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Links
between
a
leading
Indian
militant
group
and the
Tamil
Tigers
have for
the
first
time
been
confirmed
by a
rebel
leader
Wednesday,
two days
after
the army
seized
documents
stating
payments
made
towards
weapons
bought
from the
Tigers,
IANS has
reported.
There
were
several
reports
in the
past
quoting
intelligence
reports
that the
outlawed
United
Liberation
Front of
Asom (ULFA)
had
direct
links
with the
Liberation
Tigers
of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE).
On
Monday,
soldiers
of the
19
Kumaon
Regiment
seized a
large
cache of
weapons
and
explosives
buried
inside a
pit,
besides
documents
relating
to the
ULFA’s
financial
transactions.
“There
was a
noting
in one
of the
accounts
statement
that the
ULFA
paid
Rs.2.3
million
to the
LTTE
towards
purchase
of
weapons,”
an army
commander
said.
Now,
for the
first
time, an
ULFA
leader
admitted
links
with the
LTTE.
“It
was
sometime
in the
early
90s when
I was
just an
ordinary
member
at the
Lakhipathar
camp (in
eastern
Assam’s
Tinsukia
district)
when we
saw
three
lanky
Tamil
men with
our
commander-in-chief
Paresh
Baruah.
We were
later
told
they
were
from the
LTTE,”
Prabal
Neog, a
senior
leader
of the
pro-talk
ULFA
faction,
told
IANS.
The
Alpha
and
Charlie
companies
of the
ULFA’s
28th
battalion,
the most
potent
striking
unit of
the
outfit,
announced
a
unilateral
ceasefire
in June
last
year.
The
group
now in a
ceasefire
mode
named
themselves
as the
pro-talk
ULFA
faction.
“I
don’t
know
much
about
the
ULFA-LTTE
links,
but then
we heard
from our
seniors
that
something
was on.
We were
too
young at
that
time
when
such a
linkage
was
established,”
Neog
said.
The
ULFA-LTTE
links
were
established
sometime
in the
early
1990s
with
LTTE
guerrillas
training
ULFA
cadres
in the
jungles
of
Assam,
according
to
intelligence
and
police
inputs.
“LTTE
supplied
arms to
ULFA
through
its navy
with the
consignments
handed
over in
Chittagong
(Bangladesh)
to ULFA
leaders.
It was
Pakistan’s
ISI
agents
that
introduced
LTTE
arms
suppliers
to ULFA,”
said an
intelligence
official.
However,
the
ULFA-LTTE
links
did not
continue
for long
and
probably
snapped
in the
late
90s.
“Now
that
there is
material
evidence
in the
form of
the
accounts
statement
and that
ULFA
leaders
have
admitted
links
with the
LTTE,
things
need to
be
investigated
to find
out more
about
ULFA’s
other
connections,”
Nishinath
Changkakoty,
a former
Assam
police
chief,
said.
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