The 7 Sinha Regiment (SR) troops of the 58 Division now operating in general area Sugandirapuram in the Mullaittivu district, have found a clock depicting images of the architects of the controversial 2002 CFA.The clock was made in Thailand and surely unravels the dark secrets of the then regime and LTTE. "Had the 2002 CFA existed, we surely have ended with two separate nations which was signed with callous disregard of sovereignty and the coexistence of the Sri Lankan people", a defence observer stated. It is also a well known fact, how a welfare minister of the same regime sent some 1000 odd wheel chairs and medical equipment for the LTTE to be distributed among its wounded cadres, and how a senior defence official paid a private visit to a hospitalized LTTE leader in Colombo: the well known 'apple call'," he further stated."It is not surprising to see LTTE equipped with high tech communication equipment, materials for bomb manufacturing, workshops for building vessels including submersible craft and vehicles including 'pajeros' and heavy earthmoving machinery. It was during that time allegations were levelled against the same regime for sending some 40odd containers with cement into LTTE's former garrison townships at Kilinochchi and Mullaittivu, which were said, used to construct hideouts and operational bunker complexes of the LTTE", he added."It is also during this period Colombo was made a safe heaven for the LTTE and security forces confined into barracks, which later rose grave agitations island wide with the string of LTTE perpetrated assassinations and killings of the Sri Lankan military intelligence personnel", the observer recalled memories."It was also during the same regime LTTE used brute force and piled ballots in the most corrupt general elections ever reported in the island's history in the North and East, makingway for its proxies to infiltrate the Sri Lankan parliament", the observer said.Also recalling the anti-media atmosphere that prevailed during this regime, the observer stated that, the writer and defence analyst Paul Harris, who worked in Sri Lanka between 1996 ad 2002 as correspondent for Jane's Intelligence Review and the London Daily Telegraph, was forced to leave Sri Lanka in November 2002 at 24 hours notice after the government of Ranil Wickremesinghe pulled his journalist visa.Mr. Paul Harris was critical of the Cease Fire Agreement between the 2002 regime and the LTTE.
'Piece-makers': Dark secrets unravel as troops close-in on LTTE- Mullaittivu

0 Comments:

Post a Comment