THILEEPAN'S FAST TO DEATH - 
                  JAFFNA SEPTEMBER TO NOVEMBER 1987
                  
                    This account was written by a Tamil resident
                    in London, who visited his homeland for the
                    first time after five years and details the
                    happenings in Jaffna during the period 12
                    September 1987 to 14 November 1987 
                    
                       [see also MaaVeerar:
                      அணையாத
                      தீபங்கள்
                      - Lt. Col. Thileepan and  Rajiv Gandhi's War
                      Crimes] 
                      
                    Contents    Trip by train from Colombo to
                    Jaffna 
                      Indian troops carrying TV and Video
                    sets 
                      Thileepan's fast 
                      Hartals and peaceful
                    protests   
                    Thileepan dies
                    and thousands grieve 
                      But no violent reaction at
                    funeral   
                    Kumarappa,
                    Pulendran arrested by Sri Lanka Navy [see
                    also 
                    Velupillai Pirabakaran On the Arrrest &
                    Death of Kumarappa, Pulendran and
                    Others] 
                      Arrested LTTE leaders take cyanide
                    and die   
                    Indian Army
                    attacks 
                   
                   
                  Trip by train from Colombo to
                  Jaffna 
                  
                    This article is written on the
                    basis of what I saw and heard during my visit
                    to Sri Lanka from 12 September to 14 November
                    1987. My visit, along with my family, was
                    hurriedly planned to take advantage of the
                    'peace' in Sri Lanka, immediately following the
                    signing of the Agreement between Prime Minister
                    Rajiv Gandhi and President J.R. Jayawardene on
                    the 29th of July 1987. My family and I wished
                    to see our parents and our friends back at
                    home. 
                   
                  I landed in Colombo on the 12th of September
                  1987, clutching in my hands the popular Sri
                  Lankan dailies, 'The Sun', 'The Island' and the
                  'Daily News'. They were full of news about the
                  Indo - Sri Lanka Accord. They were fulsome in
                  their commendations to Rajiv Gandhi and J.R.
                  Jayawardene. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
                  were also give prominent treatment 
                  From Colombo, we travelled by train to Jaffna.
                  We were told that the direct trip to Jaffna by
                  train was only made possible after the Accord and
                  that even now, the full journey to Kankesanturai
                  (the usual last stop of the Jaffna train) was not
                  possible because of damage to the railway lines
                  between Jaffna and KKS The train was packed and I
                  found a good number of public servants returning
                  to Jaffna for the week end to visit their
                  families. 
                  Everything looked new and different to me
                  after five long years since my last visit.
                  However, I managed to locate a few persons from
                  my village, whom I knew and through them I was
                  introduced to others in the carriage. Some of
                  them said that we were the lucky ones, because we
                  could afford a home abroad away from all the
                  miseries in the Island. When questioned about the
                  situation in Jaffna, they came out with their
                  experiences of unspeakable horror and their
                  feelings of sudden relief immediately after the
                  signing of the Accord. They spoke about
                  'Operation Liberation' of the 26th of May, and
                  'Operation Poomalai' of the 4th of June and the
                  courageous and dedicated stand taken by the LTTE
                  to preserve their heritage. But when asked
                  whether the Accord would work, some sighed and
                  gave a smile; some said, 'well'; a few said 'no
                  comments'; one or two said, 'they will make it
                  work whether we like it or not'; and others said
                  'enough is enough, let us not talk of the past'.
                  None of them were sure of the future. 
                  Jaffna was peaceful when I arrived. As usual,
                  the station was noisy but with one difference -
                  and that was my first sight of the Indian Army
                  (the Indian Peace Keeping Force - IPKF) carrying
                  SLRs and AK47 machine guns. As we moved away from
                  the Jaffna railway station towards Vaddukoddai we
                  saw more and more Indian troops carrying weapons
                  at main cross roads, inside the Bank of Ceylon
                  premises opposite the Jaffna Provincial Hospital,
                  opposite Sivan Kovil near Vannarponnai and so on.
                  But I noticed that there were practically no
                  troops outside the Jaffna Municipality
                  limits. 
                   
                    Indian troops carrying TV and
                  Video sets 
                  After arriving at home, I used to visit Jaffna
                  town daily to meet my friends and relations. The
                  town was crowded with shoppers, pedestrians and
                  cyclists. If one had to move about, the cheapest
                  mode of transport was the minibus or else,
                  cycling which had no cost associated with it.
                  There was also a noticeable number of brand new
                  Japanese cars on the roads. These cars, I was
                  told, emerged only after the Accord. The shops
                  were crowded. Here and there, I saw Indian
                  soldiers carrying TV and Video sets on their
                  shoulders to their parked trucks and jeeps. I was
                  told that those who sell electrical goods were
                  thriving in their business because of the
                  presence of the IPKF. 
                  I noticed the frequent use of the terms
                  'development' and 'rebuilding' in discussions
                  amongst NGOs, academics, political activists,
                  students, religious circles, business people and
                  others - development and rebuilding of schools,
                  industries, housing, transport, tourism, towns
                  and cities. There was a noticeable optimism among
                  most people in Jaffna following the signing of
                  the Accord. There was a lull in the terror and
                  violence which had reigned over the North and
                  East for previous four years. 
                  Everyday, the newspapers carried sensational
                  investment proposals for the North and East.
                  There was news of foreign missions visiting the
                  North and East and promising aid in millions of
                  rupees. I heard local development planners
                  talking seriously of building a new town in
                  Nallur, a new city in Vadamaratchi, a modern
                  capital for the Tamils in Trincomalee, and a
                  highway from Point Pedro to Trincomalee by the
                  coastline. Money was promised for every thing
                  from orphanages to building new cities; from
                  rehabilitation to resettlement. 
                   
                    Thileepan's fast 
                  However reports reaching Jaffna indicated that
                  the East was not fully free from unrest. There
                  were reports of arrests, torture and killing by
                  the Sri Lankan Security Forces But, things were
                  going relatively smoothly until the 15th of
                  September, when it was announced that the LTTE
                  leader of the political wing in Jaffna,
                  Thileepan, had commenced a fast unto death
                  campaign at 9.30 a.m. in front of the historic
                  Nallur Murugan Temple in protest against 
                  
                    
                      the failure to effectively implement the
                      promises in the Accord; 
                      the accelerated state aided Sinhala
                      colonisation in the Eastern Province; 
                      the continued detention of Tamil prisoners
                      under the Prevention of Terrorism Act; 
                      the failure of the Home Guards to surrender
                      their arms; 
                      the failure to close army and police camps
                      situated in Tamil areas; and 
                      the delay in setting up an interim
                      administration for the North and East. 
                     
                   
                   
                    Hartals and peaceful
                  protests 
                  The fast picked up momentum day by day and
                  it became the issue in everybody's mind as the
                  days passed by. We received reports that more
                  and more people were joining the fast. One lady
                  teacher named Subashanthini Rajasundaram started
                  her fast in support of Thileepan's protest,
                  sitting next to him on the 17th of September and
                  I was informed that five others had joined the
                  fast at Valvettiturai junction on the 18th of
                  September and so on. I later received reports
                  that such fasts had been spreading in the
                  mainland as well - in places like Chavakacheri,
                  Mullaitivu, Batticaloa, and Trincomalee. 
                  There were hartals and protest marches
                  organised by the LTTE. The schools and colleges
                  were closed and students organised marches to
                  Nallur and picketed the Indian military camps.
                  During the hartal all shops were closed and the
                  public was encouraged to attend pickets and
                  rallies. I saw thousands of men, women and
                  children joining pickets and rallies. All forms
                  of transport, cars, vans, cycles, mini buses,
                  government buses, bullock carts, scooters and
                  motor cycles were used to move people
                  around. 
                  All the Tamil dailies in the North began to
                  highlight the fast and associated events.
                  Surprisingly, the media in the South (of Sri
                  Lanka) was silent on the whole issue - the
                  dailies did not carry the news and the TV and
                  radio blacked out the fast and the protest
                  movement. However in the North, everybody tried
                  to see LTTE's TV transmission named Nitharshan
                  which gave a day by day account of the events. As
                  days passed by, the deterioration in Thileepan's
                  health caught the headlines of the Tamil dailies.
                  Coloured posters began to appear in all the
                  villages. Loudspeaker fitted cars and vans were
                  seen in villages making announcements on the fast
                  and asking public to picket IPKF camps and appeal
                  for justice. 
                  I was informed that there had been a skirmish
                  on the 16th of September between the public and
                  the IPKF at Neervelli when a jeep carrying IPKF
                  personnel had been carelessly driven at a picket
                  line - and two women had been knocked down. The
                  public gathered and surrounded the jeep and
                  assaulted the IPKF officers. Three of them were
                  tied up and thrown to the road. They were later
                  released when a higher ranking officer intervened
                  and gave an assurance that an inquiry would be
                  held. On the same day, people who went to picket
                  outside the old Dutch Fort military camp, had
                  entered the recently opened Pannai Police Station
                  in Jaffna, ransacked the whole place, and tore
                  off the uniforms of the Police Officers. The
                  police station was forcibly shut and the police
                  officers took refuge in the Fort military camp I
                  felt the tension mounting day by day. 
                   
                    Thileepan dies and thousands
                  grieve 
                   The Citizen Committees, trade unions,
                  students unions, teachers associations, religious
                  leaders, all held meetings and discussed the
                  issues relating to Thileepan's fast and passed
                  resolutions and submitted memoranda to the
                  overall commander of the IPKF, Lt. General
                  Depinder Singh requesting the Indian
                  representatives to intervene and stop the fast
                  and initiate immediate efforts to set up the
                  interim administration in the North and East.
                  But nothing moved fast enough to stop
                  Thileepan's death. Thileepan died on the 26th of
                  September 1987. There was widespread grief in
                  the North. There can be little doubt that
                  Thileepan's martyrdom had a profound effect on
                  every Tamil soul in Sri Lanka. Thousands of
                  people from the North and East poured into Jaffna
                  as the news of his death spread. 
                   
                    But no violent reaction at
                  funeral 
                  Judging by past events, everyone expected a
                  violent reaction in the North and East, following
                  Thileepan's death, but to everybody's surprise
                  the funeral turned into a peaceful day of
                  mourning. The LTTE members moved in decisively
                  to curb any kind of violence. They moved all
                  state owned buses into depots and guarded them.
                  They also provided cover to government
                  institutions after some attempts had been made to
                  set fire to them. The Tamil daily Eelamurasu as
                  well as the TV Nitharshan carried the LTTE
                  leader, Prabakharan's appealed to the people
                  not to destroy or damage public property, as this
                  was the property of Tamil Eelam. Black flags
                  were seen everywhere - on the roads, in houses,
                  churches, temples, trees, public buildings and so
                  on Thousands of sobbing men, women and children
                  followed the body covered with the red flag of
                  the Tigers with their emblem on it. Thileepan's
                  body was taken on a decorated van through the
                  villages for the people to pay their homage and
                  finally taken to Suthumalai where it was kept for
                  the people to pay their last respects. I was
                  later informed that his body was donated to the
                  medical faculty of Jaffna University. The LTTE
                  said that this had been his last wish. 
                  
                    Thileepan's death brought sadness and sorrow
                    and also fear to many people. Most of them had
                    genuinely believed that the Indians would
                    intervene and stop the disaster. They began to
                    have doubts about India's conduct. They began
                    to say 'this could have been avoided' and
                    'India should have moved fast' and 'India
                    should not have let this happen' and so on. The
                    Tamil dailies began to carry articles
                    criticising the handling of the whole issue by
                    the Indians. I could feel the tension
                    mounting. 
                   
                   
                    Kumarappa and Pulendran
                  arrested by Sri Lanka Navy 
                  Following the death of Thileepan all other
                  fasts were called off. But on the 3rd of
                  October came the event which was destined to
                  trigger off the final collapse of the Indo Sri
                  Lanka Accord. The Sri Lanka Broadcasting
                  Corporation and the Tamil and English dailies
                  announced the headline news: two LTTE leaders,
                  Kumarappa and Pulendran along with 12 others had
                  been arrested by the Sri Lankan Navy and they
                  were being held in the Army camp at Pallali.
                  Panic struck Jaffna. There were rumours that the
                  arrested leaders were severely tortured by the
                  Sri Lankan security forces and that President
                  Jayawardene had ordered their removal to Colombo
                  for further interrogation. 
                  The Tamil dailies carried head lines stating
                  that the Indian military officers and high
                  officials of the Indian High Commission had
                  recommended the release of the captives but that
                  this had been over ruled by the Sri Lankan
                  government. I saw messages appearing on the
                  LTTE's giant blackboards at cross roads. There
                  were reports that negotiations were underway for
                  the release of the two leaders and the others who
                  had been captured. This issue became the talk of
                  the town. There was a big demand for Eelamurasu,
                  the Tamil daily that was published by the LTTE in
                  Jaffna From that which appeared in the Tamil
                  dailies, I gathered that much discussion and
                  behind the scene political moves were taking
                  place daily for the release of the captives. 
                   
                    Arrested LTTE leaders take
                  cyanide and die 
                  
                    But, suddenly, on the 5th of October, there
                    was an announcement from local loud speaker
                    carriers that all the captives, including the
                    two leaders had taken cyanide and killed
                    themselves. This according to the announcement,
                    was to avoid torture and removal to Colombo.
                    There was noticeable panic everywhere. I saw
                    black flags coming up again and people standing
                    at their gates to listen to the latest news
                    from passers by. I saw the tension mounting and
                    I felt a sharp deterioration in the overall
                    situation in the peninsula. 
                   
                   
                    Indian Army attacks 
                  
                    On October 10th, while I was on my way to
                    Jaffna town, I was told that the IPKF had gone
                    and blasted the premises of 'Eelamurasu' and
                    damaged the buildings of 'Murasoli' and
                    arrested all the employees. These attacks were
                    reported to have taken place at 1a.m. and 6
                    a.m. respectively. And at 6a.m., LTTE's TV
                    station at Kopay was damaged by the IPKF and
                    the equipment and machinery was removed. These
                    actions by the IPKF were seen as unwarranted
                    and they led to the LTTE taking up arms
                    again. 
                   
                  As I neared Jaffna town, I saw vehicles
                  carrying bands of young men in and out of the
                  town. It was exactly 12.55 p.m. on the 10th of
                  October that the bloody war started near Jaffna
                  Central College. There was heavy firing which
                  continued at least for about 40 to 45 minutes.
                  Jaffna town was heavily crowded with people and
                  all were taken by surprise, not knowing what was
                  going on and which direction to flee. Mini vans
                  packed with people fled from the main bus stand.
                  Cyclists rolled one top of another, desperately
                  trying to get onto the road. Pedestrians took to
                  their heels and ran wildly in all directions.
                  There was total pandemonium. I managed to get
                  behind a crowd fleeing north and finally reached
                  Vannarponnai, a village in the outskirts of
                  Jaffna town. From there, I wasted no time in
                  getting back home before the violence spread. 
                  The next day I decided to get back to Jaffna
                  to see what had happened. I did not know that a
                  curfew had been declared. Like me, there were
                  several others who were cycling together from
                  Vaddukodai to go to Jaffna town. Everything
                  looked normal. There were people on the road and
                  here and there we saw vehicles moving on the
                  road. Nothing seemed different until we reached
                  Oddumadam which is small village on the outskirts
                  of Jaffna town. We were stopped by young Tigers
                  and some other people living in Oddumadam and
                  asked to get back home. We heard loud explosions
                  coming from the direction of the town. 
                  
                    According to those who stopped us, there was
                    continuous shelling from the Dutch Fort by the
                    Indian Army 'They are blowing up the town' said
                    the old folks. 'You can't go in now' said the
                    Tigers, all carrying weapons in their hands. We
                    saw a helicopter which appeared to be coming
                    from Karainagar. We ran into a nearby house and
                    after the helicopter disappeared we were asked
                    to return home immediately. We took no chances.
                    We returned home 
                   
                  There was no news about the incidents in
                  Jaffna except that which said in the Sri Lankan
                  government's news bulletins relayed by the SLBC,
                  the newscast on All India Radio and the Manila
                  Cheithigal (the Regional News) from India. But,
                  the Tigers continued to release 'Eelamurasu'
                  which came in a single sheet, and it was hard to
                  obtain. Only a few copies were available in the
                  Vaddukodai area and they were sold very quickly.
                  It was sold at Rs.1/50 per copy and people were
                  willing to pay double to get a copy. It was the
                  only source available to read 'the other side of
                  the story' 
                  
                    The electricity supply was cut off and there
                    were no lights throughout Jaffna from 10th
                    October until our departure on the 14th of
                    November. Everybody rushed to buy batteries for
                    their radios, but batteries were difficult to
                    find. We were told that the LTTE were buying
                    batteries in bulk. Further inquiries revealed
                    that the batteries were used for land mines.
                    Without good batteries, the BBC World Service
                    and the BBC Tamil Osai were hard to receive.
                    News carried by people living in the immediate
                    environs of Jaffna town was the only source of
                    information available as to what was going on
                    inside Jaffna. We heard frightening stories
                    about killings in Jaffna. We approached the
                    LTTE sentries for confirmation of some of the
                    information that we had received, but they
                    refused to comment. 'The situation is bad and
                    explosive. The Indians have betrayed us. They
                    are killing civilians and they are firing motor
                    shells indiscriminately into the civilian
                    population constantly from the Fort and other
                    military camps', they remarked. 
                   
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