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    South Asia
     Apr 25, 2008
Page 2 of 2
Global hunt for Tigers' assets
By Ajit Kumar Singh

declared the LTTE the "second-most dangerous terrorist group" in the world, after al-Qaeda.

Nevertheless, the LTTE's international networks have suffered major reverses in the recent past, with many instances in which leaders and cadres of the LTTE or their front organizations have been arrested, sentenced to prison, or otherwise restrained, for a variety of subversive activities across the world. Some of the major incidents, in this context, include:

  • April 11, 2008: Counterterrorism police in Quebec and Ontario in Canada reportedly shut down the World Tamil Movement (WTM) office in Montreal, alleging that the organization has been

     

    raising money to finance terrorist activities in Sri Lanka.
  • January 10, 2008: A US District Court in Maryland sentenced Thirunavukarasu Varatharasa, a Sri Lankan resident in the US, to 57 months in prison and three years of supervised release, for conspiracy to provide arms, ammunition and other military materiel to the LTTE.
  • October 21, 2007: The Royal Canadian Mounted Police's senior liaison officer for the Caribbean disclosed that more than 100 people, including key members of the LTTE, were arrested in the Caribbean with fraudulent travel documents, including Western passports forged with the aim of entering the US and Canada.
  • September 25, 2007: French police arrested one Ranjan, who was appointed by the LTTE to take charge of LTTE activities in France after the arrest of Parithi aka Nadarajah Mathienthiram, who was earlier in charge of operations in this country.
  • August 14, 2007: Three top LTTE suspects, Sujit Gunapala, Sasiljaran Teverajah and Satiepawan Arseawatap, were deported to Sri Lanka. Gunapala, Teverajah and Arseawatap were arrested from Ranong province in Thailand on May 12, 2003, with 10 Glock pistols and three HK Mark 23 pistols, and had remained under detention in Thailand for attempting to smuggle weapons to Sri Lanka.
  • June 21, 2007: Arunachalam Chrishanthakumar alias Shanthan, president of the British Tamil Association and a high-ranking agent of the LTTE, and head of finance, Goldan Lambert, were arrested by British police under the 2000 Terrorism Act. Subsequently, on July 5, 2007, a British court froze all bank accounts belonging to Shanthan and wife, whose business ventures, as on July 2, 2007, amounted to $8 billion.
  • May 17, 2007: The Maldives coast guard opened fire on and sank a small vessel carrying suspected LTTE cadres after a 12-hour standoff at sea in the southern territorial waters of Maldives. The boat was carrying guns and mortar ammunition.
  • May 1, 2007: Australian police arrested two suspected LTTE cadres, Aruran Vinayagamoorthy (who had access to $526,000 in two bank accounts between August 2001 and December 2005) and Sivarajah Yathavan, after raids in Sydney and Melbourne.
  • April 28, 2007: Six Sri Lankans, including the prime accused, Satrubarajah Shanamugarajah alias Ruby, connected to the LTTE, were convicted for organized crime in Norway.
  • April 25, 2007: The "director" of the LTTE in New York, Karunakaran Kandasamy, was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Queens, on charges of providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization. An FBI raid on Kandasamy's office in Queens revealed evidence that he had raised millions of dollars for the Tamil Tigers through a front organization called the World Tamil Coordinating Committee.
  • April 1, 2007: The leader of the LTTE's France branch since 2003, Nadarajah Mathinthiran alias Parathi and Thuraisamy Jeyamorthy alias Jeya, who are in charge of fundraising in France, were among 17 LTTE suspects arrested. During 2006, the LTTE reportedly collected more than $10 million.
  • March 8, 2007: Haji Subandi, an international arms dealer from Indonesia, pleaded guilty in a federal court in Guam to conspiring to export guns, surface-to-air missiles and other military hardware to the LTTE.
  • August 30, 2006: Indonesian police arrested 13 LTTE suspects during a raid in the southern Java coast. The suspects were reportedly moving to Australia.
  • August 22, 2006: 13 suspects with close links to the LTTE, including Waterloo Suresh aka Suresh Skandarajah, were arrested from Buffalo, New York, San Jose, California, Seattle, Washington and Connecticut, following a Canadian police and FBI probe into allegations that LTTE sympathizers in North America tried to buy missiles and move terror funds.
  • April 16, 2006: Canadian police raided the office of the WTM in Montreal, the first raid after the Canadian government proscribed the LTTE as a terrorist group, and seized computers, files, LTTE flags and other political documents.

    The latest crackdown appears to be part of an international operation aimed at neutralizing the LTTE's operations worldwide. However, proscribing the LTTE has tended to have only limited success, since the organization simply sets up new fronts that continue activities earlier carried out directly by LTTE offices, or by other fronts that come foul of the law.

    Thus, after the TRO was banned in Britain, fund collection for the LTTE was undertaken by a charity named White Pigeon. Similarly, when the Washington-based Intelsat Ltd banned the National Television of Tamil Eelam, the official television of the LTTE, on April 21-22, 2007, the LTTE started its Paris-based Tamil Television Network, a pay television channel owned by Globecast, which was later shut down on May 3, 2007.

    Even the limited successes against the LTTE's international operations in the recent past have had tremendous impact on LTTE capacities on the ground. Nevertheless, the LTTE's global network is far from defunct, and the intelligence communities in the many countries in which the Tamil rebels operate fronts will have to keep pace with the constant adaptation and inventiveness that remains a hallmark of the LTTE's operations, both domestically and abroad.

    The Sri Lankan ambassador to the US, Bernard Goonetilleke, in a recent interview, noted that "a problem that is taking place 10,000 miles away from the coast of the US, is not a problem of Sri Lanka alone ... Terrorist groups feed on each other".

    Ajit Kumar Singh, research assistant, Institute for Conflict Management.

    (Published with permission from the South Asia Intelligence Review of the South Asia Terrorism Portal. )
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