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There is
an
intense
search
on for
LTTE
cadres
and
active
supporters
who
survived
final
defeat.
Intelligence
reports
say they
could
rebuild
the LTTE
and even
now are
trying
to carry
out
terror
activities.
Some of
this
information
is
coming
from
questioning
now
being
done of
Selvarajah
Padmanathan
aka ‘KP’
the
foreign
based
leader
of the
LTTE
after
the
death of
Prabhakaran,
who has
the
information
on
operational
details
and
contacts
of the
LTTE as
well as
information
on money
collected
from
expatriate
Tamils
to be
used for
the
terrorist
activities
of the
LTTE. So
says
‘Strategy
Page’
site in
a story
on
current
developments
in Sri
Lanka,
published
Aug. 30.
The
report
adds
that
while
European
and
American
politicians
and
media
strongly
criticize
Sri
Lanka
over the
treatments
of
Northern
Tamils
and want
the
refugee
centers
released
immediately
this is
not
likely
to
happen
for
serious
security
reasons.
It adds
that
“India
is much
more
sympathetic
to the
Sri
Lankan
government
on this
issue,
as India
knows
all
about
fanatical
sects
and
political
movements
and was
also
subject
to LTTE
terrorism.
Europe
wasn’t,
and
doesn't
understand.
Thus the
camps
will
only be
closed
when all
the LTTE
members
inside
them are
identified,
and no
sooner”.
Here is
the text
of the
article
titled
‘European
Racists
Close
In’
published
in
‘Strategy
Page’
August
30,
2009:
The
government
believes
the LTTE
has been
crippled,
with the
capture
of their
new
leader,
Selvarajah
Pathmanathan.
This was
because
Pathmanathan,
as
leader
of the
LTTE
gunrunning
operation,
kept
many
operational
details
and
contacts
to
himself.
Any
successor
will
have to
rebuild
much of
the
organization
without
that
knowledge.
Pathmanathan
also
controlled
a lot of
the
money
collected
from
expatriate
Tamils,
and now
those
contributions
have
dried up
(partly
because
the LTTE
has been
declared
a
terrorist
group in
so many
nations).
The
government
is
negotiating
with
Pathmanathan
to find
out
where
the
remaining
funds
are, and
what
shape
the
offshore
LTTE
organization
is in.
While
many Sri
Lankans
want
Pathmanathan
executed,
or
jailed
for
life,
Pathmanathan
is a
skilled
negotiator
who is
intent
on
talking
his way
out of a
death
sentence.
Pathmanathan
also has
information
on the
organization
that
only the
senior
leadership
had. He
is able
to let
the
government
know how
large
the
organization
was in
Sri
Lanka
before
the
final
offensive,
that
ended
the war,
began
last
year.
There
were
30,000
LTTE
members
back
then.
Not all
were
armed,
but all
were
organized,
and the
army
captured
lots of
records
listing
who they
are.
Most of
these
LTTE
staff
survived
the
final
campaign,
and the
government
is
looking
for
them.
These
are the
people
who
could
rebuild
the LTTE,
and who
are even
now
trying
to carry
out
terror
attacks.
The
government
is
pretty
angry at
the
criticism
it gets
by
European
and
American
politicians
and
media,
over the
treatment
of the
northern
Tamils.
Many
prominent
Europeans
want the
Tamils
in
refugee
camps
released
immediately,
and Sri
Lankan
security
forces
prosecuted
for war
crimes.
This
sort of
thing
enrages
the
Sinhalese
majority
in Sri
Lanka,
and
results
in
accusations
that
these
foreign
critics
are a
bunch of
pro-terrorist,
delusional,
racists
(who
imply
that the
Sri
Lankans
cannot
govern
themselves).
India,
the
original
home of
the
Tamils
(who are
a
minority
there,
comprising
only
about
six
percent
of the
population),
is much
more
sympathetic
to the
Sri
Lankan
government.
Partly,
this is
to keep
the
Chinese
out (who
are
offering
all
manner
of
attractive
commercial
deals to
Sri
Lanka at
the
moment).
But
India
knows
all
about
fanatical
sects
and
political
movements,
and was
also
subject
to LTTE
terrorism.
Europe
wasn’t,
and
doesn't
understand.
Thus the
camps
will
only be
closed
when all
the LTTE
members
inside
them are
identified,
and no
sooner.
Meanwhile,
some
atrocities
have
taken
place,
but
often
against
Sri
Lankans
who
don't
get
along
with the
police.
Over
more
than two
decades
of
terrorism
and
violence,
the
national
police
have
acquired
an
attitude
that
they are
above
the law.
Cross
the
cops,
and you
end up
dead, or
maybe
just
beaten,
or
crippled.
To show
you a
lesson.
Popular
anger
against
this
sort of
thing
has been
building
for some
time,
and
politicians
realized
that
they
could no
longer
get away
with not
dealing
with it.
So,
since
the LTTE
was
crushed
earlier
this
year,
more
police
have
been
arrested
and
prosecuted
for
misconduct.
The
police,
in turn,
have
been
ordered
to crack
down on
the
criminal
gangs,
who
flourished
during
the last
two
decades,
often by
being
the paid
accomplices
of the
LTTE.
There is
also
fear
that the
criminal
gangs
will get
their
hands on
some of
the
hidden
LTTE
weapons,
and put
them
back
into
circulation.
Today
alone,
troops
and
police
found
dozens
of
bombs,
rifles
and much
ammunition
up
north.
While
much of
these
hidden
weapons
are
found
based on
tips
from
Tamils
in the
camps,
other
stuff is
found
simply
by
examining
likely
hiding
places.
The
north
apparently
has over
a
thousand
of these
hidden
weapons
caches.
Much
more has
been
hidden,
like
secret
agents
within
the
government
and
military.
Earlier
this
month,
interrogations
of
captured
LTTE
members
revealed
that the
cook
(for the
last
seven
years)
of the
head of
the army
(general
Fonseka,
recently
promoted
to head
of the
armed
forces)
was an
LTTE
agent.
Several
other
well
placed
agents
have
been
revealed,
and
there
are
apparently
dozens
more who
are
still in
place
(and no
doubt
trying
to
figure
out how
to flee
the
country).
August
29,
2009: In
the
north,
troops
searching
for
weapons,
uncovered
a hidden
warehouse
containing
140
landmines,
and many
other
weapons.
August
25,
2009:
Police
discovered
LTTE
weapons,
and a
suicide
bomber
vest,
apparently
intended
for use
against
the
president's
brother,
who is
also an
official
in the
defense
ministry.
The
members
of this
terrorist
cell
escaped
capture,
and the
police
fear
there is
more
than one
such
group in
the
capital.
Assassination
attempts
against
senior
officials
usually
take
months
to plan
and
prepare.
It's
unknown
if this
attempt
was in
the
works
for a
while,
or was
being
hastily
put
together
by one
of the
many
groups
of LTTE
killers
now on
their
own,
since
the LTTE
high
command
has
been,
for all
intents
and
purposes,
put out
of
action
for the
moment.
There is
no one
at the
top of
the LTTE
chain of
command,
issuing
orders.
So
hundreds
of small
(no more
than a
dozen)
groups
of LTTE
members
are
trying
to
reform
the
organization,
and
avoid
capture.
August
23,
2009: In
the
north,
police
found
four
"suicide
bomber
kits",
which
had
apparently
been
hidden,
for
later
use,
after
the LTTE
was
driven
out of
the
area.
August
21,
2009:
Sri
Lanka is
establishing
a school
to train
foreign
troops
in
counter-terrorist
methods
developed
during
the
years of
fighting
the LTTE.
The
Pakistani
government
made the
initial
request
for this
kind of
training,
but Sri
Lanka
found
that
several
other
nations
were
also
interested.
The Sri
Lankan
defeat
of the
LTTE was
a rather
complex
process,
not just
a final,
massive,
military
campaign.
Military
professionals
recognize
that,
and want
to learn
the
details
of how
the Sri
Lankans
did it.
August
20,
2009:
The new
commander
(as of
last
month)
of the
army,
lieutenant
general
Jagath
Jayasuriya,
has
cancelled
his
predecessors
plans to
expand
the
military
50
percent.
There
will
still be
some
expansion,
but only
a few
thousand
troops,
and
these
will be
commando
and
intelligence
units
needed
to find
and run
down the
remaining
LTTE
terrorists.
More
troops
are
being
put to
work
clearing
the LTTE
mines
and
booby
traps
that
cover
much of
the
north,
making
many
towns
and
villages
uninhabitable
until
the
devices
are
cleared.
August
15,
2009:
Acting
on a tip
from a
captured
LTTE
man,
police
found a
45 pound
bomb
hidden
in a
culvert
outside
the
central
Sri
Lankan
city of
Mahiyangana.
The bomb
was
defused
and
removed.
August
12,
2009:
Police
captured
three
more
LTTE
members
who were
making
preparations
for
terror
attacks.
Although
the
senior
LTTE
leadership
is dead,
or fled,
many
lower
ranking
leaders
are
still
around,
and some
of these
are
trying
to
organize
more
attacks.
August
10,
2009:
Police
seized a
van full
of
bombs,
(twenty
eleven
pound
Claymore
mines),
that
were
headed
for the
capital
to be
used in
suicide
attacks.
Elsewhere
in the
north,
troops
found
six
suicide
boats,
packed
with
nearly a
ton of
explosives.
Many
small
caches
of
weapons
(rifles,
grenades,
machine-guns,
ammo)
are
being
found.
There
are
apparently
many
more to
be
discovered.
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