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Sri Lanka’s top defence official Gotabaya Rajapakse has accused the LTTE’s global network of sustaining an international propaganda campaign against his country by raising millions of dollars annually. |
He was addressing a regional defence and security conference currently underway in Malaysia, the defence
ministry in Colombo said.
Dwelling on Sri Lanka’s successful counter-terrorism campaign against the banned LTTE which he himself spearheaded, Rajapakse said much can be learnt from Sri Lanka’s experience.
He said a key part of the LTTE’s modus operandi was to mobilise support for itself by whipping up ethnic and communal feelings among the Tamil diaspora overseas.
“Extremist elements within the diaspora were mobilised by LTTE operatives and front organisations in more than 30 countries around the world to help fund
terrorist activities in Sri Lanka.”
He said the terrorist funds mobilised by groups linked to LTTE is estimated to have been between $50 to 75mn on an annual basis from 1993 to 2002, and $200mn per annum from 2002 to 2008.
They raised funds through carefully orchestrated propaganda campaign, coercion, extortion and through organised illegal activities, including fraud, drug trafficking and people smuggling.
Rajapakse said a non-state actor such as the LTTE can mobilise, maintain and successfully utilise a global network to strengthen and sustain terrorist activities in a sovereign nation is a matter of very serious concern both
locally and globally.
“Even today terrorist remnants continue to sustain an international propaganda campaign against Sri Lanka through front organisations that have now put on a
democratic face.”
He charged that some nations seem to have chosen to turn a blind eye to these front organisations and their activities because they claim to support political activism or humanitarian relief.
“At the same time, the network’s operatives, most of whom are trained terrorists, remain involved in various illegal activities, and are constantly seeking ways to revive terrorist activities in Sri Lanka.”
Last week, Sri Lanka announced the deaths of three key LTTE operatives who were trying to revive the LTTE’s armed campaign in the Tamil regions. The government said the three men had been directed by two LTTE leaders based in Europe.
Last month, Sri Lanka also designated some 16 organisations and over 400 individuals as those supporting terrorism. Parliamentary legislation to proscribe them is expected soon.
Colombo accuses Tamil diaspora organisations of being behind the third UNHRC resolution in March which prescribed an international probe into the island’s human rights record. Sri Lanka has vowed non-cooperation with the international investigation.
There are no comments.
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