Four LTTE arms suppliers convicted
A Baltimore Federal Court Jury Monday convicted a Singapore man of
attempting to sell arms to the terrorist group Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in Sri Lanka. Four co-conspirators have pleaded
guilty in the case.
Reuters reported that Balraj Naidu, 48, was charged in a conspiracy
to provide material support to the LTTE, which in 1997 was designated by
the U.S. Department of State as a foreign terrorist organisation. It
fought and lost a 26-year-long conflict against the Government of Sri
Lanka.
According to evidence presented at his trial, Naidu and four
co-conspirators arranged to buy some 28 tons of U.S.-made weapons and
ammunition from an undercover business in Maryland, Reuters said.
LTTE representatives made a $250,000 down-payment on the $900,000
weapons deal with the bogus company in the summer of 2006, the Justice
Department said.
Naidu’s partners were arrested in September 2006, after inspecting
the weapons that had been delivered to Guam and making another payment
of $450,000 to the undercover business, the Justice Department said.
Naidu was arrested after a further investigation, it said.
Reuters reported that U.S. officials said the group also had tried to
buy weapons from China, Thailand, North Korea, the Philippines and
Indonesia for the LTTE to be used against Sri Lankan government forces.
Naidu faces a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.
The co-conspirators: Thirunavukarasu Varatharasa, 40, of Sri Lanka;
Haji Subandi, 73, and retired Indonesian Marine Corps General Erick
Wotulo, 62, both Indonesians and Haniffa Bin Osman, 59, of Singapore,
all pleaded guilty and were sentenced to 57 months, 37 months, 30 months
and 37 months in prison.
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