The unholy alliance of the LTTE and the JVP
Goshaka
For years after the JVP leader Rohana Wijeweera unleashed a
Molotov-style cocktail revolution in 1971 in a futile attempt to grab
power but was thwarted under the leadership of Sirimavo Bandaranaike and
Felix Reginald Dias Bandaranaike, and the subsequent political
developments in Sri Lanka, which showed some ascendancy of the political
power of the JVP mainly due to its campaign they carried out against the
Tamil political groups including Thondaman and then the LTTE, the people
of Sri Lanka had always believed that the arch enemy of the LTTE was not
the Government but the JVP.
JVP called itself a Marxist-Leninist party, and based its
revolutionary struggle on the strategies adopted by Castro and Che
Guevara to take over Cuba. The folk hero was Che Guevara. At that time,
with the Soviet block in power, and the capitalist structure seemingly
in disarray, Che Guevara was the hero of millions of youngsters around
the world. Rohana Wijeweera grew a beard and sported a cap to have a
physical resemblance of his hero and Demi-God, Che Guevara.
In the early days of the JVP Rohana Wijeweera wrote a thesis on the
ethnic crisis.
If one reads his voluminous and platitudinous dissertation on solving
the ethnic crisis, one would not see much of a difference between the
Marxist Leninist theories of the right of self-determination; the right
of the Tamil people to secede from Sri Lanka.
Easy spread
Most youth could not understand the theory and when the JVP brought
forth a communal bigoted anti-Tamil agenda, this book was soon
forgotten. Before sowing the seeds of communal hatred Rohana Wijeweera
played into the minds of the youth, who had been discriminated against
for thousands of years due to their origins of birth. At that time,
caste played an important role in society.
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The Indian Peace Keeping Force in Northern Sri Lanka. |
The halls of fame were opened only to the elite or to the Govigama
Kandyan Buddhists. The majority of the Sri Lankan population was not
Sinhala Kandyan Buddhist.
So, it was easy to spread the message of discrimination, which was
largely true and impose it upon the intellectually inferior, uneducated
youth, who had little learning of the English language and little
knowledge of the world around them, to convince them to accept
Wijeweera’s own interpretation of the Marxist Leninist theory.
The torch bearers of this new ideology were the JVP. The conventional
Marxists were not only considered as pseudo Marxists but also as
anti-Nationalist and were made the objects of hatred. Later, many in the
Leftist movement were killed by the JVP.
At the same time in Jaffna, Prabhakaran followed the leaders of the
TULF and other leaders of their generation, whose rhetoric mixed with
racial hatred easily captured the imagination of the youth, who had been
prevented from entering the universities by certain legislations brought
by the Government in the South.
Though the leaders proclaimed, on the political stage, that their
struggle was to achieve an independent State for the Tamils, called
Eelam, to convert the more conservative masses to their ideology, yet it
was built on a dreamland fantasy.
Promise
The promise of a State where the Tamils would rule themselves was the
means of capturing the votes of the youth, in order to come in power
during the Parliamentary Elections.
The youth believed in the promises and pledges of their elder
statesmen.
When in power they changed their tune as they knew that this was an
impossible pledge like all election pledges. The youth soon found out
the truth, that for the umpteenth time the politicians had failed them.
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Rohana Wijeweera |

Prabhakaran |
Prabhakaran has something very much in common with Rohana Wijeweera.
Both came for the farthest Northern point and Southern tip of the
Island. They both belonged to the Karave and Kareiya (fisher) caste.
Prabhakaran appealed to the youth who had been distanced by the
Brahmins and the Vellalas. They used the caste as an instrument of
oppression. In the North it was far worse than in the South. In the
South, the notion of caste was gradually withering away, but in the
North, it was a part and parcel of the long Hindu traditional culture.
Prabhakaran saw this as an opportunity to attract the youth to his
movement. He also displayed his daring qualities by pulling the trigger
to kill Alfred Duraiappah, the Mayor of Jaffna in 1975. Duraiappah came
from the nobility.
He was elected from the Sri Lanka Freedom Party and became the Mayor
of Jaffna. He was a popular politician who could not be easily defeated,
so Prabhakaran shot him dead.
The children of the other so called inferior castes, who had been
oppressed for centuries by the Vellalas, saw the emergence of
Prabhakaran as a beacon of light that would emancipate them from the
narrow parochial caste society of Jaffna. It is a well-known fact that
though Prabhakaran earned the respect of the Vellalas for his bravery
and audacity, yet he would never be entertained in the house of a
Vellala, as it would be necessary to wash the house with water mixed
with saffron to cleanse it.
Rohana Wijeweera and Vellupillai Prabhakaran had the same ideals.
They hoped to become the leaders of their own Government. Both thought
of ushering in a new era. Both were Marxists who had followed the
heroics of Che Guevara and the mass adulation of Che Guevara during that
era.
It was symbolic to have the posters of Che Guevara in one’s room, to
show that you were different from the rest of the decadent society, and
it brought intellectual superiority.
Objective
In 1971, the insurgency was unleashed by Rohana Wijeweera with the
objective of the ultimate liberation from the multifaceted oppressions.
It was also based on Rohana Wijeweera’s superiority of intellect and his
rhetoric of being an undergraduate of the Lumumba University which
expelled him as his revolutionary fervor was so radiant that even the
Russians could not temper it.
His plan was precise, and was based on the module of Castro and his
small but loyal army that threw out Batista’s corrupt Government.
Rohana Wijeweera’s army comprised mainly of the lower caste Sinhala
youth and members of the disbanded ‘Govi Hamudava’, a creation of the
UNP.
Prabhakaran went into hiding after successfully shooting down Alfred
Duriappah, the Mayor of Jaffna. The methods employed by Prabhakaran were
more sophisticated than those employed by the JVP, as he had learnt from
the mistakes of Rohana Wijeweera. Vellupillai Prabhakaran was virtually
the younger brother of Rohana Wijeweera. They had many things in common,
and racism was their forte. After the defeat of the insurrection, and
after being released by J. R. Jayewardene, Wijeweera decided to fight
the UNP and Jayewardene.
Originally, the UNP was very much elated by the fact that Rohana
Wijeweera, during the famous meeting held at the Town Hall, after being
released from jail, castigated the dethroned Mrs.
Sirimavo Bandaranaike, which they dearly wanted. Rohana Wijeweera
became the spokesman of the anti-Bandaranaike ethos as the UNP wanted to
plant mass hatred on their famous feudal leadership theory of Mrs.
Bandaranaike. Jayewardene feared that in the near future, Sirimavo
Bandaranaike would again come out of defeat and challenge the UNP.
Hence, Jayewardene found a devoted ally in Rohana Wijeweera.
After shooting Duriappah and escaping to India, Prabhakaran had the
opportunity of coming back to Sri Lanka when he found that the separate
state promised by the TULF was a sham. In the 1977 elections, the SLFP
and the Left were decimated.
As usual, the Sinhalese Government made enough mistakes not to
address the ethnic question. Amirthalingam was enjoying the fruits of
being the Leader of the Opposition, which gave him a powerful position
equivalent to the rank of a Cabinet Minister.
Rohana Wijeweera found that his glib talk about the utopian goal of a
socialist state, devoid of corruption, a goal that would bring ultimate
liberation to the oppressed Sri Lankan people by democratic means, was
elusive. Wijeweera found to his amazement that the Sri Lankans had not
forgotten the killing fields, the gory spectacles of dead bodies
floating in the rivers and quickly distanced themselves from him and his
band of killers.
Wijeweera believed, like his followers, that the country would vote
for him when he contested for the Presidential elections. Like Kumar
Ponnambalam, Rohana Wijeweera was taught a lesson of his lifetime on
what democracy means in Sri Lanka.
J. R. Jayewardene was accused by Rohana Wijeweera of being aligned
with Thondaman, and paving the way for a multi-religious, multi-cultural
society where he alleged that the majority community, the Sinhalese
Buddhists were deprived of their rights. Prabhakaran appealed to the
youth and stated that the liberation of the Tamil people would come only
through a separate state and it could be fulfilled only by an armed
struggle.
After the 1983 Black July, both Prabhakaran and Rohana Wijeweera got
a new lease of life. The chauvinist Sinhala barbarians who killed the
Tamils and destroyed their property created two monsters;
Rohana Wijeweera and Vellupillai Prabhakaran. Soon, Wijeweera went
into hiding when he was accused of being instrumental in the racial
riots. Prabhakaran found that the exodus of the Tamil people from Sri
Lanka to the other countries, a great blessing in disguise as most
Western Embassies provided them with open visas to travel to any country
and be domiciled as refugees.
The Tamil diaspora was the main backers of Prabhakaran. Long after
the racial riots, the exodus to the West continued. Most Tamils went to
the West as economic refugees.
Therefore, it was important for them that Prabhakaran continued with
the war as, if peace returned they would have been compelled to return
to Sri Lanka and thousands of Tamils waiting to obtain refugee status
would be returned. The Diaspora continued to support the Eelam War and
keep the engine of destruction working overtime. Peace was the last
thing they expected.
If you trace the history of both the JVP and the LTTE, one comes to
the irresistible conclusion that knowingly or unknowingly, deliberately
or by accident, overtly or covertly, both had been partners in the
struggle to destabilise Sri Lanka.
They supported each other’s cause. If Rohana Wijeweera and his men
were to seize power in the South, and Prabhakaran in the North and
Eastern provinces, they would complement each other. They deceived the
masses in a bid to achieve these goals.
After the Indian intervention and the signing of the Peace Accord,
and the deploying of the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka, most
of the Tamils in the North and East believed that the war would come to
an end.
They believed Prabhakaran would never defy the agreement that had
been signed. For the LTTE, the only escape route was to reach India when
the danger was imminent. So it was thought too foolish to accept the
fact that Prabha would renegade on the promises given to Rajiv Ghandi
that he would honour the Indo-Lanka Agreement.
Though Rajiv Ghandi virtually forced Prabhakaran to sign the
Agreement of acceptance, he never comprehended the deceptive mind of
Prabha, who only wanted to escape from the High Security prison. It was
the only way Prabhakaran could have escaped from the prison guarded by
the elitist Black Tiger commandos of the Indian Army. “Get me out of the
Prison, I will teach Rajiv Ghandhi a lesson,” Prabha echoed.
Imprisoned
Similarly Rohana Wijeweera imprisoned by the Presidential Commission
entered into a deal with JRJ and agreed to support the UNP if he was
released. He agreed that under no circumstance would he launch another
struggle against the Government.
The accidental shooting of a University student caused the students
to dress in white and go from house to house with pictures of their dead
colleague and plead with parents not to vote for Mrs. Bandaranaike’s
Government.
The deal with the JVP was sealed and JRJ got 2/3rd majority.
Wijeweera was released and when he was asked what he would do if JVP
unleashed another arms struggle, JRJ, who was supposed to be as cunning
as a fox and articulate was that he was named the ‘Twentieth Century
Fox’ said he (Rohana) will have to find a place to hide. I am not Mrs.
Bandaranaike, everyone clapped. Even Rohana Wijeweera must have clapped
non-stop like the members of the Politburo of Soviet Russia clapping
after Stalin’s speech.
This was the same attitude JR took when he sent his cousin, former
Army Commander ‘Bull Weeratunga’, to Jaffna to quell the LTTE.
Prabhakaran and Rohana Wijeweera may have jointly applauded the Fox for
giving them an additional lease of life by these horrendous political
mistakes.
After the Sri Lanka Army hierarchy, comprising Royalists and Thomians
declared that it would take only eight minutes for the Indian Army to
take over Sri Lanka after the infamous ‘Parippu drop’, JRJ and Rajiv
signed the Indo-Lanka Agreement. The Agreement included the Cessation of
Hostilities and the handing over of all the weapons by the LTTE to the
Sri Lankan Government.
The euphoria that engulfed the nation when the LTTE activist
symbolically handed over a weapon, to the Secretary of Defence Attygalle,
made many people believe that that marked the end of the hostilities.
But it was soon found out that only a few weapons were handed over to
the Sri Lankan Government. So it was that Rajiv Gandhi and JRJ were
fooled by Prabhakarn. Prabha had not shifted even an inch from his
utopian goal of Eelam and believed that only through an armed struggle
can Eelam be achieved.
Greatest enemy
Then Prabhakaran decided to wage war against the LTTE’s former
mentors. Prabha and his comrade in the South Rohana Wijeweera jointly
opposed the Indian Army.
As it was a possibility that the Indian Peace Keeping Force would
eventually defeat Prabhakaran and implement the 13th Amendment which
would have deprived both Prabha and Rohana from achieving and sharing
power.
If the greatest enemy of the JVP was the LTTE and their public enemy
number one was Prabhakaran, then the JVP should have welcomed the advent
of the Indian Peace Keeping Force which would eventually have destroyed
the LTTE terrorists and would bring long lasting peace to the country.
Instead, Rohana Wijeweera decided to unleash a continuous armed struggle
against the occupation of the Northern and Eastern provinces by a
foreign army.
Though many Sinhalese were killed by the DJV for selling, for
patronising Indian goods, not a single Indian soldier was even harmed by
the DJV.
Rohana Wijeweera and the JVP started a spate of killings in the South
and a campaign against the so-called Indian expansionism. They killed
any person selling Indian goods, including drugs. The former Chairman of
a Pharmaceutical Corporation was killed for the alleged reason of having
sold Indian medicine.
Why did Prabhakaran want the Indian Peace Keeping Force, which
virtually confined the Sri Lankan Army to barracks, to leave Sri Lanka?
Why did he start the struggle against the Indian Peace Keeping Forces?
How did a ragtag band of young rebels manage to kill so many Indian
soldiers?
This would clearly show that Prabhakaran was determined to fight
against the Indian Army mainly because the Indo-Lanka Agreement, though
denounced by the Sinhala racists, was not sufficient for Prabhakaran. He
felt that he must be the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of Eelam,
and cannot be interfered with anyone.
Peaceful settlement
Why did Rohana Wijeweera then oppose the Indian Peace Keeping Force
and the mandate of the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord, if it was to crush the
LTTE and make them politically inferior resulting in the implementation
of the 13th Amendment, enforcing a peaceful settlement to the ethnic
crisis?
How could that concept be repulsive to the ideals of the JVP? The
rationale behind these two extremist parties, fighting to get rid of the
Indian Peace Keeping Force, was the same. Both did not support an
amicable settlement of the ethnic crisis.
Prabhakaran found that the Peace Keeping Force was a hindrance to his
utopian dream. Wijeweera thought that it would stabilise Sri Lanka and
devolve power to the Tamils, and would effectively negate any chance of
the JVP capturing power in the South. So, both the JVP and Prabhakaran
were partners in the same crusade of achieving their ambitious goals by
defeating their common enemy, the Indian Peace Keeping Force.
The young and the not so young accepted the theory as proposed by
their leaders. They were virulently either anti-Tamil or anti-Sinhalese.
They were both racist, had their own goals and believed that once the
Indian Peace Keeping Force was restrained, then the internecine struggle
would erupt again. The Indian Peace Keeping Force went to the extent of
killing all the LTTE veterans. |