sri_lion said:
So does Veerappan!

We have none remotely compared to Lord Buddha.
Your hero Veerappan should be compared to Prabhakaran -his Sri Lankan counterpart..
In terrorism and being victims of terrorism...
Sri Lanka excelled India.
Sri Lanka is the country which had the most terrible terrorist organization
which had Ships, Air planes, latest war technology.
Can you be proud of it.

Koose Muniswamy Veerappan,
Tamil: கூஸ் முனிசாமி வீரப்பன்
Kannada: ಕೂಸೆ ಮುನಿಸ್ವಾಮಿ ವೀರಪ್ಪನ್ (
January 18,
1952–
October 18,
2004) was the most notorious
bandit of
India. He resided and carried out his activities in the
Biligirirangana Betta and
Male Mahadeshwara Betta (Hills) and
Sathyamangalam and
Gundiyal forests, covering 6,000 km² in the states of
Karnataka,
Kerala and
Tamil Nadu. He challenged three state governments and the
paramilitary force of
Indian Border security. He once had a mini army with hundreds of armed members in his gang. He was wanted for killing about 184 people
[1], including senior police and forest officials, poaching about 200
elephants, and
smuggling ivory worth US$2,600,000 and
sandalwood of about 10,000 tonnes worth US$22,000,000. He had a price of
Rs. 50 million (Rs. 5
crore or US$1.1 million) on his head, but evaded arrest for 20 years until he was killed by police in 2004
[2].
Velupillai Prabhakaran (
Tamil: வேலுப்பிள்ளை பிரபாகரன்; November 26, 1954 – May 18, 2009
[1][2][7]) was the founder and leader of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (the LTTE or the Tamil Tigers), a militant organization that sought to create an independent
Tamil state in the north and east of
Sri Lanka. For over 25 years, the LTTE waged a
violent secessionist campaign in Sri Lanka that led to it being designated a
terrorist organization by 32 countries.
[8] Prabhakaran was wanted by
Interpol for
terrorism,
murder,
organized crime and terrorism
conspiracy.
[9] He also had arrest warrants against him in Sri Lanka and
India.
On May 18, 2009, the Sri Lankan Government led by President and Commander in Chief
Mahinda Rajapaksa announced that Prabhakaran had been killed while trying to escape advancing Sri Lanka Army troops,
[1][2][10][11] but UK-based Tamil Tiger spokesperson
Selvarasa Pathmanathan claimed that Prabhakaran was "still alive".
[12] On May 19, Sri Lanka's Defence Ministry announced that a body found by the shore of Nandikadal Lagoon had been identified as Prabhakaran's and the body was later shown on Sri Lankan media.
[13] A week later Pathmanathan, on behalf of the LTTE, admitted that Prabhakaran had died on May 17.
[14][15] Two weeks later a
DNA test confirmed Prabhakaran's and his son Charles Anthony's deaths.
[16]