On the Death of
Velupillai Prabhakaran
'Velupillai Prabhakaran shot dead' - Face caught Fire
Express Buzz, 18 May 2009
Velupillai Prabhakaran, the feared leader of Sri Lanka's ruthless
Tamil Tigers, was killed Monday while trying to flee the battle zone
in the island's north with two top aides, ending one of the world's
longest running insurgencies that bled the island nation for over a
quarter century.
Wild celebrations erupted in large parts of Sri Lanka, including
capital Colombo, as authorities announced that the elusive
54-year-old, who fled his home in 1972 with nothing more than a
dream to carve out an independent Tamil homeland, had died after
pursuing soldiers fired at an ambulance in which he was being taken
by his loyalists from the war zone.
Prabhakaran's face apparently caught fire and he breathed his last
in a small stretch of land near the coast in Mullaitivu district, an
area about 400 km from here which he had made his hideout a long
time ago, building seemingly impregnable underground bunkers.
The death -- which came hours after his elder son Charles Anthony,
who headed the group's IT wing and was being groomed to succeed him,
was also killed -- marks the collapse of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which Prabhakaran set up in 1976 and which
became one of the most well-armed and ruthless insurgent groups in
the world with its own army, navy and air force.
It also came three days before the 18th anniversary of the
assassination of former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was
blown up by a woman Tamil Tiger suicide bomber at an election rally
near Chennai in India on May 21, 1991.
A triumphant Sri Lankan army chief, Lt Gen Sarath Fonseka, told
state-owned TV: "We have now completed our task of liberating the
north and east from terrorists." Fonseka was badly wounded when an
LTTE suicide bomber sneaked into the fortified army headquarters in
Colombo and tried to blow him up.
Also killed Monday with Prabhakaran was Shanmugalingam Shivashankar
alias Pottu Amman, the dreaded chief of the intelligence wing that
was responsible for all the high profile assassinations the Tigers
carried out in its long and murderous history.
Other key LTTE leaders whose bodies were found Monday were Soosai,
the LTTE's naval wing leader, Balasingham Nadesan, who headed its
political wing, S. Puleedevan, head of the Peace Secretariat,
Ramesh, a military leader, Ilango, chief of the LTTE police, and
Kapil Amman from the LTTE intelligence wing.
Puleedevan dealt extensively with the diplomatic community during
the Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement between Colombo and the LTTE
from 2002 until it collapsed under renewed violence within a few
years.
The deaths sparked frenzied celebrations in Colombo and vast parts
of the Sinhalese populated central and southern provinces as people
poured out of their homes, waved national flags and distributed
sweets.
Born into a Hindu middle class family of Jaffna in 1954, Prabhakaran
was the youngest of two sons and two daughters of a junior
government employee in the Sri Lankan government.
A school dropout, he set up the Tamil New Tigers (TNT) group in
1972, which became the LTTE in 1976. He single-handedly built it
into an awesome military machine that turned assassinations into a
fine art and at one point controlled a third of Sri Lanka's land
territory and two-thirds of its coastline.
The discovery of the bodies of Prabhakaran and the others --
television footage showed the blown up face of Prabhakaran's son --
marks the macabre end of a group which still commands a lot of
support among Tamil expatriates spread all over the West as well as
in sections of Tamil Nadu, where Prabhakaran lived 1983-87 and where
the LTTE once had training camps and offices.
Anthony's body was found at Karayamullavaikkal in Mullaitivu
district, "after an unsuccessful and half-hearted attempt by LTTE
cadres to evacuate their leader's son early this morning", the
defence ministry said.
Some bodies of LTTE fighters were found in the nearby
Vellamullivaikkal area.
Tamil sources told IANS that a large number of LTTE fighters may
have committed mass suicide in Mullaitivu district by blowing
themselves up so as to avoid falling into the hands of the military.
Prabhakaran's death also came a day after the LTTE made a momentous
announcement that it had decided to "silence" its guns as the
"battle has reached its bitter end".
But the Sri Lankan military, determined to have a total victory over
the LTTE, continued the last of its mopping up operations saying
some fighters had been boxed into a 100m x 100m area, north of
Vellamullivaikkal.
More than 250,000 civilians who fled rebel-held areas were being
housed in camps in the northern province with promises from the
government that they would be resettled in their original villages
as soon as possible.
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