( October 17,
2012, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The
last leader of Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers, who is wanted by India over the
assassination of former premier Rajiv Gandhi, has been freed from military
custody, the defence ministry said Wednesday.
Selvarasa
Pathmanathan, who was arrested in August 2009, was no longer in detention and
was free to carry out work for a charity he had formed, said Lakshman
Hulugalle, the head of the defence ministry's media centre.
"Practically,
there is no detention now," Hulugalle told reporters in Colombo when asked
how Pathmanathan, who has an Interpol arrest warrant initiated by India against
him, was reportedly living in the island's north.
"He is
running a non-government organisation and doing work for the benefit of the
people... and he is free to do his work," Hulugalle said. "There is
no court case against him."
Pathmanathan,
the chief international arms buyer for Tigers, was appointed the head of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) by its elusive leader Velupillai
Prabhakaran just before he was killed by Sri Lankan troops in 2009.
India regards
the 58-year-old Pathmanathan as a key suspect in the May 1991 assassination of
Gandhi by a Sri Lankan Tamil suicide bomber during an election rally in the
southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
Sri Lanka's military
victory in May 2009 ended the LTTE's 37-year-long struggle for an independent
Tamil homeland, one of Asia's longest running ethnic conflicts. - AFP