Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
International

When Jayewardene wanted to hang Prabhakaran

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Aug, 2014 08:20 AM
  • When Jayewardene wanted to hang Prabhakaran
Sri Lankan president J.R. Jayewardene asked Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1986 to hand over Tamil Tigers chief Velupillai Prabhakaran to him so that he could hang him in Jaffna.
 
Jayewardene made the request to Gandhi during the SAARC summit in Bangalore, reveals former Congress leader K. Natwar Singh in his autobiography, "One Life is Not Enough" (Rupa).
 
Natwar Singh was then a member of the Gandhi government. New Delhi had asked Prabhakaran to come to Bangalore so as to meet Jayewardene in a bid to end the Sri Lankan ethnic conflict.
 
"We had kept Prabhakaran's presence in Bangalore a secret but somehow President Jayewardene got to know.
 
"Rajiv, hand him over to me. I shall hang him in Jaffna, where he shot dead the Mayor who was a Tamilian," he said.
 
The reference was to the 1975 assassination of then Jaffna Mayor Alfred Duriappah by a group of young Tamil militants, including Prabhakaran. This was the first known murder committed by Prabhakaran, who founded the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 1976. Prabhakaran was finally killed by the Sri Lankan military in 2009.
 
Natwar Singh, who played a key role in framing the 1987 India-Sri Lanka agreement, says that "talking to Prabhakaran was an exhausting experience.
 
"I told him that there could come a time when he would have to face the combined might of the Indian and the Sri Lankan armies.
 
"He was obdurate. His response to my scarcely veiled threat was: 'I shall never give up Eelam even if I am to die for it.'
 
"Frankly, at that time, I underestimated the depth of his fanatical determination," Natwar Singh says in his 410-page book.
 
According to Natwar Singh, Rajiv Gandhi was "for some reason ... in a great hurry to find a solution for the ethnic problems in Sri Lanka.
 
"Perhaps it was his successful handling of the Punjab and Assam crises which had given him confidence.
 
"However, Rajiv Gandhi was not familiar with the history of the ethnic problems in Sri Lanka.
 
"It is my firm belief that presidents and prime ministers should not get involved in the nitty-gritties of negotiations," says Natwar Singh, a long-time Congress leader who quit the party later after being named in a corruption scandal.
 
"They neither have the time nor the expertise for it. As the weeks went by, I got the impression that Jayewardene was getting the better of Rajiv Gandhi."
 
Natwar Singh says that then external affairs minister P.V. Narasimha Rao had reservations about the 1987 India-Sri Lanka agreement that sought to end the Tamil separatist campaign.
 
But Rao "was unwilling to take them up with the prime minister," he says, without revealing Rao's reservations. But he admits "there was merit in Rao's doubts" about the success of the 1987 pact.
 
The author feels that Rajiv Gandhi, as the prime minister, should not have met Prabhakaran in New Delhi just before flying to Colombo to sign the India-Sri Lanka agreement.
 
Natwar Singh later asked Gandhi if he "had got anything in writing from the LTTE chief... He got irritated and said, 'He has given me his word.'
 
"I said that Prabhakaran's word meant nothing. He should have been asked to give his consent in writing. He would double-cross us when it suited him. This, Prabhakaran did more than once."
 
Four years after the 1987 accord, a Tamil Tiger suicide bomber blew up Gandhi at an election rally near Chennai in May 1991. A year later, India outlawed the LTTE.

MORE International ARTICLES

NEWSFLASH: 30 injured as train derails at Chicago airport

NEWSFLASH: 30 injured as train derails at Chicago airport
More than 30 people were injured when a commuter train derailed Monday morning at the underground station of an airport in the US city of Chicago.

NEWSFLASH: 30 injured as train derails at Chicago airport

Japan to turn over nuclear material to US for destruction

Japan to turn over nuclear material to US for destruction
Japan will hand over "hundreds of kilograms of sensitive nuclear material" to the US for destruction as part of the efforts to "help prevent unauthorised actors, criminals, or terrorists from acquiring such materials," the White House said Monday.

Japan to turn over nuclear material to US for destruction

Malaysian Airlines flight MH370: Timeline of events

Malaysian Airlines flight MH370: Timeline of events
The Beijing-bound Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 which went missing March 8 with 239 people on-board shortly after taking off from Kuala Lumpur, it is officially announced in Kuala Lumpur Monday, ended in the southern Indian Ocean with no survivors.

Malaysian Airlines flight MH370: Timeline of events

Airliner's flight ended in southern Indian Ocean: Malaysian PM

The Malaysia Airlines plane with 239 people on board that went missing March 8 "is lost" and there are no hopes of survivors, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced Monday.

Airliner's flight ended in southern Indian Ocean: Malaysian PM

Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane

Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane
Japanese search and rescue teams joined Chinese aircraft Sunday in the hunt for signs of missing Malaysian plane -- MH370 -- which has mysteriously vanished.

Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane

Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: No trace but hope sustains search

Missing Malaysia Flight MH370:  No trace but hope sustains search
Search for a missing Malaysian airliner yielded no result even more than a fortnight after it disappeared but Australian acting Prime Minister Warren Truss Sunday said the hunt will continue as long as there is hope. Search continued in the southern Indian Ocean after sightings of debris believed to be from the plane

Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: No trace but hope sustains search