logo
The Hunt: The 'One-Eyed Jack' Who Masterminded Rajiv Gandhi Assassination

The Hunt: The 'One-Eyed Jack' Who Masterminded Rajiv Gandhi Assassination

NDTV11 hours ago
The 'wedding' was set for May 21. It was 1991, and a 33-year-old 5'4" swarthy, thickset man with one eye had been planning the 'wedding' for about a year. He had been entrusted with the task of changing the course of history of the subcontinent and he didn't want anything off. Sivarasan was confident. He got together a hit squad and landed in Tamil Nadu on May 1.
Twenty days later, India's former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was dead in Sriperumbudur. A human bomb had killed him.
India's most sensational political murder was "cunning in conception, meticulous in planning and ruthless in execution", said DR Karthikeyan, the IPS officer who led the Special Investigation Team that eventually cracked the case. The planning was LTTE. The execution was Sivarasan.
'One-Eyed Jack'
Chandrasekharampillai Packiachandran AKA Sivarasan hailed from Udupiddy, a town 32 kilometres from Jaffna in Sri Lanka. Sivarasan rose swiftly through the ranks of the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam), the separatist organisation founded in 1976 by Velupillai Prabhakaran and operational in Sri Lanka till 2009.
Sivarasan's fluency in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Hindi helped him become LTTE's prime hitman. His Tamil, devoid of a Lankan accent, helped him evade suspicion. Added to that was the fact that he knew the Indian topography like the back of his hand. His linguistic prowess and knowledge of India made him practically impossible to nab.
Sivarasan lost an eye in a firefight with the Sri Lankan Army in 1987. Since then, his comrades called him "Ottaraikkannan" or "one-eyed person". The name got a Marlon Brando makeover in mainstream media and Sivarasan became known as "One-Eyed Jack" after the 1961 Hollywood film.
In June 1990, Sivarasan killed K Padmanabha, a leader of the pro-India organisation EPRLF (Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front) in Chennai (then Madras) in broad daylight. Thirteen of Padmanabha's associates were killed in the same attack. Sivarasan caught the eye of the LTTE's intelligence chief Pottu Amman. Sivarasan was chosen for the LTTE's most daring operation yet: the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.
The LTTE, The Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, And The War Against IPKF
Former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was fighting the 1990 general elections with AIADMK's Jayalalitha as an ally. Rajiv Gandhi had served as the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha till December 1990, after serving as the Prime Minister of India from 1984 to 1989. When Rajiv Gandhi was in power, India signed with Sri Lankan President JR Jayawardane the Indo-Sri Lanka accord in July 1987 that dissolved the LTTE and "envisaged a devolution of power to the Tamil-majority areas".
After the Sri Lanka accord was signed, the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF, an Indian military contingent) was deployed to Sri Lanka for three years to enforce it. The LTTE denounced the accord. Several months of tension followed. On October 7, 1987, the LTTE declared war on the IPKF. The last members of the IPKF left Sri Lanka in March 1990. The LTTE regained territorial control.
In early 1990, LTTE founder Prabhakaran emerged from the jungles of Sri Lanka. He wanted revenge. Against the Indian Army, and against the Indian Prime Minister who signed the Indo-Sri Lanka accord.
The Assassination Of Rajiv Gandhi
The LTTE leadership was alarmed by the Congress's 1991 election manifesto, which spoke of the party's commitment to upholding the 1987 Sri Lanka accord.
The idea of the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi was born in the mind of the battle-scarred Prabhakaran and conveyed to Pottu Amman, the LTTE's intelligence chief. Pottu Amman handpicked Sivarasan for the operation, codenamed the 'wedding'. The Tigers smuggled 5 kilograms of gold into Tamil Nadu. Sivarasan sold it for Rs 19.36 lakh, which was then used to fund the 'wedding' expenses.
Two women were of the utmost importance in Sivarasan's hit squad: Dhanu, the bomber; and Shubha, the backup bomber. The plan was hatched. Rajiv Gandhi, Jayalalithaa's ally, was almost certainly going to visit Tamil Nadu as part of his general election campaigns. May 21 was the day he was going to be in Sriperumbudur in Tamil Nadu. The Tigers were to strike him there.
A Blast In Sriperumbudur
Dhanu, in a loose-fitting green-and-orange salwar kameez, had boarded a state transport bus to Sriperumbudur along with Sivarasan and other members of the LTTE squad.
Sivarasan was disguised as a journalist. He was dressed in a white kurta-pyjama and had a cloth bag and a notepad in his hand; identifiers you usually associated with journalists back in the day. Sivarasan was to 'cover' the Sriperumbudur poll rally of Rajiv Gandhi. He gained access to the venue. It was lightly guarded. There were no metal detectors or frisking at the poll rally.
Sivarasan, along with Dhanu, melted into the mob.
Rajiv Gandhi walked down the red coir carpet at the Sriperumbudur temple grounds. A hectic day of poll rallies in Odisha and Andhra Pradesh had left him tired and by the time he reached Sriperumbudur. An enthusiastic crowd met him there. It was twenty past 10 in the night.
Sivarasan's job was to steer Dhanu towards Rajiv Gandhi. He did. She garlanded Gandhi with a sandalwood necklace and bent as if to touch his feet. Dhanu flicked a switch. Half a kilo of plastic explosives in her suicide vest exploded. Rajiv Gandhi was dead. So were 17 others in the blast.
Sivarasan and his remaining squad disappeared from the Sriperumbudur grounds in the melee. But they left something behind.
Haribabu's Camera
Among the 18 people who died in the blast was also Haribabu, a photographer hired by Sivarasan to document the attack on Rajiv Gandhi. Haribabu's 35 mm Chinon camera lay at the blast site. It was picked up by the agencies and reached the Special Investigation Team investigating Rajiv Gandhi's assassination. The camera had photos of the entire assassination squad. It had a shot of Sivarasan's profile too.
A question that baffled the investigating agencies in the days after the attack was why the LTTE would leave behind a wealth of documentary evidence at the scene of crime. The answer was simple: the LTTE had a compulsive need for documenting their struggle. Photos of the cadres kept them motivated. Such was the need for documenting every step of their mission that the LTTE had a battlefield camera unit that filmed and photographed their cadres in action. The unit was called 'Nitharsanam' (which means reality or evidence in Tamil). True to its name, Nitharsanam served as the chronicler of the LTTE's reality.
The camera played a key role in the SIT zeroing in on the LTTE operatives involved in the attack. It took the DR Karthikeyan-led team two months to round up most of the key suspects. But Sivarasan was still at large.
Sivarasan On The Run
After the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, Sivarasan fled from one hideout to another in Tamil Nadu till he ran out of safehouses in the state. He found 11 LTTE boys who resembled him and sent them to various places in Tamil Nadu in various disguises to waylay the agencies. So, Sivarasan would be 'spotted' in the state as a bald Hindu priest, a turbaned Sikh, a Muslim cleric and a Catholic priest, all at the same time. But Sivarasan knew that he couldn't keep up with it for too long. The agencies were closing in, and he had no place to hide in Tamil Nadu anymore.
So, Sivarasan travelled 350 kilometres from Chennai to Bangalore in a water tanker, evading about a dozen police checkpoints on the way. He holed himself up in a single-storeyed house in Konanakunte on the outskirts of the Karnataka capital. He had a reward of Rs 15 lakh on his head and eluding the forces was not easy.
In his book Ninety Days: The True Story of the Hunt for Rajiv Gandhi's Assassins (Haper Collins India, 2022), journalist-author Anirudhya Mitra writes, "When he [Sivarasan] found that the police had surrounded his hideout in Konanakunte, he didn't immediately die by suicide. He knew the agencies would like to catch him alive, and yet he waited thirty-six hours for them to finally break into his hideout. It's only then that he shot himself through his temple. He was cunning, ruthless, brutal and devoted to his Tamil cause."
Death Of An Assassin
When Sivarasan left his last Chennai hideout two days after the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, he took only a 9 mm pistol with him. Sivarasan was confident he would return to the Chennai safehouse.
He could not.
The Tiger safehouse at 158 Muthamil Nagar, Kodungaiyur in Chennai played an important role in the SIT cracking the assassination case. LTTE operative Jayakumar, a suspect in the May 21 assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, told K Ragothaman, CBI's chief investigator, that the Kodungaiyur safehouse had a hole in the kitchen that seemed important to Sivarasan. Whenever Sivarasan went to the kitchen, he would send Jayakumar out of the room. The latter did not know what lay in the hole in the kitchen.
The hole, cut under a two-foot-by-two-foot kitchen tile, had in it a thick Tamil-English dictionary with a 9 mm pistol in it. This is the pistol Sivarasan shot himself with. The hole also held two small pocket diaries, a notebook, and a fake glass eye.
The diaries helped the SIT piece together the Rajiv Gandhi assassination plot. The diaries contained twenty days' worth of telephone numbers, addresses, financial transactions and codenames. Sivarasan began scribbling in them on May 1, 1991, when he landed in Tamil Nadu. His last entry was from May 23, two days after the assassination, when he fled the Chennai safehouse for Konanakunte, where he killed himself on August 19, 1991.
When the crack team from the National Security Guard broke open the door of the Konanakunte safehouse, they found six of Sivarasan's comrades dead inside. They had all bitten into the capsule of cyanide that they wore around their neck. The women died embracing each other; the men, with their arms around each other's backs.
Sivarasan, the 'One-Eyed Jack' with a 15-lakh reward on his head, lay at a distance, dead from a bullet wound to his head.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trade talks on, but India responds to Trump tariffs on auto with a ‘right' to retaliate at WTO
Trade talks on, but India responds to Trump tariffs on auto with a ‘right' to retaliate at WTO

First Post

time33 minutes ago

  • First Post

Trade talks on, but India responds to Trump tariffs on auto with a ‘right' to retaliate at WTO

India has informed the WTO of its plan to impose retaliatory duties on the US in response to steep American tariffs on auto imports. The move comes as both countries attempt to finalise a trade deal by July 9, with India insisting on its right to protect key export sectors. read more India has formally notified the World Trade Organisation (WTO) of its intention to impose retaliatory duties on the United States in response to Washington's 25% tariffs on automobiles and certain auto parts. According to the notification, the American measures are expected to impact approximately $2.89 billion worth of Indian exports, prompting New Delhi to claim its right to suspend equivalent trade concessions. 'India reserves the right to suspend concessions or other obligations… that are substantially equivalent to the adverse effects of the measure to India's trade,' the statement submitted to the WTO read. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD While the Indian government has not yet detailed the specific tariff rates or the list of U.S. goods to be targeted, it has indicated that the retaliation would match the estimated $725 million in duties the US will collect annually from these measures. The development comes amid ongoing efforts by both nations to conclude a trade deal before a July 9 deadline set by US President Donald Trump. Trump has warned that if no agreement is reached, a sweeping 26% tariff could be imposed on all Indian imports. India has expressed willingness to reduce some of its high tariffs for American goods but has held firm on sensitive sectors like agriculture and dairy, where it has resisted Washington's demands for wider market access. The move was detailed in a WTO Council for Trade in Goods meeting, where India stated that it intends to suspend certain trade concessions and obligations under various WTO provisions. The US imposed the 25% tariff on March 26, applying it to imports of passenger cars, light trucks, and select automobile components. These duties, which took effect from May 3, 2025, will continue indefinitely. India maintains that these US tariffs amount to safeguard measures, a trade tool typically used to protect domestic industries from import surges. However, New Delhi has pointed out that Washington has not formally registered the measures as safeguards with the WTO—a requirement under international trade rules. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD According to India, the US action violates the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) 1994 and the WTO's Agreement on Safeguards. Since Washington has not responded to India's call for consultations, New Delhi has now exercised its right to seek compensation through retaliatory trade measures. This isn't the first time India has used this approach. Earlier in March, it adopted similar retaliatory measures in response to US tariffs on Indian steel and aluminium exports. India's latest move highlights its intent to defend its trade interests at the multilateral level even as it engages bilaterally to resolve differences with the United States. With inputs from agencies

Curriculum committee approves chapter on Governor's powers in school textbook
Curriculum committee approves chapter on Governor's powers in school textbook

The Hindu

time39 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Curriculum committee approves chapter on Governor's powers in school textbook

The State Curriculum Committee, chaired by General Education Minister V. Sivankutty, on Friday approved the second part of the textbooks for Classes 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10, covering 95 titles. Among them, the second volume of the Class 10 Social Science textbook includes a chapter titled 'Democracy: an Indian experience', which elaborates on the powers and responsibilities of the Governor. The chapter also covers topics such as the Emergency, the Supreme Court verdict that struck down electoral bonds, and the phenomenon of 'resort politics'. Before Onam vacation The approved textbooks will be distributed to students before the Onam vacation, according to an official release. On the revision of higher secondary textbooks, the committee granted permission to conduct detailed discussions in higher secondary classrooms and to gather feedback from students, teachers and parents. It also decided to conduct district and State-level workshops to initiate the preparation of textbooks. The committee also congratulated the students, teachers and parents who contributed to the State's outstanding performance in the National Achievement Survey.

"TVK-headed alliance would always be against DMK and BJP," says Vijay at State Executive meet
"TVK-headed alliance would always be against DMK and BJP," says Vijay at State Executive meet

India Gazette

time39 minutes ago

  • India Gazette

"TVK-headed alliance would always be against DMK and BJP," says Vijay at State Executive meet

ANI 04 Jul 2025, 17:36 GMT+10 Chennai (Tamil Nadu) [India], July 4 (ANI): Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) party founder Vijay convened a State Executive Committee meeting at the party headquarters in Chennai, where several key resolutions were passed ahead of the 2026 Tamil Nadu Assembly elections. At the meeting, actor and party chief Vijay declared, 'TVK-headed alliance would always be against DMK and BJP. There is no room for compromise in this. This State Executive Committee Meeting strongly registers are Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam which is not DMK or AIADMK to encourage alliance with BJP for some selfish political gains.' Vijay further emphasised, 'No direct or indirect alliance with the ideological enemy and separatists. BJP divides people based on religion and encourages division among people to enjoy political gain. Their such poisonous attempts could work anywhere but never in Tamil Nadu.' Among the resolutions adopted, one strongly criticized the Election Commission of India's (ECI) electoral revision process, stating, 'Electoral revision in poll-bound states is an effort to reduce the votes of minorities and this should be stopped. ECI has decided to conduct intensive electoral revision in assembly election-bound states and it is highly suspicious that BJP is trying to reduce the minority voters and to increase their voters which is against democracy. This State Executive Committee meeting strongly condemns this.' Amit Shah's recent comments on the English language were deemed 'malicious' by the TVK state executive committee, describing them as a direct assault on Tamil Nadu's two-language policy. The Tamil Vettri Kazhagham mentioned that the party will never accept the imposition of Hindi and the Sanskrit language on Tamil Nadu. The party also condemned the Election Commission of India's decision to conduct electoral revision and stated that the main purpose of it is to reduce minority votes in the state. The Committee noted that the electoral revision is being conducted to increase the pro-BJP votes, which is against democracy. (ANI)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store