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MAY
29, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 21
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Sena
Vidanagama/AFP.
Police commandoes attempt to diffuse live explosives strapped to the
body of a rebel suicide bomber, who was shot dead before he could
carry out his deadly attack in Colombo in March.
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The
Tigers Claw Back
Once
dismissed as a spent force, Sri Lanka's Tamil rebels, led by the ruthless
tactician Velupillai Prabhakaran, stand on the verge of a stunning victory
on the Jaffna peninsula
By MICHAEL FATHERS Colombo
Written off by the Sri Lankan army five years ago as a spent guerrilla
force, the Tamil Tigers are close to pulling off their most stunning victory--the
military conquest of the Jaffna peninsula. Opening fresh attacks almost
daily against government troops positioned on roads around Jaffna City,
they are stretching the Sri Lankan force to its limit and blocking all
avenues for reinforcement. After months of meticulous planning, extra
recruitment and training and the capture of long-range artillery, the
Tigers, known formally as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (ltte),
have shown a new side to their talent for war.
The estimated 6,000 Tiger soldiers--about half of whom are women--have
emerged as a compact attacking force using the strategy of highly mobile
conventional armies favored by the world's most advanced countries. The
Tigers have pushed aside several Sri Lankan army divisions, numbering
around 20,000 troops, and trapped an additional 35,000 with their backs
to the sea around the defense enclave of Palali air base and Kankasanthurai
port with no guarantee of evacuation. As shells from the captured 122-mm
Howitzers and 152-mm field guns landed inside the perimeter fence last
week, Indian navy ships were cruising south of Madras, near the northern
tip of Sri Lanka. They had orders to be ready to move in at short notice.
President Chandrika Kumaratunga told members of Parliament the troops
would stay and that emergency purchases of essential military equipment
were on their way.
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ALSO IN TIME
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COVER: Nice Guys Finish Last
A backslapping
former movie actor with a penchant for telling off-color jokes,
President Joseph Estrada seems ill-equipped to solve his country's
many problems
Hostage Drama: In
search of a breakthrough
JAPAN: Dirty Little Secret
As deadly toxins contaminate the environment, the nation's leaders
simply look the other way
The Activist: One
man's clean-up crusade
Viewpoint: A plea
to take action before it's too late
AFGHANISTAN:
Religion in Command
The Taliban have ignored the intricacies of governing, leaving the
impoverished nation in crisis
Herat: The country's
golden goose has its own rules
Women: Opportunities
are still dismal
Education:
Home-based schools for girls quietly flourish
MALAYSIA:
Pirate Trade
Authorities struggle to stop booming exports of digital counterfeits
INDIA:
Holy Cow!
Animal-rights activists expose the barbaric transport and slaughter
of the country's most revered beasts
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Teresita
Schaffer, former U.S. ambassador to Sri Lanka and a director of the Center
for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, says this is the
first time the Tigers have mounted such a sustained offensive against
Colombo's 120,000-man military. "This is really an astonishing failure
on the part of the Sri Lankan army and an astonishing breakthrough on
the part of the Tigers."
The makeover of the world's most successful terrorist organization into
a model army can be attributed to its secretive leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran,
46, a confessed assassin who is poorly educated but intelligent and methodical.
"He takes notes on everything," says Varatharaja Perumal, the first and
last leader of the short-lived, Indian-installed provincial government
of Northeast Sri Lanka. "He is very interested in numerology and he is
fearful of the number eight in all its combinations. And he's a psychopath."
Ever since he was a teenager, Prabhakaran has been determined to create
a homeland for Sri Lanka's Tamils under his leadership. To opponents,
he is a murderer, having wiped out hundreds of other Tamil nationalists
over the past 17 years of conflict. The Tigers have perfected the suicide
killing, and victims have included a former Indian Prime Minister, a Sri
Lankan President and more than 50 other prominent Sri Lankans, including
cabinet ministers and legislators. To his supporters, especially among
the 900,000 Sri Lankan Tamils living abroad in Europe, North America and
Australasia, Prabhakaran is the only man who can defend Tamil rights and
remedy Tamil grievances. His argument is simple: the Tamils, who comprise
12.5% of Sri Lanka's 19 million people, and the majority Sinhalese cannot
live together in peace. Thus a separate state, Eelam, is necessary in
the Tamil heartland of northern and eastern Sri Lanka. "There is a belief
among Tamils that the Tigers may be bastards, but they are our bastards,"
says Schaffer. "You find a lot of otherwise nice, sweet, reasonable people
who say that they don't agree with their tactics, but the boys have put
us on the map."
There is very little of the map that the Tigers have not penetrated, in
one form or another. They operate a highly secretive set of businesses
around the globe--including running illegal immigrants into Europe and
North America--that deliver an estimated $60 million a year to the Tigers'
war chest. They also own more than a dozen ships. In between smuggling
arms, ammunition, explosives and illegal narcotics using different front
companies, the Tigers transport rice, cement and other legitimate cargo
to Asia, the Middle East and the Mediterranean.
The Tigers have tapped into Tamil communities in more than 40 countries,
often using violence and intimidation to collect "taxes" from local businesses
and Tamil families--ranging from 33¢ a day in Canada to $300 a year in
Britain. By linking Tamil issues to local politics behind innocent-looking
charities, they have subtly involved politicians in the cause. Earlier
this month Canadian Minister of Finance Paul Martin and Minister of International
Cooperation Maria Minna attended a $40-a-plate fund-raising dinner for
fact, a Tamil charitable association identified by Canadian and U.S. authorities
as a vehicle for funneling funds to the Tigers. Martin, who wants to be
Canada's Prime Minister, said he had done nothing wrong and that the two
ministers were answering an invitation to attend a cultural event.
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John
Macdougall/AFP.
Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga narrowly survived an assassination
attempt in December 1999, shortly before she was elected into office
for a second term.
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The
ltte is a tightly structured organization with Prabhakaran firmly in charge.
It operates specialized sections for each main task--fighting at sea,
commando operations, intelligence, communications and finance. The international
procurement network organizes all military purchases: explosives from
the Balkans, multiple rocket launchers from Ukraine, surface-to-air missiles
that are paid for in Bulgaria and picked up in Cambodia. Military analysts
say, however, that at least 60% of the Tigers' hardware, especially heavy
weapons such as artillery, tanks, armored personnel carriers and even
service workshops, have been captured intact from the Sri Lankan army.
The man handling this international supermarket is Kumaran Pathmanathan,
known as KP to his colleagues. Rohan Gunaratna, an expert on international
terrorism at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, says that without
Pathmanathan and his uninterrupted supply lines the Tigers would not have
been so successful against the Sri Lankan army. "He's an extraordinary
man whose abilities have been continuously underestimated," says Gunaratna.
That seems to have been the fate--or perhaps the advantage--of the ltte
since it was set up by Prabhakaran 24 years ago. The group's rivals never
took it seriously-- until it began exterminating them, hunting cadres
across the Jaffna peninsula and leaving corpses tied to lampposts. Successive
Sri Lankan governments, along with India during its abortive three-year
peacekeeping attempt, have misread Prabhakaran and the Tigers. Delhi ended
up fighting them and losing. No one has infiltrated them, and they show
a remarkable capacity for learning from their mistakes. Every attack is
planned meticulously; sappers infiltrate the perimeter wires of camps,
videotape what they see and identify dummy bunkers and fireposts. Sand
models are made of the target, and each attack is rehearsed endlessly.
Most weapons training and purchases are done from manuals that are translated
into Tamil and studied again and again. By contrast, training in the Sri
Lankan army is a once-only affair that leaves soldiers unprepared for
the ever-changing tactics of their foes. Army senior commanders are also
victims of the unsettled whims of successive political leaders in Colombo.
And in their midst are the favorites who take their high posts from the
political patronage of whichever party is in power.
If Prabhakaran succeeds in dislodging the Sri Lankan army from the Jaffna
peninsula, he is unlikely to declare that Eelam has arrived. Eelam to
most Tamils is a state of mind. And until there is a political settlement
with Colombo that is endorsed by the rest of the world, it is likely to
remain a dream.
With reporting by R. Bhagwan Singh/Madras, Mike Blanchfield/Ottawa,
Helen Gibson/London and Barry Hillenbrand/Washington
Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com
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