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  1. Dec 7, 2022 · Pottu Ammaan was autocratic in running the intelligence wing. He also had a cruel streak which made him a much-dreaded man within and outside the LTTE. Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) supremo Veluppillai Prabhakaran along with many senior LTTE leaders was killed in the military confrontation with Sri Lanka’s armed forces in May 2009.

  2. Oct 12, 2001 · The man performing the act was Shankar of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). On September 26, he was killed in a landmine attack in Sri Lanka's northern mainland the Wanni. The incident at Mahalingapuram was a sequel to the abduction of LTTE leader Pottu Amman by the rival People's Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE).

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    • Narrative Summary
    • Leadership
    • Name Changes
    • Size Estimates
    • Designated/Listed
    • Resources
    • External Influences
    • Geographical Locations
    • Political Activities
    • Major Attacks

    The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE),commonly known as the Tamil Tigers, were a separatist militant organizationfighting for an independent homeland for Sri Lanka’s Tamil minority in northernSri Lanka. Velupillai Prabhakaran founded the group in 1972 and by the late1980s was the dominant Tamil militant group in Sri Lanka. After a number offa...

    The LTTE’s leadership was divided between thegroup’s military wing and its secondary political wing. A central governingcommittee led by Prabhakaran oversaw all activities of the LTTE, both politicaland military. The military wing of the LTTE was further divided intosub-groups: the group’s naval wing, known as the Sea Tigers, was led by ColonelSoos...

    May 22, 1972: Tamil New Tigers. Prabhakaran founds the Tamil New Tigers, the LTTE's predecessor, in 1972.
    May 5, 1976: Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Prabhakaran establishes the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in 1976 and disbands the Tamil New Tigers.
    Unknown: 11,664 (Commissioner General of Rehabilitation Maj. Gen Sudantha Ranasinghe)
    February 1, 2002: 6,000-9,000 (Presidential spokesperson Harim Peiris, stating estimated LTTE strength before the February 2002 ceasefire)
    December 31, 2002: 16,000 (Presidential spokesperson Harim Peiris, stating estimated LTTE strength by the end of 2002 ceasefire.)
    January 8, 2004: 18,000 (Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga's Office)
    Indian Ministry of Home Affairs: 1992 to Present
    British Outlawed Foreign Groups: 2000 to Present
    U.S. State Department Foreign Terrorist Organizations: October 2003 to Present
    EU Designated Terrorist Organizations: 2006 to Present

    The LTTE had an annual budget of around $200-$300 million, mostof which was obtained from the global Sri Lankan diaspora. The main financial body of the LTTE is theAiyanna Group, responsible for monitoring financial flows and revenue,including donations from overseas Tamil communities and LTTE supporters. In 2009, overseas Sri Lankans sent an estim...

    Overseas funding is mainlyprovided by the large Sri Lankan diaspora, which has continued to grow sinceSri Lanka's 1948 independence. During the 1970s and 1980s, the LTTE's mainfinancial support came from the Tamils who fled Sri Lanka to India, Malaysia,Europe, and North America. The Indian state of Tamil Nadu became a crucialtransit point for low-t...

    Theactivities of the Tamil Tigers were primarily based in the Northern and Easternregions of Sri Lanka, where the majority of Sri Lankan Tamils reside. Howevermany of the group’s major attacks were carried out in the capital of Colombo,and violent attacks occurred throughout Sri Lanka. The SriLankan Tamil Diaspora, and widespread funding sources th...

    The LTTE is one of several violent offshoots of the Tamil UnitedLiberation Front (TULF), formerly the Tamil United Front (TUF). TUF was formedin the early 1970s from groups such as the Tamil Congress and the Federal Party.When it officially called for the formationof an independent Tamil state in 1976, the group’s name was changed to theTamil Unite...

    May 14, 1985: Gunfire attack on Sri Lankan Buddhist holy site in Anaradhapura. (146 killed (BBC) (GTD: 86 killed, 100 wounded)).
    May 3, 1986: Bomb planted on Sri Lankan Air flight carrying British, French, and Japanese tourists, at the Colombo airport set to fly to the Maldives. (14-16 killed, 23-39 wounded).
    April 21, 1987: Car bomb explodes at a bus station in Colombo, killing civilians. (113-150 killed, 200 wounded).
    June 2, 1987: Aranthalawa massacre of Buddhist monks on a bus in Eastern Sri Lanka. (33 killed).
    • May 17, 2009
    • July 8, 2015
    • May 22, 1972
  4. Sep 11, 2014 · READ LATER. Dismissing reports that the LTTE’s one-time intelligence chief Pottu Amman had been arrested in Hong Kong, the Sri Lankan Army on Thursday said he was dead for years. The Army had ...

  5. Dec 14, 2022 · The chief guest at Susheelan’s wedding was none other than Pottu Amman himself. He participated joyfully cracking many jokes at the bridegroom’s expense. He took his leave after wishing the new couple many years of wedded bliss. Barely one month later, Pottu’s henchmen arrested Susheelan. He was interrogated and tortured.

  6. Dec 8, 2022 · It was Pottu Amman who developed it to unbelievable levels. As mentioned earlier, he was aided greatly by Bosco alias Potko who at one time was a student in a Catholic seminary.

  7. Dec 12, 1997 · Pottu Amman, Prabakaran and Akila, LTTE women's wing leader, have been cited as the chief conspirators behind the Rajiv Gandhi assassination. Pottu Amman, whose real name is Sivasankaran, is a native of Ariyalai, a suburb of Jaffna town. There is a story about how he got the nickname. 'Pottu' means 'tilak' or the dot on the forehead.

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