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Midweek Review

The Karannagoda affair: Role of NGOs

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Admiral of the Fleet (Retd.) Wasantha Karannagoda

Inspector Nishantha Silva, who investigated disappearances blamed on the Navy, fled the country in late Nov. 2019. The CID officer secured political asylum in Switzerland with the blessings of the Switzerland embassy in Colombo. The failed bid by Swiss embassy employee, Garnier Francis (ex- Siriyalatha Perera) to leave for Switzerland after implicating security authorities with a trumped up crass attempt to intimidate her, grabbed both local and international media attention. Sri Lanka never made a genuine effort to ascertain high level international machinations in the wake of the last presidential election in Nov. 2019.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Admiral of the Fleet (Retd.) Wasantha Karannagoda is the highest ranking retired, or serving military officer, designated by the US in terms of the Section 7031(c) of the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programmes Appropriations Act. This is supposedly to end impunity for human rights violators, acknowledging the suffering of victims, and survivors, and promoting accountability for perpetrators in Sri Lanka.

Previously, the US designated three others, namely Gen. Shavendra Silva (Feb. 2020), Lt. Commander Chandana Hettiarachchi (Dec. 2021) and Staff Sgt. Sunil Ratnayake (Dec. 2021) under the same law. At the time Silva was designated, the much decorated soldier held the rank of Lt. General as Commander of Army and also Acting Chief of Defence Staff (CDS).

Of them, Lt. Commander Hettiarachchi and Admiral of the Fleet Karannagoda were designated over the alleged abduction, and disappearance ,of 11 persons, mostly Tamils, in Colombo, and its suburbs, in the 2008-2009 period, during the final phase of the brutal war to defeat the LTTE that was carrying out all types of terrorist acts in the South, while fighting a conventional war in the North, whereas the US found fault with the then General Officer Commanding of the celebrated 58 Division for his alleged misconduct during the Vanni offensive (2009) and Staff Sgt. Ratnayake for the killing of eight Tamils, including three children, at Mirusuvil, in the Jaffna peninsula, in 2000.

However, only in the case of Karannagoda, who served as the Commander of the Navy (Sept. 01, 2005 to July 15, 2009), the US designation was based on the findings made by NGOs and ‘independent’ investigations, both without any doubt funded by them and obviously did their bidding, without hearing the side of the accused.

Of the 11 persons, five were taken in on Sept. 17, 2008, by Navy personnel, along with a black Tata Indica. Police identified them as Rajiv Naganathan (21 years/Colombo 13), Pradeep Vishvanathan (18 years/Wasala Rd, Colombo 13), Mohammed Sajith (21 years/Dematagoda), Thilakeswaram Ramalingam (17 years/Bloemendhal housing complex, Colombo 13) and Jamaldeen Dilan (Maradana). Those involved in the operation were believed to have been accompanied by a Navy informant, Mohammed Ali Anwar alias Hadjjiar of Karagampitiya, Dehiwela. Subsequently, the 28-year-old informant, too, disappeared; he has been listed among those 11 missing.

The remaining five persons were identified as Kasthuriarachchilage John Reid (21 years/Kotahena/8-9-2008)), Amalan Leon (50 years/Arippu north/25-8-2008)) and his son Roshan Leon (21 years/Arippu north/25-8-2008), Anthony Kasthuriarachchi (48 years/Kotahena/10-10-2008) and Kanagaraja Jegan (32 years/Trincomalee)

There hadn’t been a previous instance of the NGO community and ‘independent’ investigators ‘credited’ with playing a direct role in sanctions imposed on the Sri Lankan military, though their participation in the high profile project was widely known.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, in a statement issued on April 26, 2023, declared that Karannagoda and his wife, Srimathi Ashoka Karannagoda, wouldn’t be eligible for entry into the United States.

Karannagoda, the incumbent Governor of the North Western Province, an appointment received from former Commander-in-Chief President Gotabaya Rajapaksa (Nov. 2019-July 2022), told the writer that they hadn’t sought a US visa since his visit to the US, in 2007.

Blinken declared: “The allegation that Wasantha Karannagoda committed a gross human rights violation, documented by NGOs and independent investigations, is serious and credible. The statement didn’t refer to wartime abduction cases at all. But, stressed that the designation pertained to a gross human rights violation.

The US being one the worst human rights offenders, at global level, responsible for millions of extra-judicial killings in the course of illegal regime changes, and other interventions, including helping to run death squads in its backyard, Latin America, since the end of World War 2, in Sept, 1945, only goes to expose its own sheer nakedness and much amusement to the world.

Did the US commitment to punish perpetrators of human rights violations here cover thousands killed in the hands of the Indian Army intervention (July 1987-March 1990), or the killings ordered by New Delhi, prior to the deployment of its military? Successive impotent governments lacked courage or wherewithal at least to set the record straight at the United Nations and Geneva Human Rights Council.

Blinken used the latest statement to remind the Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government of what the Superpower expected of Colombo, amidst the continuing build-up of US-China tensions.

He stressed that the bilateral relationship between the US and Sri Lanka is based on 75 years of shared history, values, and a commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.

Sanctions imposed on Karannagoda were the second such instance, after Ranil Wickremesinghe succeeded President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, in July, 2022. In the second week of January, this year, Canada directed targeted sanctions against four persons, including former Presidents Mahinda Rajapaksa and Gotabaya Rajapaksa, in terms of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. The other two are Staff Sergeant Ratnayake and Lieutenant Commander Chandana Prasad Hettiarachchi.

If these are actions by President Wickremesinghe’s much looked up to Western friends, then we can safely say Sri Lanka does not need enemies.

The last two had been earlier sanctioned by the US for committing serious crimes. Sri Lanka earned the wrath of a section of the international community (meaning the all-powerful Western bloc, led by the US, who audaciously claims world authority with rules they have created for their convenience) for the presidential pardon granted to Staff Sgt. Ratnayake, in 2020. Ratnayake was sentenced to death in 2015 for the killing of eight civilians, including three children.

The designation of the then Lt. Gen. Silva, as claimed by Blinken’s predecessor, Michael R. Pompeo, was based on human rights violations, documented by the UN and other organizations. Pompeo held Gen. Silva responsible for involvement in extrajudicial killings, through command responsibility, at the time he served as the GOC, of the 58th Division, during the final phase of the war, in 2009. Sri Lanka brought the war to a successful conclusion, in May 2009, to the chagrin of the West that wanted permanent chaos here till they achieved their regional goal of not only the breakup of Sri Lanka, but more importantly the disintegration of India, a future convenient nemesis like China.

Chaos after triumph over terrorism

The 15th anniversary of Sri Lanka’s victory over LTTE terrorism falls on May 18 – 16 days from today (May 03). The designation of Karannagoda couldn’t have taken place at a worse time as the country reels under the worst post-independence economic-political-social crisis. The latest development again underscored the pathetic failure on the part of Sri Lanka to address accountability issues. Sri Lanka cannot absolve itself of the responsibility for failing to bring investigations to a successful conclusion. The investigation into a spate of wartime adductions is a case in point.

While we do not condone any extra judicial killings, at the same time the world, but not the hegemonic West or the UNHRC, understands that under the haze of a brutal war, especially when we were fighting the world’s most ruthless terrorist outfit, the LTTE, as even conceded by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, no one could expect us to have played by Geneva rules. How is it that only weak countries, like Sri Lanka, is called to account for everything, while the West gets away with murder of innocents, virtually every day? Just look at what the Israelis are doing to the hapless Palestinian civilians, day in and day out. Are they children of a lesser God to suffer like this for no fault of theirs?

Having personally brought the abductions involving Navy personnel to the notice of police headquarters, in late May 2009, about 10 days after the successful conclusion of the war on the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon, Karannagoda, finally ended up as the 14th suspect in the high profile case. The CID named one-time Sri Lanka’s Ambassador in Tokyo as a suspect in Feb., 2019.

It would be pertinent to discuss Karannagoda’s complaint. Then the serving Navy chief dealt with his chief security officer, Lt. Commander Sampath Munasinghe (no longer in the service). Karannagoda sought police intervention following the recovery of four national identity cards, one passport, bearing the name of one of those whose national identity cards were found, one mobile phone, promissory notes worth over one million rupees and approximately 450 rounds of ammunition from Munasinghe’s cabin, in the headquarters. Karannagoda wanted to have Munasinghe investigated as regards the officer’s possible involvement with terrorists, primarily due to him being in possession of ammunition, not issued to him by the Navy.

There were so many twists and turns in this case, over the years, with police headquarters once wrongly, but deliberately, identifying Lt. Commander Chandana Hettiarachchi (still in service, now holding the rank of Commander) as Navy Sampath, an alias often used to identify Lt. Commander Sampath Munasinghe. At one point, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) questioned the rationale in wrongly identifying Lt. Commander Chandana Hettiarachchi.

Some of those who had been allegedly involved in the abduction cases were investigated over the assassination of Jaffna District TNA lawmaker Nadarajah Raviraj, a lawyer by profession, in Nov., 2006, a year after the killing of Joseph Pararajasingham, in Batticaloa. Ex-LTTE cadre Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, a key suspect in the case, now serves as State Minister for rural road development in the incumbent Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government. The Batticaloa High Court acquitted Chandrakanthan of all charges and released him in January 2021.

The US decision to designate Karannagoda seems quite sudden and done in haste. What really provoked the State Department to put out that statement? National Freedom Front (NFF) leader Wimal Weerawansa’s shocking disclosure of US Ambassador Julie Chung’s bid to influence Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena to succeed President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, in July last year, may have rattled the lady, but that development certainly didn’t cause the designation of Karannagoda. Perhaps, the latest development in the wartime abduction cases sort of reflected a developing crisis within the government. Speaker Abeywardena hasn’t denied lawmaker Weerawansa’s claim that Ambassador Chung visited him, without prior notice, to prevail on him to succeed President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, after the latter’s forced ouster, though the envoy called the NFF’s leader book, titled ‘Nine: The Hidden Story’ a ‘fiction.’

The tottering economy is certainly not the only major concern for the Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa administration. The UNP leader, with just one member from his party in Parliament, is totally dependent on the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP). The SLPP ensured Friday’s vote on the IMF loan, approved by a majority of 95 votes. 120 MPs backed the deal, whereas 25 opposed.

Foreign interventions

At the expense of protocol, foreign envoys do intervene in domestic issues. As we discuss the Karannagoda affair, the writer would like to remind how former US Ambassador Patricia Butenis intervened on behalf of top Navy officer Travis Sinniah with the then Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Butenis secured government approval to have him released from the Navy in July 2011 at a time the Rajapaksas were firmly in control. But, early retirement didn’t prevent Sinniah’s return as the Commander, in August 2016, though his resignation lasted just three months. Similarly, Maj. Gen. Mahesh Senanayake was brought back from retirement to serve as the Army Commander and received the command in 2017.

Did Sinniah earn the wrath of the powers that be for opposing the acquisition of a frigate from Russia, nine years after the end of the war? The then government, both in and outside Parliament, engaged in a desperate bid to justify the acquisition of an expensive vessel. So much so that the then State Minister Lakshman Yapa Abeywardena likened the acquisition of the expensive vessel to the purchase of a BMW, at the price of a Toyota.

Let us get back to the Navy abductions case. It attracted the attention of the UN. At the end of his visit to Colombo, in July 2017, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism, Ben Emmerson, referred to the case in hand at a media briefing at the UN compound in Colombo. The writer was among those invited to cover Emmerson’s briefing at the UN compound in Colombo.

Let me reproduce the relevant paragraph verbatim: “During the Special Rapporteur’s visit, the Chief of the Army, Mahesh Senanayake, made a public commitment to ensure that members of the armed forces, who had committed crimes, would be brought to justice; a senior Naval Commander was arrested for his alleged involvement in the disappearance of 11 people during the closing stages of the conflict, and the Special Rapporteur was assured by the Attorney General that if and when criminal allegations against the military finally reach his office, they will be prosecuted with the full force of the law. The Attorney General recognized that if Sri Lanka was to achieve lasting peace, then its law enforcement institutions must gain the confidence of all sectors of society, including the Tamil and Muslim minorities.

“But these indications fall far short of Sri Lanka’s international commitment to achieve a lasting and just solution to its underlying problems, for the benefit of all its communities, to establish a meaningful system of transitional justice that is governed by the principles of equality and accountability, and to put in place essential and urgently needed reform of the security sector.”

The Naval Commander, Emmerson referred to, was the then Commodore D.K. P. Dassanayake, who was taken in just before Emmerson’s arrival here. Since then Dassanayake has retired, having received the rank of Rear Admiral.

In the run-up to the then Army Chief Sarath Fonseka’s acrimonious public breakup with the Rajapaksas, the Navy abductions case caused quite a stir with some of those who had been under investigation making wild claims, including an alleged and unsubstantiated assassination attempt on the life of Fonseka.

Had they committed atrocities they should certainly be subject to the normal law of the land. They should face the consequences for their actions. Uniforms do not give license for those who wear them to carry out torture, abductions or extra-judicial killings.

Had the Mahinda Rajapaksa government ensured proper and speedy investigations, at least after the UNSG Panel of Experts (PoE), released its damning report on Sri Lanka, in March 2011, the Navy abduction case could have been addressed speedily.

One of the most puzzling questions is why even former internationally distinguished law Professor, like G.L. Peiris, did not bother to properly answer issues raised against Sri Lanka when he served as the External Affairs Minister of the country, especially during much of the relevant post-war periods.

Unfortunately, those who had been in power lacked political courage to do so. Navy leadership, too, never paid sufficient attention. Having plunged post-war Sri Lanka into the worst political-economic-social crisis, those who exercised political power never wanted to go the whole hog. Political interference, over the years, appeared to have impaired the investigation to such an extent, progress seemed to have been unlikely. But the sudden US designation of Karanngoda appeared to have somewhat shaken the establishment, at least a section of it.

Sri Lanka marks the 15th anniversary of her greatest triumph – eradication in the battlefield of an enemy Western powers and India believed impossible to achieve, later this month, in a state of anxiety.

In the absence of a cohesive strategy, Sri Lanka failed to recognize and counter the threat on Sri Lanka’s unitary status that emerged after the eradication of the LTTE’s conventional fighting power. Those who couldn’t stomach the LTTE’s eradication are now working overtime to push their agenda. They seem quite successful in cornering bankrupt Sri Lanka, ripped apart by utterly corrupt, reckless and irresponsible petty party politics.



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Midweek Review

At the edge of a world war

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In September 1939, as Europe descended once more into catastrophe, E. H. Carr published The Twenty Years’ Crisis. Twenty years had separated the two great wars—twenty years to reflect, to reconstruct, to restrain. Yet reflection proved fragile. Carr wrote with unsentimental clarity: once the enemy is crushed, the “thereafter” rarely arrives. The illusion that power can come first and morality will follow is as dangerous as the belief that morality alone can command power. Between those illusions, nations lose themselves.

His warning hovers over the present war in Iran.

The “thereafter” has long haunted American interventions—after Afghanistan, after Iraq, after Libya. The enemy can be dismantled with precision; the aftermath resists precision. Iran is not a small theater. It is a civilization-state with a geography three times larger than Iraq. At its southern edge lies the Strait of Hormuz, narrow in width yet immense in consequence. Geography does not argue; it compels.

Long before Carr, in the quiet anxiety of the eighteenth century, James Madison, principal architect of the Constitution, warned that war was the “true nurse of executive aggrandizement.” War concentrates authority in the name of urgency. Madison insisted that the power to declare war must rest with Congress, not the president—so that deliberation might restrain impulse. Republics persuade themselves that emergency powers are temporary. History rarely agrees.

Then, at 2:30 a.m., the abstraction becomes decision.

Donald Trump declares war on Iran. The announcement crosses continents before markets open in Asia. Within twenty-four hours, Ali Khamenei, who ruled for thirty-seven years, is killed. The President calls him one of history’s most evil figures and presents his death as an opening for the Iranian people.

In exile, Reza Pahlavi hails the moment as liberation. In less than forty-eight hours, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps collapses under overwhelming air power. A regime that endured decades falls swiftly. Military efficiency appears absolute. Yet efficiency does not resolve legitimacy.

The joint strike with Israel is framed as necessary and pre-emptive. Retaliation follows across the Gulf. The architecture of energy trade becomes fragile. Shipping routes are recalculated. Markets respond before diplomacy finds its language.

It is measured in the price of petrol in Colombo. In the bus fare in Karachi. In the rising cost of cooking gas in Dhaka. It is heard in the anxious voice of a migrant worker in Doha calling home to Kandy, asking whether contracts will be renewed, whether flights will continue, whether wages will be delayed. It is calculated in foreign reserves already strained, in currencies that tremble at rumor, in budgets forced to choose between subsidy and solvency.

Zaara was the breadwinner of her house in Sri Lanka. Her husband had been unemployed for years. At last, he secured an opportunity to travel to Israel as a foreign worker—like many Sri Lankans who depend on employment in the Middle East. It was to be their turning point: a small house repaired, debts reduced, dignity restored.

Now she lowers her eyes when she speaks. For Zaara, geopolitics is not theory. It is fear measured in distance—between a construction site abroad and a village waiting at home.

The war in Iran has shattered calculations that once felt practical. Nations like Sri Lanka now require strategic foresight to navigate unfolding realities. Reactive responses—whether to natural disasters or external shocks like this conflict—can cripple economies far faster than gradual pressures. Disruptions to energy imports, migrant remittances, and foreign reserves show how distant wars ripple into daily lives.

War among great powers is debated in think tanks. Its consequences are lived in markets—and in quiet kitchens where uncertainty sits heavier than hunger.

The conflict does not unfold in isolation. It enters the strategic calculus of China and Russia, both attentive to precedent. Power projected beyond the Western hemisphere reshapes perceptions in the Eastern theater. Iran’s transformation intersects directly with broader alignments. In 2021, Beijing and Tehran signed a twenty-five-year strategic agreement. By 2025, China was purchasing the majority of Iran’s exported oil at discounted rates. Energy underwrote strategy. That continuity has been disrupted. Yet strategic relationships do not vanish; they adjust.

In Winds of Change, my new book, I reproduce Nicholas Spykman’s 1944 two-theater confrontation map—Europe and the Pacific during the Second World War. Spykman distinguished maritime power from amphibian projection. Control of the Rimland determined balance. Then, the United States fought across two vast theaters. Today, Europe remains unsettled through Ukraine, the Pacific simmers over Taiwan and the South China Sea, Latin America remains sensitive, and the Middle East has been abruptly transformed. The architecture of multi-theater tension reappears.

At this juncture, the reflections of Marwan Bishara acquire weight. America’s ultimate power, he argues, resides in deterrence, not in the habitual use of force. Power, especially when shared, stabilizes. Force, when used with disregard for international law, breeds instability and humiliation. Arrogance creates enemies and narrows judgment. It is no surprise that many Americans themselves believe the United States should not act alone.

America’s strength does not rest solely in its military reach. Its economy constitutes roughly one-third of global output and generates close to 40 percent of the world’s research and development. Structural power—economic, technological, institutional—has historically underwritten deterrence. When force becomes the primary instrument, influence risks becoming coercion.

The United States now confronts simultaneous pressures across continents. The Second World War demonstrated the capacity to sustain multi-theater engagement; the post-9/11 wars revealed the exhaustion that follows prolonged intervention. Iran, larger and geopolitically deeper, presents a scale that cannot be resolved by air power alone.

Carr’s “thereafter” waits patiently. Military victory may be swift; political reconstruction is slow. Bishara reminds us that deterrence sustains stability, while force risks unraveling it.

At the edge of a potential world war, the decisive question is not who strikes first, but who restrains longest.

History watches. And in places far from the battlefield, mothers wait for phone calls that may not come.

Asanga Abeyagoonasekera is a Senior Research Fellow at the Millennium Project, Washington, D.C., and the author of Winds of Change: Geopolitics at the Crossroads of South and Southeast Asia, published by World Scientific

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Midweek Review

Live Coals Burst Aflame

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Live coals of decades-long hate,

Are bursting into all-consuming flames,

In lands where ‘Black Gold’ is abundant,

And it’s a matter to be thought about,

If humans anywhere would be safe now,

Unless these enmities dying hard,

With roots in imperialist exploits,

And identity-based, tribal violence,

Are set aside and laid finally to rest,

By an enthronement of the principle,

Of the Equal Dignity of Humans.

By Lynn Ockersz

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Midweek Review

Saga of the arrest of retired intelligence chief

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Retired Maj. Gen. Suresh Sallay’s recent arrest attracted internatiattention. His long-expected arrest took place ahead of the seventh anniversary of the bombings. Multiple blasts claimed the lives of nearly 280 people, including 45 foreigners. State-owned international news television network, based in Paris, France 24, declared that arrest was made on the basis of information provided by a whistleblower. The French channel was referring to Hanzeer Azad Moulana, who earlier sought political asylum in the West and one-time close associate of State Minister Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan aka Pilleyan. May be the fiction he wove against Pilleyan and others may have been to strengthen his asylum claim there. Moulana is on record as having told the British Channel 4 that Sallay allowed the attack to proceed with the intention of influencing the 2019 presidential election. The French news agency quoted an investigating officer as having said: “He was arrested for conspiracy and aiding and abetting the Easter Sunday attacks. He has been in touch with people involved in the attacks, even recently.”

****

Suresh Sallay of the Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI) received the wrath of Yahapalana Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, in 2016, over the reportage of what the media called the Chavakachcheri explosives detection made on March 30, 2016. Premier Wickremesinghe found fault with Sallay for the coverage, particularly in The Island. Police arrested ex-LTTE child combatant Edward Julian, alias Ramesh, after the detection of one suicide jacket, four claymore mines, three parcels containing about 12 kilos of explosives, to battery packs and several rounds of 9mm ammunition, from his house, situated at Vallakulam Pillaiyar Kovil Street. Chavakachcheri police made the detection, thanks to information provided by the second wife of Ramesh. Investigations revealed that the deadly cache had been brought by Ramesh from Mannar (Detection of LTTE suicide jacket, mines jolts government: Fleeing Tiger apprehended at checkpoint, The Island, March 31, 2016).

The then Jaffna Security Forces Commander, Maj. Gen. Mahesh Senanayake, told the writer that a thorough inquiry was required to ascertain the apprehended LTTE cadre’s intention. The Chavakachcheri detection received the DMI’s attention. The country’s premier intelligence organisation meticulously dealt with the issue against the backdrop of an alleged aborted bid to revive the LTTE in April 2014. Of those who had been involved in the fresh terror project, three were killed in the Nedunkerny jungles. There hadn’t been any other incidents since the Nedunkerny skirmish, until the Chavakachcheri detection.

Piqued by the media coverage of the Chavakachcheri detection, the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration tried to silence the genuine Opposition. As the SLFP had, contrary to the expectations of those who voted for the party at the August 2015 parliamentary elections, formed a treacherous coalition with the UNP, the Joint Opposition (JO) spearheaded the parliamentary opposition.

The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) questioned former External Affairs Minister and top JO spokesman, Prof. G.L. Peiris, over a statement made by him regarding the Chavakachcheri detection. The former law professor questioned the legality of the CID’s move against the backdrop of police declining to furnish him a certified copy of the then acting IGP S.M. Wickremesinghe’s directive that he be summoned to record a statement as regards the Chavakachcheri lethal detection.

One-time LTTE propagandist Velayutham Dayanidhi, a.k.a. Daya Master, raised with President Maithripala Sirisena the spate of arrests made by law enforcement authorities, in the wake of the Chavakachcheri detection. Daya Master took advantage of a meeting called by Sirisena, on 28 April, 2016, at the President’s House, with the proprietors of media organisations and journalists, to raise the issue. The writer having been among the journalists present on that occasion, inquired from the ex-LETTer whom he represented there. Daya Master had been there on behalf of DAN TV, Tamil language satellite TV, based in Jaffna. Among those who had been detained was Subramaniam Sivakaran, at that time Youth Wing leader of the Illankai Thamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK), the main constituent of the now defunct Tamil National Alliance. In addition to Sivakaran, the police apprehended several hardcore ex-LTTE cadres (LTTE revival bid confirmed: TNA youth leader arrested, The Island April 20, 2016).

Ranil hits out at media

Subsequent inquiries revealed the role played by Sivakaran in some of those wanted in connection with the Chavakachcheri detection taking refuge in India. When the writer sought an explanation from the then TNA lawmaker, M.A. Sumanthiran, regarding Sivakaran’s arrest, the lawyer disowned the Youth Wing leader. Sumanthiran emphasised that the party suspended Sivakumaran and Northern Provincial Council member Ananthi Sasitharan for publicly condemning the TNA’s decision to endorse Maithripala Sirisena’s candidature at the 2015 presidential election (Chava explosives: Key suspects flee to India, The Island, May 2, 2016).

Premier Wickremesinghe went ballistic on May 30, 2016. Addressing the 20th anniversary event of the Sri Lanka Muslim Media Forum, at the Sports Ministry auditorium, the UNP leader castigated the DMI. Alleging that the DMI had been pursuing an agenda meant to undermine the Yahapalana administration, Wickremesinghe, in order to make his bogus claim look genuine, repeatedly named the writer as part of that plot. Only Wickremesinghe knows the identity of the idiot who influenced him to make such unsubstantiated allegations. The top UNPer went on to allege that The Island, and its sister paper Divaina, were working overtime to bring back Dutugemunu, a reference to war-winning President Mahinda Rajapaksa. A few days later, sleuths from the Colombo Crime Detection Bureau (CCD) visited The Island editorial to question the writer where lengthy statements were recorded. The police were acting on the instructions of the then Premier, who earlier publicly threatened to send police to question the writer.

In response to police queries about Sallay passing information to the media regarding the Chavakachcheri detection and subsequent related articles, the writer pointed out that the reportage was based on response of the then ASP Ruwan Gunasekera, AAL and Sumanthiran, as had been reported.

Wickremesinghe alleged, at the Muslim media event, that a section of the media manipulated coverage of certain incidents, ahead of the May Day celebrations.

In early May 2016 Wickremesinghe disclosed that he received assurances from the police, and the DMI, that as the LTTE had been wiped out the group couldn’t stage a comeback. The declaration was made at the Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute for International Relations and Strategic Studies (LKIIRIS) on 3 May 2016. Wickremesinghe said that he sought clarifications from the police and the DMI in the wake of the reportage of the Chavakachcheri detection and related developments (PM: LTTE threat no longer exists, The Island, May 5, 2016).

The LTTE couldn’t stage a comeback as a result of measures taken by the then government. It would be a grave mistake, on our part, to believe that the eradication of the LTTE’s conventional military capacity automatically influenced them to give up arms. The successful rehabilitation project, that had been undertaken by the Rajapaksa government and continued by successive governments, ensured that those who once took up arms weren’t interested in returning to the same deadly path.

In spite of the TNA and others shedding crocodile tears for the defeated Tigers, while making a desperate effort to mobilise public opinion against the government, the public never wanted the violence to return. Some interested parties propagated the lie that regardless of the crushing defeat suffered in the hands of the military, the LTTE could resume guerilla-type operations, paving the way for a new conflict. But by the end of 2014, and in the run-up to the presidential election in January following year, the situation seemed under control, especially with Western countries not wanting to upset things here with a pliant administration in the immediate horizon. Soon after the presidential election, the government targeted the armed forces. Remember Sumanthiran’s declaration that the ITAK Youth Wing leader Sivakaran had been opposed to the TNA backing Sirisena at the presidential poll.

The US-led accountability resolution had been co-sponsored by the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe duo to appease the TNA and Tamil Diaspora. The Oct. 01, 2016, resolution delivered a knockout blow to the war-winning armed forces. The UNP pursued an agenda severely inimical to national interests. It would be pertinent to mention that those who now represent the main Opposition, Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), were part of the treacherous UNP.

Suresh moved to Malaysia

The Yahapalana leadership resented Sallay’s work. They wanted him out of the country at a time a new threat was emerging. The government attacked the then Justice Minister Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, PC, who warned of the emerging threat from foreign-manipulated local Islamic fanatics on 11 Nov. 2016, in Parliament. Rajapakshe didn’t mince his words when he underscored the threat posed by some Sri Lanka Muslim families taking refuge in Syria where ISIS was running the show. The then government, of which he was part o,f ridiculed their own Justice Minister. Both Sirisena and Wickremesinghe feared action against extremism may cause erosion of Muslim support. By then Sallay, who had been investigating the deadly plot, was out of the country. The Yahapalana government believed that the best way to deal with Sallay was to grant him a diplomatic posting. Sally ended up in Malaysia, a country where the DMI played a significant role in the repatriation of Kumaran Pathmanathan, alias KP, after his arrest there.

Having served the military for over three cadres, Sallay retired in 2024 in the rank of Major General. Against the backdrop of his recent arrest, in connection with the ongoing investigation into the 2019 Easter Sunday carnage, The Island felt the need to examine the circumstances Sallay ended up in Malaysia at the time. Now, remanded in terms of the Prevention of terrorism Act (PTA), he is being accused of directing the Easter Sunday operation from Malaysia.

Pivithuru Hela Urumaya leader and former Minister Udaya Gammanpila has alleged that Sallay was apprehended in a bid to divert attention away from the deepening coal scam. Having campaigned on an anti-corruption platformm in the run up to the previous presidential election, in September 2024, the Parliament election, in November of the same year, and local government polls last year, the incumbent dispensation is struggling to cope up with massive corruption issues, particularly the coal scam, which has not only implicated the Energy Minister but the entire Cabinet of Ministers as well.

The crux of the matter is whether Sallay actually met would-be suicide bombers, in February 2018, in an estate, in the Puttalam district, as alleged by the UK’s Channel 4 television, like the BBC is, quite famous for doing hatchet jobs for the West. This is the primary issue at hand. Did Sallay clandestinely leave Malaysia to meet suicide bombers in the presence of Hanzeer Azad Moulana, one-time close associate of State Minister Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, aka Pilleyan, former LTTE member?

The British channel raised this issue with Sallay, in 2023, at the time he served as Director, State Intelligence (SIS). Sallay is on record as having told Channel 4 Television that he was not in Sri Lanka the whole of 2018 as he was in Malaysia serving in the Sri Lankan Embassy there as Minister Counsellor.

Therefore, the accusation that he met several members of the National Thowheeth Jamaath (NTJ), including Mohamed Hashim Mohamed Zahran, in Karadipuval, Puttalam, in Feb. 2018, was baseless, he has said.

The intelligence officer has asked the British television station to verify his claim with the Malaysian authorities.

Responding to another query, Sallay had told Channel 4 that on April 21, 2019, the day of the Easter Sunday blasts, he was in India, where he was accommodated at the National Defence College (NDC). That could be verified with the Indian authorities, Sallay has said, strongly denying Channel 4’s claim that he contacted one of Pilleyan’s cadres, over, the phone and directed him to pick a person outside Hotel Taj Samudra.

According to Sallay, during his entire assignment in Malaysia, from Dec. 2016 to Dec. 2018, he had been to Colombo only once, for one week, in Dec. 2017, to assist in an official inquiry.

Having returned to Colombo, Sallay had left for NDC, in late Dec. 2018, and returned only after the conclusion of the course, in November 2019.

Sallay has said so in response to questions posed by Ben de Pear, founder, Basement Films, tasked with producing a film for Channel 4 on the Easter Sunday bombings.

The producer has offered Sallay an opportunity to address the issues in terms of Broadcasting Code while inquiring into fresh evidence regarding the officer’s alleged involvement in the Easter Sunday conspiracy.

The producer sought Sallay’s response, in August 2023, in the wake of political upheaval following the ouster of Gotabaya Rajapaksa, elected at the November 2019 presidential election.

At the time, the Yahapalana government granted a diplomatic appointment to Sallay, he had been head of the Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI). After the 2019 presidential election, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa named him the Head of SIS.

The Basement Films has posed several questions to Sallay on the basis of accusations made by Hanzeer Azad Moulana.

In response to the film producer’s query regarding Sallay’s alleged secret meeting with six NTJ cadres who blasted themselves a year later, Sallay has questioned the very basis of the so called new evidence as he was not even in the country during the period the clandestine meeting is alleged to have taken place.

Contradictory stands

Following Sajith Premadasa’s anticipated defeat at the 2019 presidential election, Harin Fernando accused the Catholic Church of facilitating Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s victory. Fernando, who is also on record as having disclosed that his father knew of the impending Easter Sunday attacks, pointed finger at the Archbishop of Colombo, Rt. Rev Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith, for ensuring Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s victory.

Former President Maithripala Sirisena, as well as JVP frontliner Dr. Nalinda Jayathissa, accused India of masterminding the Easter Sunday bombings. Then there were claims of Sara Jasmin, wife of Katuwapitiya suicide bomber Mohammed Hastun, being an Indian agent who was secretly removed after the Army assaulted extremists’ hideout at Sainthamaruthu in the East. What really had happened to Sara Jasmin who, some believe, is key to the Easter Sunday puzzle.

Then there was huge controversy over the arrest of Attorney-at-Law Hejaaz Hizbullah over his alleged links with the Easter Sunday bombers. Hizbullah, who had been arrested in April 2020, served as lawyer to the extremely wealthy spice trader Mohamed Yusuf Ibrahim’s family that had been deeply involved in the Easter Sunday plot. Mohamed Yusuf Ibrahim had been on the JVP’s National List at the 2015 parliamentary elections. The lawyer received bail after two years. Two of the spice trader’s sons launched suicide attacks, whereas his daughter-in-law triggered a suicide blast when police raided their Dematagoda mansion, several hours after the Easter Sunday blasts.

Investigations also revealed that the suicide vests had been assembled at a factory owned by the family and the project was funded by them. It would be pertinent to mention that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government never really bothered to conduct a comprehensive investigation to identify the Easter Sunday terror project. Perhaps, their biggest failure had been to act on the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) recommendations. Instead, President Rajapaksa appointed a six-member committee, headed by his elder brother, Chamal Rajapaksa, to examine the recommendations, probably in a foolish attempt to improve estranged relations with the influential Muslim community. That move caused irreparable damage and influenced the Church to initiate a campaign against the government. The Catholic Church played quite a significant role in the India- and US-backed 2022 Aragalaya that forced President Rajapaksa to flee the country.

Interested parties exploited the deterioration of the national economy, leading to unprecedented declaration of the bankruptcy of the country in April 2022, to mobilie public anger that was used to achieve political change.

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