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“We
share a
proud
tradition
with
India as
the only
two
countries
in the
region
that can
boast
about a
neutral
military,
but when
that
tradition
was
subverted
in Sri
Lanka by
Fonseka
there
was no
option
but to
take
action
against
him”,
stated
Defence
Secretary,
Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa
in an
interview
with
India’s
leading
weekly
magazine,
Tehelka.
He [Gen
Fonseka]
should
have had
a clean
break
from the
military
and then
entered
politics.
In his
utter
greed
for
power he
used his
position
and
contacts
for his
own
benefits,
he
further
stated.
Following
is the
text of
the
interview:
Under
what
specific
charges
did your
government
arrest
Gen.
Fonseka?
I cannot
talk
about
specific
charges
because
the
summary
of
evidence
preceding
the
charge
sheet is
now
being
prepared
by the
military
authorities
under
specific
rules of
procedure
that
guarantee
due
process
and a
fair
trial.
That is
the work
of the
prosecutor.
But
because
there
are no
specifics
so far,
this has
the
appearance
of a
personal
vendetta.
Not at
all.
Most
people
are
probably
unaware
of the
damage
done by
the
general
to our
military
while he
was in
uniform,
particularly
in the
way he
entered
politics.
You
mean, he
should
have
stayed
out of
politics
and not
challenged
the
President
in the
election?
What is
this
damage
you
speak
of?
Of
course
he has
that
right in
a
democracy.
But he
misused
his
office
to
pervert
the
process.
Most
people
tend to
simplify
this
story
into
three
parts –
a) he
fought a
successful
war, b)
he was
the army
commander,
c) he
was
arrested
because
he
challenged
the
president
in the
election.
The real
issue is
the
damage
he did
is what
led to
his
detention.
He
politicised
the
military.
We share
a proud
tradition
with
India as
the only
two
countries
in the
region
that can
boast
about a
neutral
military,
but when
that
tradition
was
subverted
in Sri
Lanka by
Fonseka
there
was no
option
but to
take
action
against
him.
As a war
hero he
has many
admirers
who
urged
him
contest…
He
should
have had
a clean
break
from the
military
and then
entered
politics.
In his
utter
greed
for
power he
used his
position
and
contacts
for his
own
benefits.
He did
this
while he
was
Chief of
Defense
Staff
(CDS),
and also
when he
was Army
Commander.
He used
the army
commander’s
bungalow
to
conduct
political
activities
and kept
military
resources
made
available
to him
in his
official
capacity
for
personal
political
use.
What do
you mean
by
political
activities?
And why
the
seeming
haste to
arrest
him?
While he
was CDS
he was
talking
to
commanders,
senior
officers,
and
there
were
complaints
of a few
soldiers
saying
he was
asking
them to
work for
him. He
was
clearly
using
the
military
for
political
purposes.
If we
did not
act on
this we
would be
signalling
that in
future
others
can get
away
with
this.
The
tradition
of a
neutral
military
so
precious
to us –
and to
India—would
have
been
destroyed.
Can you
be more
specific
about
your
phrase
“using
soldiers”?
Soldiers
at lower
levels
manning
roadblocks
were
stopping
vehicles
and
seeking
votes
for the
general.
Most of
them
were
very
young
people
recruited
during
the last
three
years,
and when
their
own
commander
contests
they’re
in a
very
confused
state.
In fact
he tried
to
gather
support
even
among
army
deserters
to whom
he gave
shelter.
He was
actively
doing
this
while he
was CDS.
He was
using
officers
and
soldiers
to
conduct
surveys
and
compute
vote
percentages
to
measure
his
support
within
the
army,
and this
started
while he
was
still
army
commander.
That is
why,
when we
found
out, we
acted
swiftly
against
15
senior
army
officers
who were
sent
into
compulsory
retirement.
Aren’t
there
other
very
serious
allegations
that the
general
was
planning
a coup
and
assassination
of the
President
and his
family?
Well,
those
are
covered
under
civilian
law and
are the
subject
to
procedures
of
criminal
investigations
which
are a
separate
procedure.
The
general’s
arrest
is in
connection
with
offences
he
committed
while he
was in
uniform.
But why
was it
necessary
to
surround
his
hotel
with
troops
after
the
election
results
were
announced?
He
created
that
situation.
He
booked
70 rooms
in the
Taj
hotel,
another
70 in
the
Cinnamon.
What
for? We
sent
security
around
the
hotel
because
we
wanted
to avoid
post-election
violence.
During
that
time
(former
Prime
Minister)
Ranil (Wickremesinghe)
spoke to
me and I
told him
“we have
not
arrested
you or
him, you
are the
people
who
booked
that
hotel.”
We later
found
out that
the
security
officer
at the
hotel, a
former
army
person,
erased
all the
CCTV
recordings
and then
altered
his own
attendance
registry
to cover
up.
The
world,
particularly
the
Western
media
and
human
rights
groups
are
highlighting
his
arrest
and
charges
of a
vendetta.
I’d like
to know
why they
didn’t
highlight
his
public
statements
during
the
election
when he
was
openly
saying
he would
arrest
the
President
if he is
elected
and put
him and
his
ministers
in
cages.
There
were
corruption
charges
against
him when
he was
army
commander
that he
was
using
his
position
to
influence
officers
in the
army to
purchase
arms
from his
son in
law
Danuna
Tilekeratne’s
company
HiCorp
International.
Why
didn’t
you
arrest
him
then?
Well,
the
details
are only
now
coming
out
because
there’s
been a
falling
out
among
the
suspects.
His
supporters
say the
general
is being
punished
because
he spoke
out on a
quick
political
solution
to the
Tamil
issue,
on war
crimes,
and the
speedy
resettlement
of the
IDPs
(internally
displaced
persons).
I wish
more
journalists
would do
their
homework.
Why
don’t
you
simply
analyse
his
speeches
while he
was
still in
uniform
immediately
after
the end
of the
war, and
those he
made
when he
became a
candidate?
His
first
speech
to
soldiers
was that
they had
not lost
their
lives
and shed
their
blood
just to
allow
politicians
to
implement
political
solutions,
“we will
not
allow
this.”
Is this
not an
attempt
to
mobilise
the
military
against
the
political
system?
An
Indian
army
commander
making
this
kind of
statement
would
have
been
sacked
immediately.
But then
he
entered
politics.
His
tactics
changed
from
planning
a direct
military
takeover
to
attempting
to grab
power
through
political
means.
How do
you
react to
his
allegations
that you
ordered
your
troops
to shoot
down in
cold
blood
LTTE
leaders
who were
surrendering
with
white
flags?
Again,
study
the
record,
do your
homework.
Earlier,
he said
something
else. He
gave a
lecture
to his
old
school
after
the war
and told
the
audience
that the
political
leadership
was
trying
to
protect
LTTE
interests
by
asking
them to
surrender
“But it
was a
war
situation
and they
had to
be
killed.”
Now, he
reverses
his
stand,
talks
about a
political
solution
and says
I gave
orders
to shoot
people
waving
white
flags of
surrender.
What
really
happened?
This was
supposed
to have
happened
on the
last day
– May
18, 2010
– the
day
Prabhakaran
was
killed.
The LTTE
leaders
were now
trapped
in an
area 400
meters
by 400
meters,
about
200 of
them,
surrounded
by the
military.
It is
late at
night,
past
midnight.
Make a
mental
picture
of this.
Can you
see them
coming
out with
white
flags in
this
dense
jungle
in pitch
darkness?
The
situation
was that
some
terrorist
cadres
counter-attacked.
Prabhakaran
was
trying
to break
out and
escape
to the
lagoon,
his son
went in
another
direction.
At the
same
time
10,000
surrendered
cadres
came
down
from one
side. In
this
kind of
situation
in the
thick of
battle,
can you
expect a
young
recruit,
barely a
month
into
battle,
to
recognise
a senior
LTTE
cadre
and make
a
decision
as to
shoot
him
selectively
or spare
him?
The war
crimes
issue is
still
being
kept
alive,
do you
recognise
it as an
issue?
Yes we
recognise
what a
war
crime
is. If
you use
the
pretext
of war
for
revenge
killings,
abductions,
ransom,
if that
is done
under
the
pretext
of a
military
operation
it is a
crime.
And we
have
arrested,
tried
and
punished
soldiers
for
this. We
have put
officers
in jail
for
this.
But
there
are
situations
over
which we
have no
control.
They
claim,
for
example
that we
bombed a
hospital.
If a
hospital
is
marked
as a
hospital
and we
deliberately
bomb it,
that’s
wrong.
And we
did not.
But look
at the
last
phase of
the war.
The LTTE
was
trapped
in an
area of
one
square
kilometre,
and in
this
situation
of
fighting
it is
difficult
to
control
a stray
bullet
hitting
a
hospital.
Moreover
in a
situation
like
this
there’s
no
question
of
patients
or
civilians
in the
area.
One has
to
understand
the
ground
situation
in such
close
combat.
Many
western
countries
are
still
insisting
on a war
crimes
trial.
These
appear
to be
the same
countries
that
wanted a
regime
change
in Sri
Lanka.
Why? And
why
would
they
want to
back a
military
man?
Three
aspects
to this.
First,
there is
a very
powerful
and
moneyed
diaspora
with
LTTE
sympathies
that
plays a
crucial
role in
these
countries,
participates
in their
vote
bank
politics
and
media.
Second,
because
Sri
Lanka
did not
tow the
line on
certain
strategic
policies;
and
third,
the
human
rights
lobbies
pushing
war
crime
trials
to which
they
believed
the UNP,
supporting
the
general,
would be
more
amenable.
Are the
general’s
criticism
of your
government’s
treatment
and
rehabilitation
of IDP’s
a source
of real
concern
to you?
The
reality
is that
when he
was in
uniform
the
general
was the
only
person
on our
Security
Council
who
opposed
the
early
settlement
of the
IDPs –
the only
person.
He kept
arguing
it was a
huge
security
risk.
That’s
the only
reason
that the
resettlement
of IDPs
was
delayed.
While as
CDS he
opposed
heir
release,
he later
made
common
cause
with the
opposition
which
was
using
the IDP
issue to
blame
the
government
during
the
election.
What
finally
happened?
My view
was that
the
newly
liberated
areas
like
Jaffna,
the
peninsula,
the East
were
safe and
IDPs
could be
sent
back
there
early.
Fonseka
had a
firm
“no.” So
I said
let them
at least
go to
temporary
camps in
the
eastern
province.
We
released
thousands
of them
but
Fonseka
ordered
them
dragged
right
back to
the
original
detention
areas.
We were
under
pressure
from the
UN and
other
countries
but the
general
kept
arguing
“security.”
Finally
President
Rajapakse
himself
intervened.
He said:
“What
security
are you
talking
about?
Here are
300,000
people
in these
camps,
some
20,000
pro-LTTE
as well
as
cadres
have
already
escaped.
So
where’s
the
security?
I want
them
resettled
immediately!”
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