9/24/2007
Dr.
Christoper Smith an expert on security issues in South Asia has
told a Melbourne court today(24), that the internationally proscribed
terrorist outfit the LTTE, has roots which run deep in Australia's
Tamil community.
Dr.
Christopher Smith has given evidence to the Melbourne Magistrates
Court in the committal hearing for three men accused of using
the Melbourne-based Tamil Coordinating Committee to raise funds
for Sri Lanka's Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), also
known as Tamil Tigers.
Melbourne
pair Aruran Vinayagamoorthy, 33 and Sivarajah Yathavan, 36, along
with Arumugan Rajeevan, 41, of Old Toongabbie in Sydney's west,
have been charged with being members of a terrorist organisation,
making funds available to a terrorist organisation and making
an asset available to a proscribed entity.
Vinayagamoorthy,
of Mount Waverley, and Yathavan, of Vermont South, have also been
charged with intentionally providing support or resources to a
terrorist organisation.
Dr.Smith,
who was giving evidence via video-link from the United Kingdom,
has prepared reports on Sri Lanka for the National Commission
on Illegal Weapons and is currently involved in the preparation
of witness reports for the British courts on Sri Lankan asylum
seekers.
In
a report Dr.Smith wrote for the Australian Federal Police (AFP)
- entitled The Liberation Tamil Tigers of Eelam (LTTE): Local
Insurgency Global Organisation - which was tendered to the court,
he said support for the LTTE runs deep in the Tamil community
in Australia.
"The
LTTE has never admitted to operating front organisations in Australia,
or indeed, anywhere else in or outside of Sri Lanka," Dr.Smith
said in his report.
But
he said "denial and lack of comment are fundamental parts
of the LTTE strategy".
"The
LTTE has always been an exceedingly secretive organisation.
"The
LTTE taproots run deep through the Tamil diaspora in Australia,
as well as other parts of the world."
Dr.Smith
said LTTE supporters were thought to use sporting and community
events as a way to raise funds.
"The
links the LTTE has established are also pragmatic," he said.
"It
might maintain a presence during cricket matches, doing little
more than pass around a collection box.
"But
few Tamils will have any illusion as to which organisation they
are donating."
He
told the court on Monday that he travelled to Sri Lanka three
times a year, and had contacts within that country's government,
military and police force.
He
said he also had contacts within the Tamil community.
"I
have a network of contacts in Sri Lanka and outside Sri Lanka,"
Dr.Smith told the court.
During
cross-examination defence lawyer Phillip Boulten SC questioned
the credibility of the evidence in Dr.Smith's report.
Mr
Boulten asked Dr.Smith if he had ever conducted interviews with
active members of LTTE.
"I
have had interviews with individuals who I have suspected of being
LTTE members," Dr.Smith said.
"I
have never had anyone admit to me of contributing to LTTE. That
is something people don't admit to."
The
hearing before Magistrate Peter Reardon continues on Tuesday.
Dr.Christoper
Smith, is the former Founder Director of the Conflict, Security
and Development Group King's College, London.
Courtesy:
The Sydney Morning Herald
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