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Tigers divided

With the ?secession?/?expulsion? of V. Muralitharan or ?Colonel Karuna?, the Eastern military commander of the LTTE, from the parent outfit, one of the world?s deadliest terror outfits has recorded its first real split in about a quarter century of its existence.

Updated on: Mar 17, 2004, 19:06:00 IST
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With the ‘secession’/’expulsion’ of V. Muralitharan or ‘Colonel Karuna’, the Eastern military commander of the LTTE, from the parent outfit, one of the world’s deadliest terror outfits has recorded its first real split in about a quarter century of its existence.

HT Image
HT Image

Reports point to differences with supremo V. Prabhakaran over administrative matters and over the putatively inferior status accorded to the Batticaloa Tamils in relation to those from Jaffna in the LTTE’s scheme. This is unlikely to be the whole story, although it is not clear if there is an ideological underpinning to Karuna’s departure.

But the LTTE claim of being the ‘sole representative’ of Tamil aspirations in Sri Lanka stands dented. It will be another matter if the LTTE can eliminate Karuna, the treatment Pirabhakaran had meted out in the Eighties to another top military tactician, Mahatya. Karuna’s insurance is that he commands a couple of thousand fighters. If they remain loyal, changes in the political contours of the two-year-old ceasefire (as well as the country’s April parliamentary election) may be on the cards. Karuna has already sought a separate truce with Colombo, though nothing is known of the terms. In the Parliament poll, he will no doubt seek to get as many of his proxies elected as he can so that the LTTE does not retain a monopoly of so-called Tamil ‘eelam’ MPs.

Will the LTTE split also split the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) and the remaining four elements of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) — proxies of the LTTE — along North-East lines? Karuna, for now, is unlikely to drop the gun for fear of LTTE retribution. But chances are that the ceasefire will not be in jeopardy since Pirabhakaran’s military leverage has diminished with Karuna’s departure. India needs to keep a close watch on these and related developments and the fallout, if any, in Tamil Nadu.

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