ANTI-LANKA CONGRESSMANS
TRIP TO KILINOCHCHI WAS PAID FOR BY THE LIBERATION TIGERS OF TAMIL
EELAM, SAYS CHICAGO TRIBUNE
By Walter Jayawardhana
in Los Angeles

Congressman visiting Killinochchi
A Democratic Party Congressman of the United States who has been
making pro-LTTE statements regarding the Sri Lanka Air Force bombing
at Mullaithivu received a trip to Sri Lanka last year that was paid
for by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a proscribed terrorist
group in the United States.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam had spent at least $ 13,150 for
the trip of Congressman Danny K. Davis and his aid to visit Kilinochchi
, it has been revealed.
Chicago congressman Danny Davis and an aide took a trip to
Sri Lanka last year that was paid for by the Tamil Tigers, a group
that the U.S. government has designated as a terrorist organization
for its use of suicide bombers and child soldiers, revealed
Chicago Tribune news paper quoting law enforcement sources.

Congressman Danny K. Davis
Davis' seven-day trip came under new scrutiny this week following
the arrests of 11 supporters of the organization on charges of participating
in a broad conspiracy to support the terrorist group through money
laundering, arms procurement and bribery of U.S. officials,
the newspaper , one of the largest in the United States said in a
major exposure.
The newspaper further said, The five-term Democratic congressman
said he was unaware that the Tigers paid for the trip and on his required
congressional disclosure form he reported that the trip was paid for
by a Hickory Hills-based Tamil cultural organization, the Federation
of Tamil Sangams of North America.
During the visit, Davis spent most of his time in a region
controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, as the group is
formally known, and visited the organization's political headquarters.
He also met with a police chief for the region appointed by the Tigers,
the newspaper further reported.
Few hours before the newspaper exposure was published this correspondent
contacted his Chicago office and indicated to them that we wanted
to ask him about his statement regarding an alleged bombing of an
orphanage by the Sri Lanka Air Force.
This correspondent said he wanted to know how the Congressman came
to the conclusion that the ones killed were the same orphan girls
he said he visited during his trip to Kilinochchi, last year. A man
named Ira Cohen who answered on behalf of him was unable to answer
the question, quite agitated and on several occasions threatened to
end the conversation accusing this correspondent that an attempt was
being made to put words in his mouth.
This correspondent wanted to get matters clarified since the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam had used the congressmans statement for
propaganda purposes, and had distributed his statement among the United
Nations representatives in New York by passing a hand out in front
of the United Nations building.
The Chicago Times of August 24 further said, The Tamil Tigers
is a separatist group that has been fighting since 1983 for an independent
state for 3.2 million ethnic Tamils in Sri Lanka, a tear-shaped island
nation of 20 million off the southern tip of India. In addition to
conventional guerrilla tactics, the group has used terrorist methods,
including 200 suicide bombings, in a bloody conflict that has claimed
more than 60,000 lives. Though the violence between the government
and the separatist group abated during the past several years, it
recently surged again, threatening a renewed civil war.
Davis said he believed that the trip, from March 30 to April
5, 2005, was paid for by the Tamil federation, which in accordance
with congressional ethics rules sent him a written statement of the
travel expenses, more than $7,000 each for Davis and his aide, Daniel
Cantrell. Davis said he knew that the group was "associated"
with the Tamil Tigers but did not realize that the trip's costs were
covered with funds controlled by the rebel group.
"I know who I got the trip from," Davis said. "I don't
know if any clandestine group gave them money. All I know is what
I saw and was told."
He also said that he had not been contacted by federal investigators
in connection with the trip.
He defended the trip, saying he traveled there at the behest
of ethnic Tamils who live in his West Side congressional district
so that he could examine charges that the region was not receiving
an equitable share of relief funding sent to Sri Lanka in the aftermath
of the December 2004 tsunami. Davis has been harshly critical of the
Sri Lankan government's treatment of the Tamil minority.
"Since I have an interest in human rights and since I have a
tendency to kind of favor the underdog, I went at their request to
take a look," Davis said. "I don't regret taking the trip.
I have a much better understanding of the situation than prior to
going."
As recently as this past Saturday, Davis talked in Chicago
with a supporter of the Tamil Tigers who was among 11 people arrested
on charges of conspiring to aid the rebel group through money laundering,
procurement of arms, including surface-to-air missiles, and bribery
of public officials.
That Tamil Tiger supporter, Murugesu Vinayagamoorthy, was
described in a federal criminal complaint as a high-level operative
who served as an intermediary between the Tigers' leaders and foreign
backers. The complaint charges that he offered a $1 million bribe
to an undercover FBI agent posing as a State Department official in
an attempt to remove the Tamil Tigers' designation as a terrorist
organization.
Davis said he first met Vinayagamoorthy, a 57-year-old London
physician, at a Tamil cultural event in the Chicago suburbs at which
both of them gave speeches "a few years ago." Vinayagamoorthy
also participated in several of the meetings that Davis held while
visiting Sri Lanka, the congressman said.
The Tamil supporter contacted the congressman's office again
last week seeking a chance to brief Davis on events in Sri Lanka,
where violence between the government and Tamil Tigers has flared
anew. Vinayagamoorthy arranged to do so while walking alongside Davis
Saturday for 10 blocks during the congressman's annual "Back
to School" Parade in Chicago, Davis said.
The criminal complaint against Vinayagamoorthy asserts that
he had "direct and frequent contact" with leaders of the
rebel group and was "often dispatched" to facilitate Tamil
Tiger projects around the world.
Without mentioning Davis or his aide by name, the complaint describes
a series of transactions in which Vinayagamoorthy and others charged
in the case allegedly laundered $13,150 in Tamil Tiger funds at the
direction of a top guerilla leader to pay for travel of "two
individuals" to Tamil-controlled Sri Lanka. The two individuals
were Davis and Cantrell, law enforcement officials said.
Another person arrested in the case, Nachimuthu Socrates, was listed
as a director in 2004 of the Tamil cultural organization which Davis
listed in public disclosure forms as the trip's sponsor, the Federation
of Tamil Sangams of North America. Representatives of the federation
did not return phone messages on Wednesday.
Davis said he always assumed that the organization had a connection
with the Tamil Tigers.
"I knew that they were associated with the Tamil Tigers, yes,"
he said.
Davis has been an outspoken supporter of the Tamil minority in Sri
Lanka.
This month, he issued a statement condemning an Aug.14 Sri Lankan
Air Force bombing in Tamil-controlled territory that reportedly killed
dozens of girls.
Davis' statement said the facility was an orphanage he had visited
during his 2005 trip to Sri Lanka. The government said the site was
a former orphanage being used as an LTTE training camp for female
recruits.
"We've been engaged," Davis said. "There hasn't been
anything clandestine about our position."
Davis has been one of the most prolific travelers in Congress, accepting
47 trips paid for by private groups since 2000. That total ranks Davis
15th among the 535 members of Congress, according to Political Moneyline,
a non-partisan watchdog group that compiles data from congressional
disclosure forms.
The Tamil Tigers were designated by the State Department as a foreign
terrorist organization in 1997. As a result, federal law bars providing
them funding, arms or other material support.
The FBI searched a residence Sunday in Glendale Heights in connection
with the Tamil Tiger investigation, according to Ross Rice, a spokesman
for the bureau's Chicago office. No arrests were made and no criminal
charges have been filed as a result of the raid, Rice said.