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1990 Batticaloa massacre

Killing of Tamil refugees by the Sri Lankan Army


Killing of Tamil refugees by the Sri Lankan Army

FieldValue
titleBatticaloa massacre or Sathurukondan massacre
captionThe ditch in which the massacres victims were buried
map
locationBatticaloa, Sri Lanka
coordinates
targetSri Lankan Tamil civilians
date
timezone+6 GMT
typeCutting, Burning
fatalities184
injuries1
perpsSri Lankan Army
weaponsSwords, Knives

The 1990 Batticaloa massacre, also known as the Sathurukondan massacre (), was a massacre of at least 184 minority Sri Lankan Tamil refugees, including infants, from three villages in the Batticaloa District by the Sri Lankan Army on September 9, 1990.{{cite web|url = http://www.dailynews.lk/2003/10/07/fea06.html

Background information

By 1946, 33% of clerical jobs in Ceylon were held by Sri Lankan Tamils, although they were 11% of the country's population. This was partly due to the availability of Western-style education provided by the Protestant American Ceylon Mission, Hindu revivalists, and local Catholic missions in the Tamil-dominated Jaffna peninsula. After gaining independence from Britain in 1948, Sinhalese politicians made the over-representation a political issue. They initiated measures aimed at correcting the over-representation by establishing ethnic quotas for university entrants.

These measures, and a series of riots and pogroms starting from 1956 that targeted Sri Lankan Tamils and the resultant mass murder, displacements and refugees, led to the formation of rebel groups advocating independence for Sri Lankan Tamils. After the 1983 Black July pogrom, full-scale civil war erupted between the government and the rebel groups.

During the course of the civil war there were a number of massacres of civilians, war rapes, torture and enforced disappearances attributed to both the government and allied groups as well as the various rebel formations.

The massacre

The village of Sathurukondan lies just beyond Iruthayapuram, the northern suburb of Batticaloa. At 5:30 p.m. on September 9, 1990, armed men in uniform and in civilian clothes came into the area and ordered everyone to come on to the road. They were then marched to the army camp in the vicinity after being told that they would be questioned and released. Most of those who were left in the village that day were elderly, women and the very young.

According to the only survivor, Kanthasamy Krishnakumar (21), in a recording made before leading citizens in Batticaloa:

Krishnakumar who was injured, managed to roll out of sight in the semi-darkness, crept away to a house and asked for water. He then went to his village and stayed in an empty house, and later found his way to his cousin's in Batticaloa town.

The list of victims totaled 184 (38 Sathurukondan, 47 Kokuvil, 37 Panniachchiady and 62 Pillayarady). Of this number, there were 47 children below the age of 10 and several women.

Government investigation

Retired judge K. Palakidnar of the Special Presidential Commission of inquiry appointed by the People's Alliance government described the massacre in detail in his final report. According to the report of the commission of inquiry, 5 infants, 42 children under ten, 85 women and 28 old persons were among the 184 villagers who were murdered. The judge also identified three captains of the Sri Lankan Army: Warnakulasooriya, Herath and Wijenaike as the responsible parties.

The judge in his report urged the Sri Lankan President that there is strong evidence for the massacre and that legal action should be taken against the perpetrators. Although indictment levelled against alleged miscreants by the Human Rights Task Force, no action has been taken against the alleged perpetrators. Within the Batticaloa district, during the late 1980s and early 1990s a total of 1,100 civilians disappeared, assumed killed.

References

References

  1. "The massacre at Sathurukondan: 9th September 1990 – Report 8". [[UTHR]].
  2. "Chapter 45: War continues with brutality". Asia Times.
  3. "Batticaloa massacre victims remembered". [[Tamilnet]].
  4. "World Report 2000: Sri Lanka". [[Human Rights Watch]].
  5. Devotta, Neil. (2003). "Fighting Words: Language Policy and Ethnic Relations in Asia'". The MIT press.
  6. "Tamil Alienation". Russell R. Ross.
  7. "Arrests and subsequent disappearances from the village of Sathurukondan and other Villages".
  8. "Unanswered Questions About 1990 Operations in The East". UTHR-J.
  9. "Where is the Mass Grave of Vantharamoolai?". ACHRC.
  10. Cronin, Audrey. (2009). "How Terrorism Ends: Understanding the Decline and Demise of Terrorist Campaigns". Princeton University Press.
  11. (September 2016). "Graveyard for Disappeared Persons – Statistic for Batticaloa district".
  12. "HRW report – Sri Lanka". [[Human Rights Watch.
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