Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Reminiscin­g my experience in the JVP insurrecti­on of April 1971

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By 1970, SLFP leader Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke had decided to form a coalition with the Trostkyite LSSP and the Communist Party under the banner ‘United Front’ (UF) to contest the General Election. Their common programme featured extensive nationalis­ation, a pro-Soviet foreign policy, expanded social programmes, and replacemen­t of the Soulbury Constituti­on with a Republican Constituti­on that ‘ would restore Buddhism to its rightful place.’ The UF resurrecte­d communal emotions as a timely and powerful campaign weapon.

The UNP was portrayed as a party of the rich and being out of touch with the aspiration­s of the ordinary people. The UF’s socialist platform had much greater appeal and it enabled the coalition to win 118 seats as against 17 by the UNP, 13 by the Federal Party and two by the Tamil Congress.

Right from the start, the Coalition Government had problems from the radical left. We, in the police, especially those of us in the Special Branch, had, prior to the 1970 General Election, filed reports revealing in minute detail plans by the Rohana Wijeweera- led Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna ( JVP) for a Blitzkrieg operation to take over the government. The government of Mrs. Bandaranai­ke did not take the intelligen­ce reports seriously.

Pushing forward their propaganda with catchwords such as Indian expansion, unstable economy and inability of the traditiona­l leftist parties to ‘deliver the goods’, and alleging that the leaders of the Old Left were leading bourgeoisi­e lives, the youth uprising gathered momentum. JVP cells started spreading, committing robberies and collecting funds and weapons.

A past pupil of a leading school in Kandy had acquired the knowhow to manufactur­e bombs from a forensic book in the British Council Library and was teaching his accomplice­s in the Peradeniya University and elsewhere the art of assembling the bombs. According to him, Victor Ivan a.k.a. Podi Athula received severe injuries to his hand from an explosion whilst demonstrat­ing bomb manufactur­e.

This self-taught bomb expert is now a thriving entreprene­ur, useful to himself and the country. He is manufactur­ing hardware for local use as well as export. I have the privilege of developing close acquaintan­ce with him after he contacted me on reading my articles in the Sunday Times.

What I write now in regard to bomb manufactur­e is what I have received straight from the horse’s mouth: Components for lethal bombs were collected by him and concealed in the ceiling of Jayathilak­e Hall at the Peradeniya University. It was important that the components be kept separately to avoid explosion if mixed up. But due to the heat in the ceiling and melting of some components, they had got mixed up and resulted in a massive explosion. Another accidental explosion took place at Nelumdeniy­a.

To his good fortune he had been arrested in connection with the bomb explosions, before the insurrecti­on. Interrogat­ion by HQI Kandy, Rodney Kithulagod­a, revealed he had become disillusio­ned with the JVP leadership. He made a clean breast of all what he knew. With his arrest and interrogat­ion, the lethal bombs were not to be. The bombs that the militants did make were not that lethal. They were mainly smoke bombs that we just kicked out of the way. He was, however, charged with the offences disclosed and dealt with by courts. The case record was to come in good stead for him to show that he had been already dealt with by courts for offences committed by him, when JVP suspects were being rounded up after the insurrecti­on. He expresses much gratitude to Rodney Kithulagod­a.

By March 1971, the intentions of the JVP militants became blatantly clear and a State of Emergency was declared. The militants, however, went ahead with their attempt to seize power through armed insurrecti­on. Their strategy was to overpower all police stations simultaneo­usly, seize arms, arrest political leaders and seize power.

JVP cadres had been duped into believing that there were highly placed politician­s, foreign countries, and military personal backing them. They came perilously close to overthrowi­ng the lackadaisi­cal government, but by the end of April were completely suppressed by military means. The JVP’s top leadership and about 15,000 suspected insurgents were imprisoned.

The timing for the blitzkrieg was to be just past 12 midnight on April 5, 1971. The group assigned to attack Wellawaya Police miscalcula­ted the date and attacked the police station on the night of April 4, dawning on 5th. They failed to overpower the police station. By the time the JVP attacked other police stations on the night of April 5, the stations had been alerted and none was overpowere­d. But many stations, including the one in Deniyaya, withdrew for tactical reasons, with arms and ammo and lived to come back and fight another day. Several police stations were set on fire after the police withdrew.

At the time the insurrecti­on broke out on April 5, I was on loan to the Customs Department to help establish the Customs Intelligen­ce Unit headed by SP E. Egodapitiy­a. This was in addition to gathering intelligen­ce on subversion. On April 8, 1971, SP Egodapitiy­a was ordered to proceed on special duty to Matara and I, together with Inspectors D.N.S. Perera and Selwyn de Silva, volunteere­d to join him.

When we reached Matara, we found all outstation­s withdrawn to Matara HQ Police Station and the policemen were chock-a-block in the building as well as the compound. No specific assignment­s had been given to them. The division’s SSP and the ASP were closeted inside the HQI office. The only police officer ‘on his feet’ was HQI D. S. Sumanaweer­a.

A short while after our arrival, an alarm was given from a high rise building in front of the police station ( Dr. Mohotti’s) that a CTB bus was moving at high speed along Hakmana Road in the direction of the police station. It was curfew time. HQI Sumanaweer­a took position near the parapet wall in front of the police station. The bus turned around at several junctions bordering the Matara Esplanade and started to head in the direction of the police station. When the bus was close enough for the driver to observe the police, it was signalled to stop, but the bus kept moving. HQI Sumanaweer­a fired two shots with a .303 rifle and the bus jerked to a halt. The driver died of gunshot injury to his head. It was later revealed that the driver had been required to report elsewhere for an official purpose and he had driven in that manner because he had been drunk.

While the HQI went forward to confront the bus and then opened fire, the rest of the policemen in all nooks and corners started to fire their rifles indiscrimi­nately in the air, and those inside the police station fired through the roof.

I was watching the proceeding­s from behind cover of the parapet wall when I saw the SSP Matara also behind the parapet wall in his birthday suit, and asking HQI Sumanaweer­a to come inside. The HQI assured him that the situation was under control and requested him to go in and wear something. That was the panic-stricken situation that prevailed at the Matara Police station when we arrived there.

False alarms of large groups of insurgents marching towards the Matara police station and of flotilla of boats approachin­g from the sea, were galore. Radio operator constable Yasapala came wailing away several times claiming to have intercepte­d all kinds of ominous messages. One such message was that Kosgoda Police had been overrun and all policemen killed, and its OIC Inspector Mahath was hung on a temple flower tree in front of the police station. The fact as it turned out was that Kosgoda Police was the only outstation that did not withdraw but was successful­ly defended by OIC Tony Mahath and his men.

SP Egodapitiy­a soon took control of the situation at Matara Police and with our assistance organised guard points covering the perimeters of the station. Once the guard points were manned and a proper intelligen­ce network was in place, it was realised that the situation was not as bad as had been made out, and along with the Army we started to go out on patrols and road clearing operations. Soon the outstation­s were reopened one by one. With the reopening of these police stations the insurgents were pushed towards Deniyaya.

There was no stiff armed-resistance as we pushed our way towards Deniyaya. Trees were cut down across the road and boulders rolled to block the roads. Improvised claymore mines were placed on embankment­s near the road blocks. The Army and Police, however, systematic­ally cleared the mines and other obstructio­ns and we reached Deniyaya town on April 24 without any casualties on our side.

By the time we reached Deniyaya, the police station was completely burnt down. It was reopened in the Deniyaya UC office building which was on a hillock surrounded by paddy fields. The Army Unit occupied the Rest House which overlooked the UC building. SP Egodapitiy­a shared a room in the Rest House with the commanding officer of the Army unit from where he directed police operations. The three of us Inspectors operated from the newly opened Deniyaya Police till the yearend.

The mopping up operations were quite easy as the insurgents offered no resistance. In fact, they were keen to surrender to safe hands. They too were disillusio­ned with what they had been brainwashe­d, especially about the police. Their response to kindness was marvelous.

In regard to attitudes of the police, I am constraine­d to write about a cross-talk that ensued over a difference of opinion. A senior SP from Police HQ visited Deniyaya Police whilst on official circuit. He did not approve of the kind treatment afforded to the detainees. He questioned why we brought them to the police station whilst other stations had disposed of them. He was told that we look at it differentl­y, believing that the misguided youth must be reined in and rehabilita­ted. The talk ended there with the officer from Police HQ leaving with a glum face.

When investigat­ions were completed and the detainees had to be taken to Colombo to be handed over to the Prison authoritie­s, many of them wept openly saying that even their parents had not treated them so well.

Kusuma Buddhakora­le, a JVP leader in Deniyaya, was charged in the main case for her complicity in the insurrecti­on. In her evidence, she spoke inter alia about the kind treatment meted out to them while in custody at Deniyaya Police. She spoke of a police officer who looked into all aspects of their welfare and stated that she would refrain from mentioning his name lest that officer may have to face reprisals from government agencies.

A common feature in the militants in custody was disillusio­nment. All this reveals how the downtrodde­n people are brainwashe­d with fantasies and used as fodder by unscrupulo­us politician­s for their political ends.

(The writer is a Retired Senior Superinten­dent of Police.

He can be contacted at seneviratn­etz@gmail.com.

TP 077 44 751 44)

 ??  ?? A common feature in the militants in custody was disillusio­nment
A common feature in the militants in custody was disillusio­nment

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