BOOK
REVIEW Enigma
decryption Inside an
Elusive Mind. Prabhakaran, by M Narayan
Swamy
Reviewed by Sreeram Chaulia
Mathematicians term proofing of complex theorems
enigma decryption. Veteran journalist M R Narayan Swamy
has accomplished nothing less than enigma decryption by
authoring an incomparable biography of Sri Lanka's
ultra-secretive guerrilla supremo, Velupillai
Prabhakaran. The fruit of more than 100 interviews in
three continents over two years, Swamy's chronologically
sound and factually dense book unveils an intimate
portrait of the legendary chief of the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who is a riddle wrapped in a
mystery inside an enigma.
Prabhakaran is a
"devilishly compelling figure", enjoying semi-divine
status in the eyes of his constituency and evoking
fanatical commitment from his followers. Right from the
July 1983 Thinnaveli ambush, his soldiers have seldom
hesitated to lay down their lives for the Desiya
Thalaivar (national leader) and his vision of an
independent Tamil state in northeastern Sri Lanka.
Prabhakaran's "unrelenting propensity to kill" for the
cause and rapacious control of LTTE-controlled areas
have also given critics ammunition to deride him as a
megalomaniac of Stalinist proportions. Swamy's portrait
touches both sides of the coin - Prabhakaran the
revolutionary and Prabhakaran the control freak.
Prabhakaran's cult figure image among Sri Lankan
Tamils owes to the vacuum created by the steady decline
of the democratic Tamil political tradition. Gandhian S
J V Chelvanayakam's Tamil Federal Party failed to pacify
angry and directionless Tamil youth chafing under
Sinhalese chauvinism and state repression. Methods of
peaceful protest and petition in the face of
increasingly discriminatory majoritarian policies by
Colombo seemed hypocritical and treacherous to a new
generation of radicals.
Prabhakaran, born in
1954 in Valvettiturai, Jaffna, was a child of this
disquiet and disenchantment with political solutions.
When a Sinhalese mob set a Hindu priest on fire in the
anti-Tamil riots of 1958, he questioned, "Why did we not
have the capability to hit back? Why shouldn't we take
up arms to fight those who have enslaved us?" (p 24)
Early in life, Prabhakaran experimented with
improvised bombs, attaching incense sticks to pilfered
chemicals. In his teens, he burned a state-owned bus. In
1972, he dropped out of school and slipped away from
home to escape police crackdowns on Tamil militants.
Igniting the now-famous elusiveness, Prabhakaran
destroyed all his photographs in the family album before
fleeing.
Leading a harsh underground life in the
Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Prabhakaran forged new ties
and alliances among likeminded Sri Lankan Tamil youths.
In 1974, he was blamed for half a dozen bomb blasts in
Jaffna. In July 1975, 21-year-old Prabhakaran came to
national limelight after assassinating Jaffna's
pro-Colombo mayor in broad daylight. With instinctive
alertness, Prabhakaran eluded the police dragnet. Even
as a greenhorn, he was paranoid about security and kept
details of plots and plans to himself, sharing them only
on a need-to-know basis.
In 1976, Prabhakaran
formed the LTTE and announced the death penalty for
those who quit or betrayed the group. Bank robberies,
thefts of rifles from security personnel and dynamite
from factories, and targeted killings of policemen
formed the staple of the LTTE's infancy. Bicycle-bound
LTTE "boys" became deliverers of death for agents of the
state. Prabhakaran's own firing skills were brilliant
and largely self-taught (he used to devour weapons
magazines and "Teach Yourself Shooting" books).
In 1978, Prabhakaran shot a Tamil MP in Colombo
point-blank, launching the first militant strike outside
the troubled northeast. Bastiampillai, a police officer
believed to be practically invincible, was gunned down
by the LTTE in April. Two months later, Prabhakaran used
a time bomb to blow up a Sri Lankan aircraft outside
Colombo.
Growing pangs in LTTE involved the
invariable personality clashes and dissent. By 1979,
Prabhakaran quarreled with Uma Maheswaran, a senior
leader. Anton Balasingham, the newly-appointed LTTE
ideologue, tried in vain to thaw the feud. Amid
allegations and counter-allegations over the murder of
two LTTE activists close to Uma, and the group majority
gainsaying Prabhakaran's demand to be assigned
overriding powers, the latter resigned in early 1980.
Old buddies soon came back to Prabhakaran, who
rebuilt his base from Tamil Nadu. In 1981, LTTE cadres
killed two Sri Lankan army soldiers, the first attack on
the military by Tamil rebels. By 1982, Jaffna police
stopped carrying out routine functions fearing Tiger
retribution. Across the Palk Strait in India, a shootout
in the city of Madras between Prabhakaran and Uma ended
in the former's arrest by Indian police. Then premier
Indira Gandhi, perceiving a role for the Tigers in
India's strategic interests, helped Prabhakaran's
release and escape back to Sri Lanka.
In 1983,
Prabhakaran issued a diktat against voting in elections
and projected the LTTE as the only authentic voice of
Tamil nationalism. The horrific anti-Tamil riots of that
year legitimized Tamil chauvinism and militancy like
never before and also heightened Indira Gandhi's
interest in training and arming groups like the Tigers.
India's patronage turned the race to join militant
groups "from a trickle to a torrent". (p 84)
Prabhakaran accepted Indian assistance, but
remained circumspect about this tryst from the genesis.
The LTTE was the only militant army that did not provide
Indian authorities real names and identities of its
members being trained in Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.
Unlike other pro-India Tamil outfits, Prabhakaran
refused to ease exacting entry norms in the interest of
quality (al-Qaeda's growth is also attributable to
selective recruitment). Tiger trainees were repeatedly
confronted with simmering tensions between Prabhakaran
and India. One Prabhakaran follower said, "We should
keep a distance from the Indian establishment all the
time." (p 100)
Prabhakaran emphasized time and
again that Tamils needed to fight "our own battle" for
Eelam. Democratic parties like the Tamil United
Liberation Front (TULF) were derided as "India's pets"
lacking self-reliance. In 1984, without cognition of
Indian intelligence, Prabhakaran set up a super secret
wing to procure sophisticated weapons and explosives
abroad. This gave birth to the LTTE shipping line and
intelligence wing. He also imported anti-snooping
equipment on suspicion of his office or home being
bugged by the Indians.
In the mid-1980s, the
LTTE relentlessly attacked police and military
installations in Sri Lanka, switching from hit-and-run
operations to sustained guerrilla warfare. Prabhakaran
reluctantly joined hands with fellow militant groups to
raise the scale of anti-government activities to
full-scale internal war. The umbrella organization, the
Eelam National Liberation Front (ENLF), however,
threatened Prabhakaran's independence of thought and
action. Alarmed that the LTTE's unique identity was
submerged in the Front, he pulled out in no time.
The 1985 Anuradhapura massacre of Sinhalese
civilians by the LTTE prompted Indian mediated
government-rebel talks at Thimpu. Prabhakaran openly
opposed negotiations, saying that the Sinhalese could
never be trusted. His contempt for the Indian government
was equally unmistakable for forcing both sides to the
table. Prabhakaran realized that Delhi would never allow
Sri Lanka's break-up, a policy that collided with his
goal of separate statehood for the Tamils. He grew wary
of Sri Sabarattinam, the Tamil Eelam Liberation
Organization (TELO) commander, who was over-reliant on
India and rumored to be commissioned to weaken the LTTE.
Intending a blitzkrieg, he ordered a decimation of TELO
guerrillas across Jaffna, and warned civilians against
helping or harboring escapees. According to the Tigers,
TELO was pulverized "to prevent the Indian army from
landing in Jaffna". (p 137)
Persecution of Tamil
civilians by the Sri Lankan army in response to LTTE
pogroms of Sinhalese civilians gave Prabhakaran more and
more soldiers in 1986-7. The aura of Prabhakaran was
another factor goading new recruits into the LTTE fold.
Indian efforts to force the Tigers back to peace talks
when they were growing into the most formidable player
in the northeast raised Prabhakaran's ire no end. He
began to allege that Rajiv Gandhi was "angry with him"
and that Indian intelligence was planning his
assassination through the Eelam People's Revolutionary
Liberation Front (EPRLF), enough cause to initiate
another lightning obliteration of another rival
organization. In July 1987, when India's backdoor
diplomacy was leading to possibilities of a ceasefire,
Prabhakaran unleashed "Captain Miller", the LTTE's first
suicide bomber of the Black Tigers squad.
Prabhakaran agreed to the India-Sri Lanka peace
accord under duress. He claimed to being "betrayed by
the government of India, by Rajiv Gandhi. I have been
stabbed in the back." (p 162)His concurrence was only a
tactical move to get out of Delhi and return to Jaffna.
When the Indian peacekeepers landed in Sri Lanka, LTTE
officials thundered, "This will be the Afghanistan of
India." As Indian troops spread out far and wide in the
northeast, Prabhakaran resented their lording over his
fiefdom. He made an aide, Dhileepan, observe hunger
strike in Jaffna protesting "Indian military hegemony"
and also alleged Indian propping up of rebel groups that
Prabhakaran had crushed to pulp.
In October
1987, the LTTE shot dead five Indian commandos and
heralded Prabhakaran's biggest gamble. His game plan was
to attract Tamils unhappy with the LTTE but now
suffering from the mass casualties caused by Indian
forces. Verily, the LTTE's dominance over Sri Lankan
Tamils swelled in the war against India. Executing Tamil
collaborators and traitors was high on Prabhakaran's
agenda during this David versus Goliath battle. His
secure operations headquarters in Mullaitivu was so well
fortified that "even sunlight could not penetrate". The
Tiger boss never slept in the same place two nights in a
row, and kept some of his closest aides unaware of his
whereabouts.
Prabhakaran, the master strategist,
also patched up with archenemy Sri Lankan president
Premadasa to weather the Indian threat. From June 1989,
in the most unbelievable twist, Colombo supplied arms to
the LTTE to drive the Indians out. By 1990, the
victorious Prabhakaran was the de facto ruler of
one-third of Sri Lanka. He set about purging all
internal Tamil opposition on charges of aiding the
Indian army. Within the LTTE, Prabhakaran weathered
possible coups by former number twos like Mahattaya and
Kittu. No sooner had the Indian peacekeepers beaten a
hasty retreat, Prabhakaran turned against his new
friend, Premadasa, by announcing "Eelam War II".
In September 1990, Prabhakaran flagged off the
diabolical mission to assassinate Rajiv Gandhi, who was
on a comeback trail in Indian politics. In a remarkable
sleight of deception, he sent two personal emissaries to
Rajiv indicating that the Tigers were willing to make up
with the former premier. This put Indian intelligence on
the wrong trail and gave the perfect alibi to the LTTE's
most high profile suicide bombing in 1991. A "sleeper
agent" of the LTTE then went on to penetrate Premadasa's
presidential staff and blew the Sri Lankan president to
bits in 1993. In 1995, Gamini Dissanayake, the
opposition's presidential nominee, was similarly
dispatched. Increasing resort to Black Tiger operations
reinforced Prabhakaran's image as "someone who could
reach anywhere and decimate any opposition". (p 237)
Chandrika Kumaratunga, the current Sri Lankan
president, never inspired much confidence in
Prabhakaran. He was skeptical of her sincerity and
convinced she was acting in tandem with the military.
"Eelam War III" broke out in 1995 with even more deadly
consequences for civilians on both sides. The LTTE
brought down government aircraft using newly-acquired
surface-to-air missiles and repulsed wave after wave of
army advances. "Prabhakaran proved again that he was a
military genius meeting the challenge of a much larger
and powerful force." (p 259) In December 1999, Chandrika
narrowly survived a Black Tiger attack and went blind in
one eye.
As a tenuous ceasefire now holds in Sri
Lanka, Prabhakaran has objected to scaling down the
Tiger's buildup and armament. Whether he can emerge out
of the moniker of lord of the jungle and turn into a
normal political leader capable of making pragmatic
compromises remains to be seen.
Swamy is unsure
if he can metamorphose into a statesman like Yasser
Arafat during Camp David or Xanana Gusmao after East
Timor's independence. What is certain is that the enigma
called Prabhakaran holds the key to peace in Sri Lanka.
Inside an Elusive Mind. Prabhakaran, by M
Narayan Swamy, Konark Publishers, New Delhi, September
2003. ISBN: 81-220-0657-4. Price: US$8.70, 290 pages.
(Copyright 2003 Asia Times Online Co, Ltd. All
rights reserved. Please contact content@atimes.com for
information on our sales and syndication policies.)
|