1 September 2021 08:45 am Views - 132
Kerala, TN officials suspect revival of LTTE
An ongoing National Investigation Agency (NIA) probe into the seizure of 300 kg heroin, five AK-47 rifles and 1,000 live rounds of 9mm ammunition, off the coast of Vizhinjam near Thiruvananthapuram has led to speculation that international drug-running and weapon trading rackets are aimed at reviving the Sri Lankan Tamil separatist group- LTTE.
The case relates to the March 18 interception of a boat with contraband by the Coast Guard following an intelligence input. The mastermind behind the operation was a Sri Lankan Tamil Suresh Rajan, a resident of Colombo who had been living at Kundrathur, a Chennai suburb, for some time, the Indian Express reported.
Multiple sources in Kerala and Tamil Nadu Intelligence Agencies said they failed to closely look at the case as it was being probed by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB). “The NCB was about to charge-sheet six Sinhalese who were on board when NIA stepped in and probed further,” said an Intelligence Officer attached to the Kerala Police.
The NIA probe later revealed that six Sinhalese were only workers. Meanwhile, Rajan was arrested from Angamaly, Kerala in August and was later taken into custody by the Tamil Nadu Q-branch for his links with LTTE groups still active in Tamil Nadu and Sri Lanka.
However, when the NIA stepped in and took over the probe, they found scientific evidence of a Dubai link from a Thuraya handset (considered an advanced satellite phone) which was seized from the boat. “That was the crucial evidence that led to the arrest of Suresh and his associate Soundararajan,” the officer said.
During searches conducted by NIA at premises linked to the accused in Kerala and Tamil Nadu, several incriminating documents, including books relating to LTTE and several cellphones, gadgets and SIM cards were seized.
According to the officer, the March 18 incident was not an isolated case. “Evidence collected from Rajan after his arrest, including those of transactions worth crores of rupees, shows that he was an international drug smuggler with active links with Pakistan-based drug runner Haji Salim, who often shuttled between Dubai, Pakistan and Iran. Rajan held a prominent role in drugs and arms- trafficking to Sri Lanka through the backyard of India,” the officer said.
A Tamil Nadu Intelligence Officer said there was evidence that Rajan met Sri Lankan drug lord Madhush Lakshitha alias ‘Makandure Madush’, who was killed in a shootout in the island nation in October 2020.