Yogeswaran married Sarojini, daughter of Ponnambalam.[2][3]
Career
After returning to Ceylon Yogeswaran resumed his studies at Ceylon Law College, qualifying as an advocate.[2] He then started practising law in Jaffna.[2][3]
Yogeswaran's house in Jaffna was burnt down on the night of 31 May 1981 by a mob of Sinhalese policemen and paramilitaries.[3][10][11] Yogeswaran and his wife managed to escape by jumping over their back walls.[10][11]
Yogeswaran and all other TULF MPs boycotted Parliament from the middle of 1983 for a number of reasons: they were under pressure from Sri Lankan Tamil militants not to stay in Parliament beyond their normal six-year term; the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka required them to swear an oath unconditionally renouncing support for a separate state; and the Black July riots in which up to 3,000 Tamils were killed by Sinhalese mobs. After three months of absence, Yogeswaran forfeited his seat in Parliament on 22 October 1983.[12]
In effort to bring about unity amongst the Tamils, Yogeswaran made contact with the LTTE and met with them several times.[4] He arranged a meeting between the LTTE and the TULF leaders at their Bullers Road residence.[4] At around 6.45 pm on 13 July 1989 three men, Peter Leon Aloysius (alias Vigna), Rasiah Aravintharaja (alias Visuwesvaran/Visu) and Sivakumar (alias Arivu), arrived at the residence.[13][14] The police guards allowed the trio to enter the premises without searching them.[13][14] Vigna and Visu went upstairs to the Yogeswaran/Sivasithamparam residence whilst Arivu remained outside.[13][14] The two men met with Yogeswaran, Amirthalingam and Sivasithamparam.[15] The meeting seemed to be going well when suddenly Visu pulled out a gun and shot Amirthalingam in the head and chest.[13] Yogeswaran stood up but was shot by Aloysius.[13] Visu then shot Sivasithamparam on the right shoulder.[13] A shoot out ensued between the LTTE trio and the police guards in which all three assailants were killed.[13][15] Amirthalingam and Yogeswaran were dead but Sivasithamparam survived.[13][14][15]
^Rajasingham, K. T. "Chapter 23: Srimavo's constitutional promiscuity". Sri Lanka: The Untold Story. Archived from the original on 13 February 2002.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)