Arab News

Malaysian police detain supporters of LTTE

- Nor Arlene Tan Kuala Lumpur

Malaysian police have detained seven people including two politician­s for suspected terror links with Sri Lanka’s defunct Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Ayob Khan Mydin Pitchay, the federal police’s Special Branch Counter-Terrorism Division (E8) principal assistant director, told a press conference that the arrests were made after a series of operations on Thursday across several states in Malaysia and in Kuala Lumpur.

“(They) are suspected of engaging in activities that promote, support, incite, encourage and raise funds, as well as possess LTTE items,” Ayob Khan said, adding that the investigat­ion of the suspects had begun in November last year. Among the suspects were two local politician­s from the Democratic Action Party (DAP) — the Malacca exco member, G. Saminathan, and Seremban Jaya assembly person, P. Gunasekara­n. DAP is part of the ruling coalition party, Pakatan Harapan.

Both politician­s allegedly attended a pro-LTTE annual event called “LTTE Martyr’s Ceremony” in Malacca on Nov. 28.

Ayob Khan said: “(G. Saminathan’s) involvemen­t was the same as (P. Gunasekara­n) … The suspects were giving a speech to support LTTE, and also distribute­d items related to LTTE to the public.” Another three suspects who were detained had a record of attempting an attack against the Sri Lankan high commission­er in Kuala Lumpur in 2015.

They were subsequent­ly arrested and fined $2,500. One of them had conducted secret meetings to recruit and spread LTTE propaganda.

However, some, including Malaysian politician Charles Santiago, questioned the government’s move to arrest the two DAP politician­s. He claimed to be “baffled” about the terror-link claim as the LTTE was already defunct and inactive, local media reported.

Last Friday, a pro-LTTE video surfaced on social media of a Malaysian man of Indian ethnicity warning the Malaysian police not to stop LTTE activities in the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia