Forward march, many more miles to go yet
9 March 1997
The government had to maintain a camp in Vavunathivu for two very
important reasons.
One, without it the only air force base in the entire district of
Batticaloa would stand completely exposed to the Tigers who dominate
the Paduvankarai hinterland which lies less than a mile from it.
Two, in the absence of any military presence at the Vavunathivu
junction whence the sole access road from the Batticaloa town to the
vast paddy producing interior of the district branches off to form
the vital southern and the north westerly routes beyond the lagoon,
it would be almost impossible to supervise or sustain the island of
Puliyantivu where the Third Brigade Headquarters, the Kachcheri, the
military intelligence unit, the district hospital, government
department offices etc., are situated. The main part of the town
where the Portuguese built a fort in the seventeenth century is in
the Puliyantivu island which is about two miles south east of the
Vavunathivu junction. The Tigers have been able to build up and
consolidate their position on the eastern side of the town as well,
in areas which are accessible along the coast. There is a police
post at the Mamangam temple to defend this corner of the town's
outskirts.
The manner in which the LTTE is systematically stepping up pressure
on and around the town can clearly be felt -and at times very
obvious. The government for want of troops is trying to manage the
situation with the Police. This is the case in Valaichenai which is
another strategic sector of the district. The pressure is having the
effect desired by the L TTE with each passing day. There is a patent
tendency, among soldiers and particularly Policemen in sectors which
feel this most to decamp fast. This happened when the Mavadivembu
camp between Chenkaladi and Valaichenai was attacked and overrun in
January and when Police posts in the town were shot at recently.
The LTTE detained all the lorries and other vehicles that usually go
to the Paduvankarai region to bring back bricks from the large kilns
located near Veppavedduvan on Monday. It was quite obvious that the
Tigers were going to launch a major attack on one of the
precariously located camps of the region. Armed groups which work
with the army in Batticaloa claim that all military positions in the
district were duly instructed by the Ministry of Defense to go on
full alert.
In the first phase of the attack the LTTE swiftly took control of
the western half of the Valaiyiravu bridge and all the bunkers on
its short gravel approach path from Vavunathivu junction. These
bunkers were manned by the army near the bridge and by the PLOTE
towards the junction. All vehicles bringing paddy to the town were
unloaded and thoroughly checked by armed boys of this group here. A
week before the attack, Ranjan, the person in charge of this point,
was saying that it was virtually impossible for the L TTE to launch
an attack from the north along the edge of the lagoon which was
considered the direction most vulnerable or for that matter from any
side because the surrounding terrain is flat (in some parts
flattened, to be precise) and open. This in his view, gave the army
a very decisive and singular advantage to rapidly outflank and
overwhelm any Tiger build-up in the camp's vicinity. This, indeed,
has been the long accepted credo among many (including a couple of
amateur military geographers) who have applied themselves to the
study of the Eelam War that Paduvankarai has the most unsuitable
terrain for fighting the army.
The camp was located about hundred and fifty metres from the
approach road. The soldiers and PLOTE cadres (one of whom was
wounded) withdrew in haste across the bridge before it was blown up.
The Tigers occupied these positions until about 10 A.M next morning
and effectively thwarted attempts by army reinforcements to reach
the camp which was completely destroyed by that time. Some of the
bolder residents of Puthur and Thimilathivu, the densely populated
northwestern outskirts of the Batticaloa town gathered on Thursday
morning to watch the Tigers loading tractors on the other side of
the lagoon. PLOTE cadres who moved to the eastern approach of the
bridge that morning with the local Police Counter Subversive Unit
said that they had to look on helplessly as the LTTE removed
whatever was left of the camp. They said that the Tigers were busy
ransacking the place until nine o'clock in the morning. A local
resident claimed that eighteen soldiers including an officer who
were captured by the LTTE when it overran the camp had been shot
dead on the spot. There is also an unconfirmed report from
Batticaloa, which was carried by the Virakesari yesterday, that
altogether about hundred soldiers may have been killed in the
attack.
The rescue operation was stymied by LTTE's mortar attack on the
Brigade headquarters located on the southern edge of the town.
Though the army is apparently saying that long range mortars had
been used in the shelling, it is evident that the Tigers had set up
an 8lmrn mortar position on the Buffalo island which lies close to
the town separated from it by a narrow part of the lagoon. Ram, the
LTTE' s regional military commander, seems to have brought with him
when he came from Mullaitivu late last year to take up his several
of these medium range but effective 81 mm mortars and ample
ammunition. This can be seen in the video called Neruppu Meenkal
(fire fish -an answer, probably, to the army's Singing Fish Op)
shows income detail the attack on the Pulukunavi STF camp. The
artillery piece captured by the Tigers here, incidentally, appears
to have been sent to the north by sea.
The government has vacated four camps in the region, at Vellaveli,
Pullumalai, Palaiyadiveddai and Bakkiella, since December. All the
other camps, whatever their location, now stand exposed to attack as
the fall of Vavunativu clearly demonstrates. The population of the
region, both Tamil and Muslim, submit to the LTTE.
It is only the government which seems to assume and assert that it
is inexorably progressing towards its strategic objective in the
north and east.
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