanced Offshore Patrol Vessels (AOPVs), namely SLNS Sindurala and SLNS Gajabahu and four Fast Attack Craft (FACs), at the Colombo Port. It would be pertinent to mention that SLNS Sindurala, built at the Goa shipyard, in terms of an agreement signed at the tail end of the Mahinda Rajapaksa government, was adjudged the best vessel in the SLN fleet in 2022.

Additional SBS personnel and snipers, too, had been brought in to Colombo though none of them knew exactly what their task would be. The OPV and FAC crews most probably felt that they were awaiting orders for a major anti-drug operation in the high seas.

As the decision was made to evacuate the President and the First Lady, the Chief alerted the vessels and quickly deployed tugboats to pull SLNS Sindurala and, shortly thereafter, SLNS Gajabahu, formerly of the US Coast Guard, carrying the President and the First Lady. By the time the two AOPVs moved in different directions, on the instructions of VA Ulugetenne, the hand phones of SLNS Gajabahu crew were collected to prevent them from revealing what was happening. Along with the AOPVs, two pairs of FACs had moved out to sea. (https://island.lk/ranil-reveals-bid-to-get-rid-of-him-while-gr-was-fleeing-to-trinco-on-board-slns-gajabahu/)

Nearly 12-hour journey to Trinco

The SLNS Gajabahu, formerly of the US Coast Guard, had a crew consisting of over 100 officers and men. Someone, most probably a port employee, posted a short clip of some unidentified persons taking large travelling bags into the ship but the President, First Lady and VA Ulugetenne going in were never captured on a camera.

As the vessel began its journey towards Trincomalee, it remained approximately 12 nautical miles from land and the President received many calls, some of which weren’t answered. VA Ulugetenne, too, received quite a number of calls. Those familiar with the developments at that time said that some felt that SLNS Gajabahu should move out of Sri Lankan waters. There had been suggestions that the destination should be the Maldives, India or Singapore. Regardless of such suggestions, SLNS Gajabahu proceeded towards Trincomalee where the Navy made necessary arrangements to host them.

Captain Marlon Perera, who still serves the Navy, had been the Commanding Officer of the vessel. Perera now holds the Commodore rank.

During the journey precautions were taken to ensure the safety and security of the President and the First Lady. Although the crew hadn’t been aware that they would be entrusted with such a sensitive task at a time the country was in crossroads against the backdrop of an economic collapse and sovereign default, there were fears of the crew being affected by propaganda in support of regime change operation.

The attempt made by sailor Wijemuni Vijitha Rohana de Silva to cause harm to Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, way back in July, 1987, underscored the necessity to take precautions during the Colombo-Trincomalee journey as the possibility of anti-Gotabaya campaign having an impact on at least some members of the ship crew couldn’t be ruled out.

On July 30, 1987, during a guard of honor in Colombo, the 21-year-old naval rating struck Gandhi on the shoulder and back with the butt of his rifle. Gandhi narrowly avoided the full impact of the blow by evasive ducking.

On the invitation of VA Ulugetenne, Gotabaya Rajapaksa attended all the formalities in respect of a visit undertaken by the President to the Trincomalee Navy base. The President participated in those formalities knowing that he couldn’t attend the commissioning parade that was scheduled to be held on 15 July, 2022. The Navy was not in a position to put off the commissioning parade hence the decision to invite Defence Secretary Gunaratne as the Chief Guest.

Ulugetenne retired from active naval service on 18 December, 2022, following a distinguished career, spanning over 37 years. He received the appointment as the 24th Commander of the Navy in July, 2020, just a couple of months after Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s election as the President.

Wickremesinghe, in his capacity as Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s successor, appointed Ulugetenne as Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Cuba. The appointment was made in late 2023 and the retired Navy Chief presented his credentials to Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel on 13 February, 2024 (https://island.lk/from-fonseka-convictions-to-arrest-of-ulugetenne/)

However, within weeks after the last presidential election held in late November, 2024, the NPP government recalled over a dozen top envoys appointed by the previous administration. Admiral Ulugetenne was among them. The government deprived a decorated officer, who had served the country for nearly four decades, from completing his term in Havana. Within months after his return, he became the target of a murder investigation.

Then out of the blue the retired Navy Chief became the focus of a murder investigation, that, too, post-war. The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) arrested him on 28 July, 2025, over the disappearance of a person reported in July, 2020.

Kurunegala High Court Judge Tikiri Jayatilleke, on 14 October, 2025, granted him bail. Jayatilleke declared that the CID acted in an illegal manner in respect of the former Navy Commander. His counsel Kalinga Indatissa, PC, alleged in court that his client had been apprehended only on the basis of an ex-LTTE cadre’s allegation in the absence of any evidence

The next hearing is scheduled for 08 July, 2026. Ulugetenne was held at the Kegalle Prison for four days and then transferred to the Dumbara (Pallekale) Prison. Altogether, he was in prison for 80 days, like a common criminal, despite him being a former Navy Commander with an unblemished career record.

Wartime Chief of Naval Intelligence, Rear Admiral (retd) Sarath Mohotti, who had been also arrested in connection with the same investigation, was also granted bail, a few weeks later.

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Midweek Review

India should convene a regional El Niño preparedness dialogue in Delhi

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El Niño events have historically been associated with weaker monsoons in South Asia, erratic rainfall patterns, and increased risks of droughts and floods.

The coming months could bring South Asia and the wider Indian Ocean region a dangerous mix of climate shocks, economic strain, and geopolitical instability. At the centre of this looming challenge is the anticipated El Niño event, which is likely to disrupt monsoon patterns, intensify weather extremes, and place additional pressure on already fragile food, water, and energy systems.

But El Niño will not arrive in isolation. It will intersect with continuing global disruptions—from the war in Ukraine to instability in the Middle East—each of which continues to reverberate through energy markets, food supply chains, and shipping routes. The combined effect is likely to be cumulative, not linear.

This is, therefore, a moment that calls for anticipatory regional coordination rather than fragmented national responses.

A record of regional first response

There is already a clear precedent for such coordination in the region.During the COVID-19 pandemic, India emerged as a key first responder, supplying vaccines, medicines, and logistical support across the neighbourhood under its “Neighbourhood First” policy. This helped establish a practical framework for regional cooperation in times of systemic stress.

More recently, India played a similar role during the economic crisis in Sri Lanka, providing critical financial assistance, fuel, and essential supplies at a moment of acute vulnerability. India has also been among the first responders during major climate-related disasters, including cyclone events such as Cyclone Ditwa, delivering rapid humanitarian assistance.

These are not isolated gestures. They reflect an emerging pattern in which India increasingly functions as a stabilising force in the wider region.

This trajectory is reflected in India’s evolving regional frameworks—from Neighbourhood First, to SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region), and now the broader MAHASAGAR vision, which signals an expanded maritime and regional engagement architecture.

Why El Niño is different this time

El Niño events have historically been associated with weaker monsoons in South Asia, erratic rainfall patterns, and increased risks of droughts and floods. In a region where agriculture remains highly climate-sensitive, even modest deviations can translate into inflation, rural distress, and fiscal pressure.

This year, however, the risks are compounded by global fragilities:

* Persistent food and fertilizer price volatility

* Elevated energy costs linked to geopolitical tensions

* Supply chain disruptions in key commodities

* High debt burdens in several neighbouring economies

Together, these factors reduce the resilience of national systems and increase the risk of cascading shocks across borders.It is also important to recognise that social instability in some fragile countries in the region should be kept in mind, as climate shocks and economic pressures can quickly reinforce each other and create wider humanitarian and political consequences.

The case for a Delhi-based regional initiative

Against this backdrop, there is a strong case for India to convene a regional El Niño preparedness dialogue in Delhi, bringing together neighbouring countries, key development partners, and multilateral institutions.

This should not be limited to South Asia alone. The impacts of El Niño extend across the wider Indo-Pacific and Indian Ocean region. Participation could include:

* Neighbouring states in South and Southeast Asia

* The United Nations system

* The World Bank and Asian Development Bank

* Key bilateral partners such as Japan and others active in regional resilience

Given its geographic position, institutional capacity, and experience as a first responder, it is both natural and appropriate for India to chair such an initiative.

What the initiative should focus on

The objective should be practical coordination rather than declaratory statements. Three areas stand out:

1. Shared forecasting and early warning systems

Strengthening real-time exchange of climate data, monsoon projections, and sectoral risk mapping, particularly for agriculture, water, and fisheries.

2. Contingency planning for essential supplies

Coordinating regional approaches to food reserves, fertilizer availability, and energy supply buffers during climatic disruptions.

3. Disaster response and financing coordination

Improving interoperability among disaster management systems, and exploring rapid-response financing through multilateral development banks for climate-related shocks.

From Neighbourhood First to MAHASAGAR

India’s regional doctrine has steadily evolved—from Neighbourhood First to SAGAR, and now MAHASAGAR—reflecting a broader conception of responsibility in the Indian Ocean region.Each stage has expanded the scope of engagement: from immediate neighbourhood assistance, to maritime cooperation and growth, to a wider vision of regional interconnectedness.

A structured El Niño preparedness initiative would be a natural continuation of this trajectory, embedding climate resilience into the region’s evolving strategic architecture.

Climate as regional security

The distinction between climate events and security outcomes is increasingly blurred. A failed monsoon in one country can trigger food inflation in another; a cyclone can disrupt trade routes; droughts can accelerate migration pressures and fiscal instability.

El Niño should therefore be seen not only as a meteorological phenomenon but as a systemic stress test for regional resilience.

India is already widely seen in the region as a first responder in times of crisis. The experiences of COVID-19, the Sri Lankan economic emergency, and climate-related disasters have reinforced this role in practical terms.

The next step is to move from reactive response to anticipatory coordination.

A Delhi-based regional El Niño preparedness meeting—anchored by India and supported by multilateral institutions and key bilateral partners—would be a timely and pragmatic initiative. In an era of compounding global risks, regional cooperation is no longer optional; it is essential.

(Milinda Moragoda is the Founder of the Pathfinder Foundation. Can be contacted via email@milinda.org, courtesy wionews.com.

by Milinda Moragoda

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Midweek Review

Beyond Harsha’s IMF “Revelations”

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Harsha

“A demagogue is one who preaches doctrines he knows to be untrue to men he knows to be idiots.” — H.L. Mencken

Summary

During a recent television appearance (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0QWfenCFlk) , opposition MP and Committee on Public Finance (COPF) Chair Dr. Harsha de Silva dramatically brandished the latest IMF Letter of Intent (LoI, 13 May 2026), pointing to the signatures of President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and Central Bank Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe as proof of a “secret” alignment with austerity and cost-reflective utility pricing. However, for serious students of Sri Lankan macroeconomics, this “revelation” contained no new information. The legal, structural, and institutional mandate for cost-reflective pricing was codified long before the current administration took office—embedded in the IMF Extended Fund Facility (EFF) of 2023, the 2023 IMF Governance Diagnostic, and the Economic Transformation Act of 2024. This article argues that veteran economists in parliament must move beyond theatrical “gotcha” moments designed for political popularity and instead fulfill their true duty: educating the public on the non-negotiable continuity of structural adjustment programmess.

Anatomy of a Non-Revelation

The recent spectacle of Dr. Harsha de Silva presenting the IMF Letter of Intent on live television was framed as a grand exposure of the current administration’s hidden fiscal policy. With theatrical emphasis, Dr. de Silva pointed to the signatures of President Anura Kumara Dissanayake (AKD) and the Central Bank Governor, declaring that the government had bound the public to the bitter pill of cost-reflective electricity and fuel pricing.

Yet, to anyone who understands the mechanics of central banking and sovereign debt restructuring, this performance revealed nothing that was not already part of (i) the public, (ii) legal, and (iii) institutional reality. A Letter of Intent is a standard operational requirement of the IMF review process; it is not a newly minted policy conceived in secret. By treating a routine administrative continuity as a shocking disclosure, Dr. de Silva engaged in political showmanship rather than economic education.

Legacy of Cost-Reflective Pricing

The narrative that cost-reflective utility pricing is a novel concession by the AKD administration is factually incorrect. The institutional architecture to eliminate non-commercial losses within the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) and Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) was firmly established under the previous administration of Ranil Wickremesinghe.

The structural benchmarks were explicitly laid out in (i) the March 2023 IMF EFF Agreement and (ii) re-emphasized in the September 2023 IMF Governance Diagnostic Report. This framework was further consolidated by the legislature through (i) the Economic Transformation Act of 2024 and (ii) the new Sri Lanka Electricity Act. When the current administration assumed office, the fiscal tracks had already been laid. President AKD is merely operating the machinery of state within the legal and economic boundaries inherited from his predecessor Ranil Wickremesinghe to prevent a secondary default.

The Myth of the Solitary Saviour

There is a troubling tendency among Sri Lanka’s technocratic elite to engage in a saviour complex—positioning themselves on television screens as the singular authorities capable of managing public finance or navigating international waters. Dr. de Silva’s presentation was less about unveiling unknown data and more about projecting an image of unrivaled smartness in public finance.

When veteran economists resort to these manoeuvers, they diminish their own professional standing. Sri Lanka’s economic recovery does not hinge on the brilliant insights of a single individual or party; it depends on (i) institutional discipline, (ii) data-driven planning, and (iii) structural continuity. Pretending that routine compliance documents are exclusive intelligence updates serves only to feed personal political popularity at the expense of public intellectual growth.

Real Politics behind the Screen

Why, then, did Dr. de Silva choose to make a mountain out of an administrative molehill? The answer lies in pure political strategy. The National People’s Power (NPP) platform ascended to governance on strong anti-austerity rhetoric, promising relief from the heavy tax and tariff burdens imposed by the previous regime.

By holding up the signed LoI, Dr. de Silva sought a political checkmate. His objective was to expose the contradiction between the NPP’s populist election promises and its executive actions. While highlighting this policy convergence is fair game in partisan politics, framing it as a “new discovery” misleads the electorate into believing that the IMF programme is an optional, arbitrarily signed document rather than a legally binding national framework that leaves any sitting President with zero alternative manoeuvers.

True Mandate of Parliament’s Financial Oversight

During the broadcast, the fundamental boundary of the Committee on Public Finance (COPF) was brought into question. Dr. de Silva correctly noted that COPF does not formulate state policy—that remains the strict prerogative of the Executive and its chosen advisors. COPF’s true mandate is oversight: ensuring transparency, accountability, and the efficient monitoring of state revenues and expenditures.

If the head of our public finance oversight body wishes to protect the national interest, that energy should be (ii) directed toward evaluating the actual performance scorecards of state institutions, (ii) tracking structural benchmarks, and (iii) monitoring the real-time efficiency of economic programs. Using the platform of technical oversight to score quick points on a talk show blurs the vital line between a state auditor and a political campaigner.

Conclusion: The Need for Institutional Candour

Sri Lanka has paid a catastrophic price for populist rhetoric and the manipulation of economic facts for electoral gain. What the public requires from veteran economists and seasoned politicians today is not more political theater but radical candor.

The truth is simple: Sri Lanka is locked into a long-term, institutional structural adjustment programme that transcends whoever sits in the presidential secretariat. President AKD is executing pre-existing state commitments because the alternative is immediate economic isolation. Rather than trying to convince the public that they alone possess the secret key to salvation, opposition technocrats owe it to the nation to elevate the discourse. It is time to replace television showmanship with (i) honest, (ii) evidence-based planning, (iii) acknowledging that while politicians change, the arithmetic of national survival remains exactly the same.

(The writer, among many, served as the Special Advisor to the Office of the President of Namibia from 2006 to 2012 and was a Senior Consultant with the UNDP for 20 years. He was a Senior Economist with the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (1972-1993). He can be reached via asoka.seneviratne@gmail.com)

By Prof. Asoka S. Seneviratne

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