Pirapaharan
By: T. Sabaratnam 28. RAW Meets Pirapaharan Pondy Bazaar Shootout With unbridled power concentrated in his hands, President
Jayewardene set out to stifle the fledgling Tamil militancy. But the
tools he used- state terrorism and weakening of the moderate leadership-
were counterproductive. Police and army atrocities, in the process of
frightening the Tamil people into submission, emboldened them. They
drove the Tamil people into the arms of the militant groups. They helped
the militant groups to gradually assume the role of protectors. Weakening of the TULF by refusing to make the DDCs effective too
had a similar effect. The TULF which put the entirety of its hopes and
future on the success of the DDC system lost its credibility, as it had
nothing to show the people as its achievement. Police and army pressure on the militants did to some extent
debilitated the PLOTE as some of its top men like Mariyanayagam,
Ganeshalingam, Robert, Gnanasekaram, Anton, Aranganayagam, Arafat were
taken into custody. But LTTE, then smaller, was relatively intact. Pirapaharan
and ten of his trusted men crossed over to Tamil Nadu on 6 June 1981, on
the sixth night after Pirapaharan saw with horror the burning of the
Jaffna Public Library, a blatant act of state terrorism and cultural
genocide. He kept back Mahataya to watch LTTE’s interests in the
Jaffna peninsula. Uma
Maheswaran stayed in his Vavuniya Camp and staged the spectacular
Kilinochchi bank robbery and crossed over to Tamil Nadu with four of his
confidantes on 25 February 1982 taking with him 20 packets of gold. He
went to Chennai where he had established a network with the help of the
Communist Party and Tamil nationalist movements. Pirapaharan
at that time was working with the TELO as many of his senior colleagues
had deserted him and joined Uma Maheswaran’s, PLOTE. Pirapaharan who
left his home at the age of 16 to commit himself totally to struggle for
the freedom of the Tamil people was pained and in his interview to Anita
Prathap in 1984 called the desertion “betrayal”: Q: Which was your most frustrating moment of your life? A:
I cannot pinpoint such a moment in my life. But the most frustrating
aspect has been the betrayal of some of my trusted friends: those who
pretended to be sincere to the cause. But turned out to be self-seeking
opportunists. Pirapaharan
went to Madurai where he stayed in the camp. He asked Kittu and
Ponnamman to stay in Madurai and proceeded to the rented house at
Varasalavakkam, on the outskirts of Chennai, where Balasingham and Adele
were living during their second spell in Tamil Nadu in 1981. Adele in
her book The Will to Freedom records one of Kittu’s youthful pranks in
Madurai. Dressed like a Brahmin and wearing a white thread that
resembled the sacred thread (Poonool)
he went to a non-vegetarian restaurant and ordered mutton curry and
fried chicken and ate them with relish astounding the waiters and the
owner. Adele
also provides thumb-nail sketches of the cadres who lived in their
Varasalavakkam home. Baby Subramaniam, who joined Pirapaharan soon after
he formed the LTTE in 1976 and currently in charge of education in the
Vanni administration, was a mild mannered person who never indulged in
gossip or personal power struggles. He was a walking encyclopedia of the
history of freedom struggles and of the LTTE. He always carried with him
an old bag, full of papers and books dealing with freedom struggles.
Being a strict vegetarian, he would eat his rice meal with five of six
fried curd- chillies (moor mulakai).
Nesan
(Ravindran Ravithas), who gave up his medical studies to join
Pirapaharan, was then his close confidante. He later dropped out and is
living in a foreign country. Shanker was the other. A young man with
athletic build he used to go out of the house every morning to do his
running exercise. Shankar helped Rahu for some time to look after
Pirapaharan’s security. But Rahu was Pirapaharan’s chief bodyguard
for many years. He was later expelled from the LTTE for violating the
rules. Pandithar was the other member of the Varasalavakkam household.
Pandithar, a chronic asthmatic, never permitted his disease to obstruct
his political activity. He was killed in the army roundup of the
Atchuveli camp in January 1985. Sri Sabaratnam who later became the
leader of TELO also lived at Varasalavakkam because of the TELO- LTTE
working alliance. Pirapaharan was a regular visitor. He lived in one of
the three rooms allocated to the two Members of the Legislative Assembly
(MLA) of the Tamil Nadu Kamaraj Congress (TNKC) of which Nedumaran was
the leader. Moves
were afoot qt that time to form a new organization by integrating the
LTTE and the TELO. Sri Sabaratnam who became the leader of the TELO
after the arrest of Thangathurai and Kuttimani supported that move
enthusiastically saying combining the skills and the resources of both
organizations would strengthen and widen the freedom struggle. Two
objections were raised by senior members of the LTTE. Firstly, they did
not want to give up the history of the LTTE. Secondly, the fear that Uma
Maheswaran who earlier claimed the leadership of the LTTE would reassert
his claim. Sri Sabaratnam was not happy but agreed to postpone the move.
That move failed because by the middle of 1982 Pirapaharan decided to
drop the working alliance with TELO and function on his own. Baby
Subramaniam, later, reasoned Pirapaharan’s decision thus: Pirapaharan
had had enough of trouble with people who would debate on everything
endlessly. He, an action oriented person by nature, abhorred this
debating which resulted in delaying or even abandoning action. He
believed that there should be a single leader and his study of
successful revolutions and freedom struggles convinced him about it. He
wanted the freedom struggle of the Tamils to succeed and for that to
happen there should be a monolithic organization under his leadership. A day at Varasalavakkam Pirapaharan
instilled in his cadres the habit of rising early and performing their
physical exercises. They eat their breakfast around 8 a.m.; rotti,
thosai or occasionally string hoppers with coconut sambol or dhal curry.
Around 9 a.m. Balasingham, Adele, Pandithar and others who volunteer to
join trek in the searing Sun to the bus halt on the main road about a
kilometer away and wait for the bus. They wave the grey-green bus to
halt and travel to the Peroor market to buy that day’s provisions,
fish and vegetables. Balasingham,
a hard bargainer, does the bargaining. He always buys the freshest fish
at the cheapest price, says Adele.
They
then cook their main rice meal. On Pirapaharan insistence, every one had
become a good cook but Adele says Pandithar was the best. So, he
functioned as the chief cook. Bala took upon himself the messy task of
cleaning and cutting the fish. Once that was over, he would sit on the
sack of rice kept in the corner of the kitchen and crack jokes. By the
mirth and laughter Adele surmised, she did not know Tamil then, they
should have been dirty jokes. Adele peeled the annoying small onions,
Ragu cut the vegetables according to Pandithar’s instructions, Shankar
helped Ragu, Nasen scraped the coconuts squatting on the ground, Sri
cooked meat, his specialty, whenever it was cooked and Pirapaharan
joined in to cook his favorite chicken curry dish. After
they finished cooking, they took a wash, sat on the mats cross-legged,
and ate their lunch. Then they took a nap while Pandithar toiled writing
that days accounts and balancing the organization’s budget. In the
evening, they go either for a film or to the beach. Pirapaharan
preferred to watch English films, particularly war films. If they
don’t go out they will gather on the flat cemented roof (moddai
madi) and discuss political developments in Sri Lanka and India and
plan their strategies. If the discussion was laced with laughter, Adele
knew that Bala was entertaining them with his dirty jokes. When
Pirapaharan was away, they play cards which he had prohibited. If he
suddenly returns while they were playing, he would rebuke Bala for
encouraging the boys down the wrong road. Smoking and drinking were
strictly prohibited. Pirapaharan
insisted that expenses on the cadres should be kept low but they should
be fed and looked after well. “They had sacrificed their parents and
the comforts of family life for the sake of the freedom struggle. They
should be given good food and at least the minimum comforts,”
Pirapaharan repeats endlessly. He does not permit any waste. The daily
expenditure allowed for food for each cadre was ten Indian rupees. The
cadres were allowed two sets of clothes. They should wash them daily and
wear them clean. New clothes were bought for Tamil New Year and Dipavali.
They should have their hair cut and shave regularly. Pirapaharan
detested his cadres looking shabby. Pocket money for cinema was given
once a week. Pirapaharam
Ragu, Ragavan, Pandithar, Shankar and Baby carried revolvers. They had
their ‘big guns’ too. Adele was the first woman in the movement to
carry a revolver. She carried it in her handbag. She was told to protect
herself and Bala with that weapon for Bala never carried weapons. Adele
in her book The Will to Freedom recounts
the training she was given to handle weapons. She says she was taken to
a coastal area a few kilometers south of Chennai. The target was set up
inside a young cypress tree plantation. Ragu and Pandithar went away to
bring the guns from a hidden place. They returned with two very long
newspaper wrapped parcels. They were automatic rifles. Adele
was first taught the use of the revolver. Pirapaharan instructed her how
to fire the deadly weapon. He then demonstrated it. “He then handed me
the weapon,” Adele says. “I, of course, felt clumsy handling it… I
aimed and hit the target at least once out of six shots. We then turned
to the automatic rifle and that was an awesome experience. The power of
the recoil nearly made me to drop the weapon.” Pirapaharan
and his cadres were very careful during the practice sessions. The
ammunition was very costly and extremely difficult to get. Each bullet
cost 25 Indian rupees. Each cadre was given one or two rounds of
ammunition per week for shooting practice. That made the cadres to use
the ammunition very carefully and try to achieve maximum accuracy with
their aim. And that gave birth to Pirapaharan’s weapons policy: wrest
them from the enemy. Pirapaharan repeats to his cadres like a mantra:
Get the weapons from the enemy, Never lose a weapon to the enemy.
The wresting of even a simple revolver was a matter for celebration. “Pirapa,”
whispered Kannan
Pirapaharan
and Uma Maheswaran loved thosai, especially
the masala thosai prepared
at a restaurant near the Pondy Bazaar railway station. Both were
frequent patrons of that restaurant. On 19 May, Uma and Kannan ate their
dinner there and came out to go to Pavalar Perumchithnar’s house where
they stayed since crossing over to Tamil Nadu on 25 February. That
evening Pirapaharan and Ragavan saw a Hollywood film at a nearby cinema
hall and walked to the restaurant for dinner. Uma was busy starting the
motorcycle on which he was seated and Kannan was climbing the pillion.
Kannan saw Pirapaharan. “Pirapa,”
he whispered to Uma. Uma’s
hand dipped into his trouser pocket to fetch the revolver. Pirapaharan
too had spotted Uma and he whipped out his revolver. Agile
and smart Pirapaharan fired first but Uma ducked and drove off in his
motorcycle. Six shots rang and four bullets pierced Kannan’s legs, an
accolade to Pirapaharan’s marksmanship, and Kannan fell on the road
bleeding. The
crowd on that busy road was shocked and a few sturdy youths chased
Pirapaharan and Ragavan, who ran towards the station. Finding they were
running towards the Pondy Bazaar police station, they turned back and
ran into a human wall of shouting men. Inspector Nandakumar, realizing
that the sound he heard was from a revolver, ran to the road with his
men. The crowd overpowered the two fleeing men and handed them over to
the police. Police
acted fast. They dragged the two men, beating them all the way, to the
police station. They dispatched the wounded Kannan to Royapettah
hospital. For
the Pondy Bazaar police use of a revolver was totally unusual.
Underworld gangs often settle their grudges in that area. They use
knives, iron rods and bicycle chairs and never a gun. Nandakumar was
stern. Uma was caught after a week, on 25 May, while waiting at a
railway station. A constable walked up to him and demanded him to show
his identity. Uma refused, argued. When the constable tried to arrest
him Uma resisted and pulled out his pistol and it went off accidentally.
The constable knocked him down, overpowered him and arrested him. Pirapaharan,
Ragavan and Uma were taken to the Foreshore Police Station and locked up
in separate cells like common criminals.
Pirapaharan
gave his name as Karikalan and Uma his name as Muhunthan, their Iyakkap
peyar (the name by which they are known in the movement). Tamil Nadu
police treated them as common criminals and slapped the charges of
attempted murder and violation of Indian Explosives Act and the Arms
Act. When their real identities were known it was shocking news for the
Tamil Nadu Police and a prize catch for Sri Lanka. Tamil Nadu police
suddenly turned courteous and treated them with respect. In Colombo,
there was thrill, elation. The news was conveyed to Deputy Defence
Minister D. B. Werapitiya and to President Jayewardene. Werapitiya
summoned the National Security Council which decided on three actions:
to request India to deport Pirapaharan and Uma; to send a delegation
headed by Inspector General of Police Rudra Rajasingham to negotiate
deportation and to offer a reward of one million Sri Lankan rupees as a
reward for making the arrests. State
media, particularly the Daily News, was told to give maximum publicity
to the decisions of the National Security Council. Daily News and its
two sister morning dailies Dinamina and Thinaharan led with the
sensational story about the arrests. The story quoted an
un-named senior policeman as saying: "These arrests are a very
significant break-through, the best we've had in years." I was at the News Desk when Defence Ministry phoned the story.
There was joy in the News Desk. It quickly infected the whole Editorial
Department and the entire Lake House. Members from other departments
flocked to the News Desk to get more details. A driver, Ariyaratne, said
with a sigh of relief: The problem is over. The
Daily News was told to play up the story and make up a case for the
deportation of the three arrested militants. Defence Ministry gave the
fodder for the campaign with a press communiqué stating Pirapaharan and
Uma Maheswaran were fugitives from Justice. Pirapaharan was wanted for
18 murders and two bank robberies and Uma Maheswaran for nine murders
and a bank robbery. Weerapitya announced the one million Sri Lankan
rupee reward to the Tamil Nadu police for arresting the two militant
group leaders. The
reward story was picked up by the Indian news agencies. Tamil Nadu Chief
Minister M. G. Ramachandran was immediately informed of it. He summoned
Tamil Nadu Inspector General of Police K. Mohandas and told him to treat
Pirapaharan and Uma Maheswaran leniently. He said in choice Tamil: “Paiyangal visayathil konjam parthup po appa” (Be a little
considerate in the matter concerning the boys). Mohandas replied they
have decided not to accept the reward announced by Sri Lanka and added:
“We are only interested in the law and order aspect of the problem. We
only want to prevent Chennai from becoming another Chicago.” The
Daily News baked up the news stories with an editorial urging India to
deport Pirapaharan and Uma Maheswaran. The editorial was a sermon to
India on how Big Brother India should behave towards its little
neighbour. It dug out the precedent of Karunanithi government agreeing
to deport Kuttimani in 1973 when he was arrested in India on a charge of
smuggling. Sri Lankan police flew to Chennai and brought back Kuttimani
handcuffed. The
Sri Lankan government sent a delegation headed by Rudra Rajasingham to
Chennai and Delhi to negotiate with the state and central governments
for the deportation of Pirapaharan and Uma Maheswaran. He broke his
journey in Chennai and had a meeting with Mohandas. His request to see
the two militant leaders was granted. The delegation was taken to the
Foreshore Police Station and shown Pirapaharan and Uma Maheswaran locked
up in high security cells. On his return Rudra Rajasingham told the
Colombo media that the two militant leaders were locked up like common
criminals. What the Sri Lankan IGP was not told and failed to observe
was the respect with which the two leaders were treated by the police. The
news of Pirapaharan’s arrest generated shock waves in Jaffna.
Pirapaharan’s father Velupillai retained Chandrahasan, the lawyer son
of Thanthai Chelvanayakam to watch the interest of Piurapaharan. He
rushed to Chennai and met Diravida Munnetra Kalazham (DMK) leader
Muthuvel Karunanithi, who was out of power. But Karunanithi continued
with the electoral alliance DMK had with Indira Congress. He instructed
his parliamentarians in New Delhi to inform Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
about the danger of deporting the two militant leaders to Sri Lanka.
“They would be killed,” Karunanithi warned her. Kittu,
Ponamman and Pulendran rushed to Chennai from their Madurai Camp. They
held a secret discussion with Pandithar and others then staying in
Chennai. They decided to
get on the roof of Chennai’s tallest LIC building and threaten to jump
from it if Pirapaharan was not released. Baby
Subramaniyam, the eldest of the LTTE cadres and the most knowledgeable, shouted
at them in fury when he learnt about their plan. “Are you all mad?”
he screamed. “Leave that to me. I will deal with that matter. I will
get him out somehow or other.” Baby decided to utilize the elaborate
network of sympathizers he had laboriously built. An
unassuming public relations man, Baby spent most of his time in meeting
Tamil Nadu politicians, scholars, Tamil activists and even leading
businessmen and philanthropists and won them over to the Sri Lankan
Tamil cause. P. Nedumaran, leader of the Tamil Nadu Kamaraj Congress,
was the foremost among them. The wiry, tall Nedumaran was originally in
the Indian National Congress and when it split into two factions, he
joined the Indira Gandhi faction. Later, he formed his own party, the
Tamil Nadu Kamraj Congress. Baby Subramaniam met Nedumaran and requested
his assistance to get Pirapaharan released. Nedumaran
who admired the courageous deeds and the deep commitment of Pirapaharan
had wanted to meet the young Sri Lankan Tamil freedom fighter. He had
asked Baby several times to arrange a meeting. Baby had evaded it saying
that Pirapaharan was in Jaffna. Now he could not evade. He took
Nedumaran to the Foreshore Police Station and when he saw Pirapaharan
Nedumaran was astonished. He had seen him in his room in the
legislator’s hostel. Pirapaharan
apologized. “I am sorry. I never told you who I was,” he said. Nedumaran
remembered seeing Pirapaharan in Jaffna when he visited that town in
1981. He looked hard at Pirapaharan for a few minutes and said: Did you
come and see me with some boys when I came to Jaffna last year? Pirapaharan
admitted that he did. “Why
din’t you tell me your name? Pirapaharan
explained that the police and the army were after him and police
detectives were among the group of boys who went to see him. “If I
told my name I would have been arrested then and there,” he said. Nedumaran
was not annoyed. He realized how careful Pirapaharan was about his
security. He also realized how bold he was. His admiration of
Pirapaharan grew. He conveyed his feeling to Pirapaharan and told him
not to worry. He assured him that he would do everything possible to get
him released on bail. He also admonished Pirapaharan for getting
involved in a shootout in a foreign country. “Why
are you fighting among yourselves?” Nedumaran queried. “Why can’t
you be together? Your infighting is making it difficult to organize
support to your struggle.” He advised Pirapaharan to patch up his
differences with Uma. Nedumaran
kept his word. He convened an all-party meeting at the TNKC office on 1
June. Karunanithi informed him that he would not attend the meeting as
he had already done the needful. MGR sent a representative to the
meeting. All major political parties in Tamil Nadu participated in the
meeting. Baby attended as an observer. Three
decisions were made at the meeting. The first was to urge the Tamil Nadu
government not to agree to deportation. The second one was to urge the central government to turn down
the Sri Lankan request for deportation. They also decided to launch a
campaign in support of the Sri Lankan Tamil freedom struggle. Indira
Gandhi had by that time worked out her strategy. The option paper her
experts had prepared in 1980, soon after she was re-elected to office in
January that year, nearly three years after her defeat in the March 1977
parliamentary election, suggested the use of Tamil militancy as a tool
to weaken Jayewardene and destabilize his government. Indira
Gandhi, aligned firmly to the Soviet block in those days of the cold
war, was
disturbed with Jayewardene’s pro-American tilt and his gradual shift
into the Israel- Pakistan- China orbit. Her hope that Sri Lanka would
get out of the American influence once Sirimavo Bandaranaike returns to
power in the mid-1983 parliamentary election was shattered when she was
deprived of her civic rights. The only option then left for India was to
destabilize Jayewardene by making use of the growing Tamil militancy. Arular
of the EROS who was in Chennai at that time told me of a secret meeting
he had with the ambassador of the Soviet Union in New Delhi. He said he
urged the ambassador to persuade India not to deport the guerilla
leaders. The Soviet envoy’s reply was: Don’t worry. Be with India.
Indira Gandhi will look after you.” Indira
Gandhi looked after Pirapaharan and Uma Maheswaran. One day in mid-June,
two officials of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) walked into the
Foreshore Police Station to meet Pirapaharan. They introduced themselves
as Indian Central Government officials and questioned Pirapaharan about
his activities and about the LTTE. They
talked sympathetically about the problems of the Sri Lankan Tamils and
informed Pirapaharan that India would be in a position to help the
freedom struggle. They then asked Pirapaharan whether the LTTE would be
in a position to assist India. From the questions they asked about the
Trincomalee harbour, Pirapaharan knew India was up to something. The
second meeting the RAW officials had with him a few days before his
release on bail on 6 August helped Pirapaharan, a keen observer of
political developments in Sri Lanka and India, to piece together the
emerging trend and spot the obstacles that development would place on
the path of the freedom struggle of the Sri Lankan Tamils. Next Chapter 29. The Indian Interest
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