Tissainayagam case & Karava civil war
September 7, 2009 at 9:20 am · Posted Public Articles
The judgement in the J. S.Tissainayagam case was the talk of the town last week, firstly because Tissainayagam is Tamil, and secondly because he was a journalist and the case had to do with something that he wrote, among other matters…
http://www.island.lk/2009/09/06/politics1.html

(Dear Subramaniam, posts on JNW requires sourcing for all information provided, especially if its potentially defamatory. Generalizations are fine such as lawyers, legal documents, police etc if you do not wish to mention names, though the credibility of articles improve if names are mentioned. You have mentioned that these are from statements Tissanayagam had made? Can you clarify that all information here are from statements he had made? Thank you CA – JNW)
Mr. Jayeprakash Tissanayagam was born in 1964 at Inuvil in Jaffna . He was an old boy of St. Thomas College , Mount Lavinia and graduated in political science at University of Peradeniya . He had started his career as a journalist at the Sunday Times in 1987, but later shifted to the NGO sector. According to Mr. Tissanayagam’s career history shown below, he can be recognized more as a career NGO worker than a journalist.
Origin
Mr. Tissanayagam is the only recognized journalist who has been taken into custody on suspicion of having connections with terrorist activities, by the Terrorist Investigation Department (TID) of the Police. 06 March 2008, the TID raided two neighbouring offices at a Shopping complex of Kotahena, down Jampettah Street on reliable information that the LTTE had been running a press and a web-based propaganda institute there. During the raid it was found that a press owned by one Mr. Jaseekaran had been running under the name E-kuality Graphics Private Ltd , at the No 12 , Jampettah Street , Colombo 13. The next-door office at the No 12, was that of Outreach Multimedia Private Ltd.
TID initially took Mr. Jaseekaran and Miss Valarmadhi into custody. Later, on the information revealed during the investigations, Mr. Tissanayagam was taken in to custody on 07 March 2008.
Alleged fabrication
The arrest of Mr. Jayeprakash Tissanayagam and his accomplices was shown to the world as the government’s arbitrary arrest of a group of independent journalists. The suspect’s long-time hobnobbing with various foreign funded NGOs and his career as a journalist gave a snowballing effect to the story. Many international civil rights groups, foreign embassies, INGOs without making a slightest effort to verify the facts have started sending heaps of letters to the law enforcement authorities to release the suspects.
Background
According to the statement made by Mr. Tissanayagam, he had come into close terms with known LTTE propagandist Dharmaratne Sivaram alias Taraki while he had been working for the Sunday Leader in 1999. Together with Taraki, Mr. Tissanayagam had toured the Trincomalee, Batticaloa and Vavuniya areas where the LTTE was then very active. Taraki was the editor of “Tamilnet”, the LTTE’s official mouthpiece on the Internet, and known to be the mastermind behind the all-Goebbelsian propaganda of the outfit that spread out its tribal ideologies. As result of this connection with Taraki, Mr. Tissanayagam had quit the Sunday Leader and started a pro LTTE magazine named North Eastern Herald with Taraki in 2002.
Mr. Tissanayagam further stated that he had joined North Eastern Herald because it drew lot of foreign funds and therefore he found it to be very profitable to work there. An office affiliated to the Switzerland Embassy named SIDA had been its main financer. The directors of the company formed to carryout the publication were, Dharmaratne Sivaram , Shivakumar, and Yuvialan Thangarajh (A lecturer at Eastern University ). The magazine had been published up to November 2005, until SIDA stopped funding to the company. The main objective of making money through foreign aid for which the company was started was no longer achievable. According to Mr. Tissanayagam, a person named Karuniyan Arulanandan had agreed to provide funds to keep the company alive but failed in his part.
What was interesting about the above mentioned business venture was that it was carried out mainly to draw foreign funds and seemed to have no any intention of becoming a self-financing business. Its main business, the publication of the magazine too had no market penetration but was mainly published as an opinion maker in favour of the LTTE at international forums. Like many such organizations run by foreign funds, the business made easy money for the people involved and ceased to exist as the financer turned its back. This is the bitter truth of many bogus rights activists in this part of the world.
In 2004, the main suspect of the case, Vetrivale Jaseekaran had come to meet Mr. Tissanayagam and proposed him to start another venture that can draw a good amount of foreign funds. According to Mr. Tissanayagam, he had come to know Mr. Jaseekaran via another journalist in 2000, during one of his tours to Batticaloa. Consequently, a company named Renaissance Publication and Guarantee Limited had come in to operation under the directorship of Jayeparkash Tissanayagam, Vetrivale Jaseekaran, Kathiravale Vignashwaran, Balasubramaniam Wasanthan alias Shivakumar, Rohitha Bhashana Abeywaradane, Sathasivan Baskaran, and Vadivelu Valarmadhi. The company had started its office at No 82, Bandaranayake Mawatha, and Colombo 12 and started publishing a pro-LTTE magazine- North Eastern Monthly since February 2004.
The North Eastern Monthly had been published under the direct guidance of LTTE and its content therefore had been aimed at subtly promoting tribal and sectarian ideologies championed by the LTTE. It has been found that LTTE had directly funded the organization through its agents in Colombo.
In early 2006, Mr. Tissanayagam together with Mr. Jaseekaran had started another company named Outreach Multimedia Private Ltd. According to the evidence revealed so far, this new company had been started at the behest of the LTTE with the aim of carrying out internet-based propaganda for the terrorist outfit. The company directors were Mr. Tissanayagam, Mr. Jaseekaran and another individual named Terald Abeygunawardane. The last individual, Mr. Terald Abeygunawardane is currently in hiding to avoid police arrest.
After starting the new company, Mr. Tissanayagam and the team had made a proposal to another INGO named FLICT with the aim of finding much desired foreign funding. As per the evidence, the company had made a written proposal to the INGO requesting 2.3 million rupees in 2006 in order to start a fully equipped web- based media organization. However, for some unknown reason the INGO had not considered the proposal serious enough, and had not been very quick to release the funds. As a result the disheartened entrepreneurs had lost their interest on the new project but continued their activities in the Renaissance Publication and Guarantee Ltd.
In mid 2005, Mr. Tissanayagam had come into close contact with a hardcore LTTE cadre called Baba. On the instruction of Baba, Mr. Tissanayagam had met LTTE heads in Kilinochchi at least twice in 2005 and 2006. The North East Monthly had been published every month during 2005-2006 periods adhering to the guidance provided by the LTTE.
As the evidence had started to pile up, Mr. Tissanayagam admitted that Baba had given him money for publishing the magazine. However, Mr. Tissanayagam had testified that he had refused the money offers made by Baba saying that someday the police may track him down. The TID had found that Baba had deposited 50,000 rupees at least on 3 occasions at an account that belonged the Renaissance Publication, at the Hatton National, Bank, Kotahena. Finally in early 2007, Mr. Tissanayagam seemed to have got cold feet of drawing direct funds from a terror outfit and stopped publishing the propaganda magazine in June 2007, as the company could not find any other source of funding.
Thereafter, Mr. Tissanayagam had joined another INGO named ITI (One Text Initiative), established for “peace building” in this country in 2007. During this time he had also worked as a freelance journalist for The Sunday Times.
However, responding to the early request made by the Outreach Multi Media, the INGO, FLICT had suddenly decided to provide 950,000 rupees to Mr. Tissanayagam and the team in early 2008. With this sudden fortune, the team of directors had reorganized themselves and re- launched the website http://www.outreach.sl.
It can be reasonably suspected with the available evidence that Mr. Tissanayagam had obtained money from LTTE knowingly that it is a terrorist organization. Also, it is worthwhile to note that Mr. Tissanayagam had received the payments of which the TID has substantial proof, during a time when the LTTE was carrying out many civilian massacres, bus bombings, train bombings etc. If Mr. Tissanayagam was a responsible citizen, he could have come to the police and revealed the information he knew about the terror agents in Colombo .
However, the possibility cannot be ruled out that Mr. Tissanayagam was actually another individual like those free media fighters who had been lured by the terrorist outfit exploiting his greed for money. This possibility comes to the surface when looking at the profile of Mr. Jaseekaran , the main suspect of the case.
Mr. Tissanayagam has been indicted under the Prevention of Terrorism Act and the case is being heard at the courts.