Forces Chiefs to testify against Tigers in Australia
Sri Lanka's most senior military figures will give evidence against
three Melbourne Tamils accused of raising money in Australia to fund a
terrorism campaign in Sri Lanka. The trio - Aruran Vinayagamoorthy,
Sivarajah Yathavan and Arumugam Rajeevan - have been committed to stand
trial in the Victorian Supreme Court next year. They have pleaded not
guilty.
The men, accused of being members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam, entered their pleas last week after about six weeks of sporadic
hearings, which began in September in Melbourne Magistrates Court.
They faced charges of being members of a terrorist organisation
between July 1, 2004, and their arrest this year, providing resources to
a terrorist organisation between July 6, 2002, and 2007, and making
available an asset to a proscribed entity.
Vinayagamoorthy and Yathavan have also pleaded not guilty to
intentionally providing support or resources to a terrorist organisation.
Vinayagamoorthy pleaded not guilty to an additional charge of making
available an asset, namely boat design software and radio transmitters,
to a proscribed entity.
Maximum penalties for the charges range between five and 25 years'
imprisonment. Central to the Australian Federal Police case against the
men is the accusation that they collectively raised $1.9 million in
charitable donations from the Australian Tamil diaspora, most of it
collected after the 2004 tsunami.
The AFP alleged the men channelled the funds to Sri Lanka, via
Malaysia, and using international money transfers in denominations too
small to raise a red flag through the AUSTRAC reporting system. The
committal hearing was told that Vinayagamoorthy was overheard discussing
"the movement" and saying: "As for me, I have carried arms. I don't have
any worry about anything.
I will do anything, whatever the movement asks me. I will do them
all." The court heard that police seized photographs of Rajeevan meeting
with LTTE head in Sri Lanka, V. Prabhakaran and raising the LTTE flag.
The committal hearing heard evidence from Army Commander Sarath Fonseka,
and Navy Chief Wasantha Karannagoda.
The case has proceeded despite the LTTE not having been proscribed a
terrorist organisation by Australian authorities.
Whether the LTTE is a terrorist organisation, or a separatist group
engaged in a civil war, will be central to whether a jury finds the men
guilty of the charges. Rajeevan, Vinayagamoorthy and Yathavan are on
bail.
The Australian |