|
India has broken yet another LTTE ring that
sought to smuggle war material to the
outlawed outfit, arresting four men
including a British national of Sri Lankan
origin in Chennai, IANS reported yesterday.
It is the first crackdown on the LTTE this
year in Tamil Nadu.
Informed sources said the LTTE activist
was known only as Sahanthan. He belonged to
Mullaitivu and had arrived in India about a
year ago.
His mission was to coordinate activities
aimed at supplying the LTTE war material,
the sources told IANS. He travelled
extensively in Tamil Nadu for this purpose.
Arrested with him was British national
Jayanathan, who flew into Tamil Nadu
recently and who reportedly has had links
with the LTTE in the past.
The other two arrested men were
identified as Babu of Rameswaram and Guhan
of Cuddalore in Tamil Nadu. Both are Indians
and said to be linked to the Vidhuthalai
Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK), a pro-LTTE group
in Tamil Nadu that is now allied to Tamil
Nadu's ruling DMK.
Seized from them were several satellite
telephones, global positioning system (GPS),
night vision devices as well as medicines
that had been neatly packed in crates.
Much of the goods had been bought abroad,
underlining that Tamil Nadu seemed to be a
transit point for war material that a
bruised LTTE desperately needs to battle the
relentless military advance, the sources
said.
It is clear from Friday's seizures that
the LTTE continues to use Tamil Nadu to
source its war needs and that some
consignments may have got past the Indian
security agencies.
The involvement in the smuggling ring of
a Briton of Sri Lankan origin reveals that
the Tigers are drawing upon the Tamil
diaspora to further their interests.
The latest attempt to smuggle
communication equipment, night vision
glasses and medicines also shows the Tigers
have no plans of giving up their fight
against the military, the sources said.
The last major arrest of LTTE suspects in
Tamil Nadu took place in December 2008 when
the police swooped on Amir Antony
Paranthaman. The arrest led to the seizure
of satellite telephones and GPS system sent
from Switzerland.
The police also then seized 500 kg of
ammonium nitrate, a fertiliser component
used to make explosives.
Like the LTTE cadres arrested Friday,
Paranthaman had come to Tamil Nadu some
months previously with a singular mission -
keep the Tigers supplied with whatever it
needs to keep fighting.
|