Black July

Black July
Part of Riots in Sri Lanka

A Tamil youth stripped naked by Sinhalese rioters near Borella bus stand.[1][2]

Location of Sri Lanka
Location Sri Lanka
Date 24 July 1983 (1983-07-24)
30 July 1983 (1983-07-30) (UTC+6)
Target Primarily Sri Lankan Tamils
Attack type
Burning, decapitation, stabbing, shooting
Weapons Axes, guns, explosives, knives, sticks
Deaths 400-3,000
Non-fatal injuries
25,000+
Victims Tamil civilians
Number of participants
Thousands

Black July (Sinhala: කළු ජූලිය Kalu Juliya) is the common name used to refer to the anti-Tamil pogrom[3] and riots in Sri Lanka during July 1983. The riots began as a "response" to a deadly ambush on 23 July 1983 by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a Tamil militant group, that killed 13 Sri Lanka Army soldiers. Beginning in the capital Colombo on the night of 24 July 1983, anti-Tamil pogroms spread to other parts of the country. Over seven days, mobs, mainly Sinhalese, attacked Tamil targets, burning, looting, and killing. Estimates of the death toll range between 400 and 3,000.[4][5] 8,000 homes and 5,000 shops were destroyed.[6] 150,000 people were made homeless.[7] The economic cost of the riots was $300 million.[7] A wave of Sri Lankan Tamils fled to other countries in the ensuing years and many thousands of Tamil youths joined militant groups.[4][5]

Black July is generally seen as the start of full-scale Sri Lankan Civil War between the Tamil militants and the government of Sri Lanka.[5][8][9][10] July has become a time of remembrance for the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora community around the world.

Background

During the colonial period, many Sri Lankan Tamils, particularly those from the Jaffna peninsula, took advantage of educational facilities established by missionaries. They were also benefited by the British policy of divide and rule, which placed minorities in positions of power in colonies and soon dominated the civil service and other professions. When Sri Lanka became independent in 1948, a majority of government jobs were held by Tamils, who were a minority of the country's population. The elected leaders saw this as the result of a British stratagem to control the majority Sinhalese, and they deemed it a situation that needed correction.

In 1956 the Official Language Act, commonly known as the Sinhala Only Act, was introduced. Up until that time English, spoken by only five percent of the population, had been the sole official language." The use of Sinhala, spoken by 75 percent, and Tamil, spoken by 25 percent, was severely restricted. Protests against the Sinhala Only policy by Tamils and by the leftist parties were met with mob violence that eventually snowballed into the riots of 1958. The implementation of the Sinhala Only Act deprived the Tamil populations, in the north and east of the country, of their right to fully integrate into government institutions. It was the foremost injustice brought upon this ethnic minority.

In 1958, the Tamil political leadership acquiesced to a formula of Sinhala as the official language, but with the "reasonable use of Tamil". Only the leftist parties opposed this, holding out for parity of status between the two languages. However, after the Tamil people gave an overwhelming mandate to the Tamil nationalist Illankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (Federal Party), which had agreed to a subordinate status for the Tamil language, the leftist parties eventually abandoned parity of status.

Throughout the 1960s, protests and state repression against these protests created further animosity. In 1972, the policy of standardisation that affected Tamils' entry into universities strained the already tenuous political relationship between the elites of the Tamil and Sinhalese communities. The quota entitlement in political representation became another cause for contention between Sinhala and Tamil people. There was also a series of ethnic riots in 1977 following the United National Party's (UNP) coming to power.[11] In 1981, the renowned public library in Jaffna was burnt down by a violent mob. The Jaffna Library was well known at the time as a nexus of Tamil activity, with various Tamil groups vying for control. Until 1983, there were similar incidents of low level violence between the government and the mushrooming Tamil militant groups. There were many murders, disappearances, and cases of torture attributed to both sides.

On 23 July 1983 at around 11:30 pm, the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (the Tamil Tigers or the LTTE) ambushed the Four Four Bravo military patrol in Thirunelveli near Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka.[12] A road-side bomb was detonated beneath the jeep that was leading the convoy, injuring at least two soldiers onboard. Soldiers traveling in a truck behind the jeep dismounted to help their colleagues. They were ambushed by a group of Tamil Tiger fighters who fired at them with automatic weapons and hurled grenades at them. In the ensuing clashes, one officer and twelve soldiers were killed immediately, and two more were fatally wounded. The total death toll was fifteen. A number of the rebels were also killed.[13] Kittu, a regional commander of the LTTE later admitted to planning and carrying out the ambush.[13] This attack has been described as a retaliation for the killing of one of the LTTE’s founding members, Charles Anthony, by Sri Lankan forces[14] and as a retaliation for the abduction and rape of some Tamil school girls by the government forces.[15]

Black July anti-Tamil riots in Colombo in 1983. The 'Black July' riots are seen as the starting point of the conflict

Sunday 24 July

The Army, including its Commander Tissa Weeratunga, didn't want the soldiers' funerals to be held in Jaffna. And because of possible disturbances at multiple locations, they didn't want to hand the bodies over to their families.[16][13] So the decision was made at the highest level to hold the funeral, with full military honours, at Colombo's General Cemetery at Kanatte.[16] Prime Minister Ranasinghe Premadasa, fearing violence, was against holding the funeral in Colombo, but President J. R. Jayewardene overruled him.[17] The President, the Prime Minister, and the rest of the Cabinet were to attend the funeral, which was to take place at 5pm on 24 July. This plan was against the standard procedure of burying the fallen soldiers in their home villages.[13]

Preparations were made for the funeral, and the riot squad at Borella Police Station was put on stand-by. But by 5pm the bodies hadn't arrived in Colombo.[18] The soldiers' families wanted the bodies handed over to them to be buried according to tradition. Due to procedural issues, the bodies were still at Palali Army Camp near Jaffna.[18] The bodies were eventually moved from Palali Air Force Base shortly after 6pm. Back at Colombo General Cemetery, tensions were growing because of the delay, and a large crowd, including around 3,000 people from the Wanathamulla slum, started gathering at the cemetery, angered by news of the ambush, which was magnified by wild rumour.[18] The Avro plane which was carrying the bodies arrived at Ratmalana Airport at 7:20 p.m. by which time the crowd at the cemetery had swollen to more than 8,000.[18] The crowd wanted the bodies to be handed over to the families rather than to be buried at the cemetery. Violence broke out between the crowd and police, and the riot squad was summoned. The riot squad fired tear gas at the crowd and baton-charged them before handing control of the situation over to the Army. The President then decided to cancel the military funeral and hand the bodies over to the families.[19] The vehicles carrying the bodies had been driven away from Ratmalana at 8:30 p.m. and the drivers were heading to the cemetery. But they were diverted to Army Headquarters so that they could be handed over to the families. The crowd at the cemetery was informed of the President's decision at around 10pm.[19] The crowd left the cemetery in a restive mood.

A section of the crowd marched up D. S. Senanayake Mawatha to nearby Borella, where they destroyed Tamil-owned Nagalingam Stores.[19] The mob, which by that time numbered around 10,000, attacked, looted, and set fire to any building near Borella junction that had a Tamil connection, including Borella Flats and the Tamil Union Cricket and Athletic Club.[19] Then houses belonging to Tamils in the neighbourhood were targeted. The police fired tear gas at the crowd, but after exhausting all of their stock, they were forced to fire rifles into the air.[20] The crowd then dispersed in the direction of Dematagoda, Maradana, Narahenpita, Grandpass and Thimbirigasyaya, where they attacked and looted Tamil properties and set them on fire.[20] Members of underworld criminal gangs then joined in.

Monday 25 July

President Jayewardene met the country's Security Council at the President's House, Colombo at 9:30 a.m. on 25 July. A hundred yards away the Bristol building, the Tamil-owned Ambal Cafe, was ablaze.[20] Also close by on York Street, the Tamil-owned clothier Sarathas was ablaze as well.[20] Soon all the Tamil-owned shops on Baillie Street opposite the President's House were on fire. Every Tamil-owned business in the Fort area was on fire by the time the Security Council meeting finished.[20] The President ordered a curfew in Colombo from 6pm.[21][22] The mob moved on to Olcott Mawatha, where they set fire to the Tamil-owned thosai boutique Ananda Bhawan, oilman store Rajeswari Stores, and Ajantha Hotel.[20]

The rioting had spread to the slums of Canal Bank, Grandpass, Hattewatte, Kirilapone, Kotahena, Maradana, Modera, Mutwal, Narahenpita, Slave Island, and Wanathamulla by 10am. Mobs armed with crow bars and kitchen knives roamed the streets, attacking and killing Tamils.[20] Wellawatte and Dehiwala, which contained the largest number of Tamils in Colombo, were the next target of the mob. Homes and shops were attacked, looted, and destroyed.[20] Tamil shops on Main Street and Bo Tree Junction were also attacked.[23] The riots then spread to the middle class residential areas of Anderson Flats, Elvitigala Flats, Torrington Flats, and Thimbirigasyaya. Tamil targets in the exclusive Cinnamon Gardens were also attacked as were those in the suburbs of Kadawatha, Kelaniya, Nugegoda and Ratmalana.[24] The residence of the Indian High Commissioner was also attacked and ransacked.[22] By lunchtime, virtually the entire city was on fire. The curfew was brought forward to 4:00 p.m. and then to 2:00 p.m., and it was extended to Gampaha District due to the violence spreading as far as Negombo.[24] In Kalutara the TKVS Stores were set on fire. The owner jumped out of an upstairs window, but the mob threw him back into the fire.[25] The curfew was extended to Kalutara District.

The police were unwilling, or unable, to enforce the curfew.[26] The army was then called in to assist the police.

The rioters were then becoming organised, using voter registration lists to target Tamils.[25] The possession of electoral lists by the mobs, which enabled them to identify Tamil homes and property, implied prior organization and cooperation by elements of the government.[27] As President Jayewardene would later admit in a statement, “a pattern of organization and planning has been noticed in the rioting and looting that took place.”[28] Eighty-one out of the 92 Tamil-owned flats at Soysa Flats were attacked, looted, and set on fire.[25] The mob attacked the industrial area of Ratmalana, which contained a number of Tamil-owned factories. Jetro Garments and Tata Garments on Galle Road were completely gutted.[25] Other factories attacked included Ponds, S-Lon, Reeves Garments, Hydo Garments, Hyluck Garments, AGM Garments, Manhattan Garments, Ploy Peck, Berec and Mascons Asbestos.[25] Indian-owned factories such as Kundanmals, Oxford, and Bakson Garments were not attacked, giving credence to the suggestion that the mob was deliberately going after Sri Lankan Tamil targets.[25] Seventeen factories were destroyed in Ratmalana. Capital Maharaja, a Tamil-owned company, is one of Sri Lanka's largest conglomerates. Six of their factories in Ratmalana, their headquarters in Bankshall Street, and their Hettiaratchi were destroyed.[29][30] The mob ended the day by setting fire to Tilly's Beach Hotel in Mount Lavinia.[25]

One of the most notorious incidents of the rioting took place at the Welikada Prison on 25 July.[26][31] Thirty-seven Tamil prisoners, most of them detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, were killed by Sinhalese prisoners, using knives and clubs. Survivors claimed that prison officers allowed their keys to fall into the hands of Sinhalese prisoners. But at the subsequent inquest, prison officers claimed that the keys had been stolen from them.[26]

Outside of the Western Province, there was violence in Galle, Kegalle, Trincomalee and Vavuniya on 25 July.[32]

The mobs were equipped with voter registration lists. There was burning and attacking mainly of Tamil residences and businesses. And army and government officials were late in being deployed to control the mob. All of this gave credence to the idea that it had been an organised attack with support at the government level. While a number of Tamils fled the city, many Sinhalese and Muslims saved the lives and properties of Tamils despite the activities of the gangs. Many Tamils were sheltered in government buildings, temples as well as Sinhalese and Muslim houses in the following days.[26][33][34]

Tuesday 26 July

The mob attacks continued in Wellawatte and Dehiwala on 26 July. There were 53 houses on Ratnakara Road. The 24 Tamil owned/occupied houses were burnt.[29] Three houses were owned by Sinhalese but were rented by Tamils. The mob removed the property from these three houses out to the road and burnt it.[29] The three houses were not burnt down, neither were the 26 Sinhalese owned/occupied houses.[29] In many parts of the city, the Army merely looked on as property was destroyed and people were killed.[29]

The violence spread to the country's second largest city, Kandy, on 26 July.[31] By 2:45 p.m. Delta Pharmacy on Peradeniya Road was on fire.[32] Soon afterward a Tamil-owned shop near the Laksala building was set on fire, and the violence spread to Castle Street and Colombo Street.[32] The police managed to get control of the situation, but an hour later a mob armed with petrol cans and Molotov cocktails started attacking Tamil shops on Castle Street, Colombo Street, King's Street, and Trincomalee Street.[32] The mob then moved on to nearby Gampola.[32] A curfew was imposed in Kandy District on the evening of 26 July.[32]

In Trincomalee, false rumours started spreading that the LTTE had captured Jaffna, that the Karainagar Naval Base had been destroyed, and that the Naga Vihare had been desecrated.[35] Sailors based at Trincomalee Naval Base went on a rampage, attacking Central Road, Dockyard Road, Main Street, and North Coast Road.[36] The sailors started 170 fires before returning to their base.[36] The Sivan Hindu temple on Thirugnasambandan Road had also been attacked.[36]

The curfew was extended nationwide on 26 July as a precautionary measure. There were more outbreaks of violence and looting against Tamils in areas where various ethnic groups coexisted .[31] By the evening of the 26 July the mob violence began to slacken off as police and army units patrolled the streets in large numbers and began to take action against the rioters.[37] The soldiers killed in the Thirunelveli ambush were quietly buried during the night curfew.[37]

Wednesday 27 July

In the Central Province, the violence spread to Nawalapitiya and Hatton.[36] Badulla, the largest city in neighbouring Uva Province, had so far been peaceful. But around 10:30 a.m. on 27 July, a Tamil-owned motorcycle was set on fire in front of the clock tower in Badulla.[36] Around midday an organised mob went through the city's bazaar area, setting shops on fire.[36] The rioting then spread to residential areas,and the homes of many Tamils were burnt down.[36] The mob then left the city in vans and buses that they had stolen and headed for Bandarawela, Hali-Ela, and Welimada, where they continued to set properties on fire.[38] The riot had spread to Lunugala by nightfall.[38]

The daytime curfew in Colombo was lifted on 27 July, and the day began in relative calm. But then at Fort Railway Station, a train heading for Jaffna was stopped as it was pulling out of Platform One after cartridges were found on the track. Sinhalese passengers on the train started attacking Tamil passengers, killing twelve.[38] And some Tamils were burnt alive on the railway tracks.[38]

Following the riot at Welikada prison on 25 July, Tamil prisoners had been moved from the Chapel Ward to the Youth Offenders Building. On the evening of 27 July, Sinhalese prisoners overpowered the guards, armed themselves with axes and firewood, and attacked the Tamil prisoners in the Youth Offenders Building. Fifteen Tamil prisoners were killed.[38][31][39] Two Tamil prisoners and a third prisoner were killed during a riot at Jaffna prison on the same day.[31][40]

Thursday 28 July

Badulla was still on fire on 28 July, and the rioting spread from Lunugala to Passara.[41] There was also rioting in Nuwara Eliya and Chilaw.[41] But the violence had subsided in Colombo, Kandy, and Trincomalee.[41]

President Jayewardene and his cabinet met in an emergency session on 28 July. Jayewardene then made a primetime televised address in which he appealed for an end to the violence.[31][42][41] Jayewardene blamed the violence on "the deep ill feeling and suspicion that has grown between the Sinhalese and the Tamil people", caused by the calls for an independent Tamil state which began in 1976.[43] The Tamil United Liberation Front, the largest political party representing the Tamils, had passed the Vaddukoddai Resolution in 1976. He blamed the violence committed by the Tamil militants for the way "the Sinhalese people themselves have reacted".[43] Jayewardene vowed that the "Sinhalese people will never agree to the division of a country which has been a united nation for 2,500 years [sic]" and announced that the government would "accede to the clamour...of the Sinhalese people" and ban any party which sought to divide the nation.[44][40]

Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi called Jayewardene on 28 July and informed him of the impact the riots had had in India.[45] She requested that Jayewardene receive Minister of External Affairs P. V. Narasimha Rao as her special envoy.[45] Jayewardene accepted, and a few hours later Rao arrived in Sri Lanka.[45]

Friday 29 July

Colombo was still calm on 29 July. Tamil residents were visiting their friends and relatives who had taken refuge in the many refugee camps in the city. But at around 10:30 a.m. two Sinhalese youths were shot on Gas Works Street.[46] A large crowd gathered at the scene, and soon rumours started circling that the youths had been shot by Tamil Tigers in the Adam Ali building.[46] The building was surrounded by the army, navy, and police who proceed to fire at the building using submachine guns and semi-automatic rifles.[46] A helicopter also fired at the building with a machine gun. The security forces stormed the building but found no Tamil Tigers, weapons, or ammunitions inside.[47] Rumours began to spread around Colombo that the army was engaged in a battle with the Tamil Tigers.[48] Panicking workers began to flee in any mode of transport they could find. Mobs started gathering in the streets, armed with axes, bricks, crow bars, iron rods, kitchen knives, and stones, ready to fight the Tigers.[48][37] The Tigers never came, so the mobs turned their attention to the fleeing workers. Vehicles were stopped and searched for Tamils. Any Tamil they found was attacked and set on fire.[48] A Tamil was burnt alive on Kirula Road.[48] Eleven Tamils were burnt alive on Attidiya Road.[48] The police found an abandoned van on the same road which contained the butchered bodies of two Tamils and three Muslims.[48] Police shot dead 15 rioters.[39] At 2pm on 29 July, a curfew came into force which lasted until 5am on Monday 1 August.[49]

Badulla, Kandy, and Trincomalee were calm on 29 July but there was violence in Nuwara Eliya where around midday. The Tamil-owned Ganesan and Sivalingam stores were attacked and set on fire.[49] The violence then spread to Bazaar Street and Lawson Road.[49] Violence was also reported in Kegalle District and Matara District. In Kegalle District the violence spread from Dehiowita to Deraniyagala to Avissawella.[49] In Matara District the worst affected areas were Deniyaya and Morawake.[49] There was violence in Chilaw as well.

Indian External Affairs Minister Rao held discussions with President Jayewardene and Foreign Minister A. C. S. Hameed before visiting Kandy by helicopter.[45][49]

Saturday 30 July

Violence was reported in Nuwara Eliya, Kandapola, Hawa Eliya, and Matale on 30 July.[49] The rest of the country was quiet. That night the government banned three left-wing political parties, Communist Party of Sri Lanka, Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, and Nava Sama Samaja Party, blaming them for inciting the riots.[49]

Government's response

There had been a growing tension between the Sinhala and Tamil communities of Sri Lanka even before the actual riots began. And with the formation of rebel Tamil groups, there was a rising anti-Tamil sentiment among the Sinhalese majority. Although the violence began as a spontaneous reaction by Sinhalese mobs who had gathered at the Colombo cemetery where the bodies of the soldiers were to be buried, they were later joined by elements associated with Sinhalese political activists actively involved in the organisation of the riots.[50] Also, during the early stages of riots, it is alleged that the local police and military stood by doing nothing.[51] Numerous eyewitness accounts suggest that "in many places police and even military personnel joined the rioters."[52] However, by 26 July the police and army were out in the streets taking action against the mobs, and most of the violence died out. The government extended the curfew to prevent violence from spreading to other parts of the country. A brief span of rioting broke out on 29 July when police shot and killed 15 Sinhalese looters.

The Sri Lankan government is accused from various corners of being complicit during the pogrom and of supporting and encouraging the Sinhalese mobs.[53][54][55] President Jayewardene has been accused of failing to condemn the violence or to express sympathy to the survivors, blaming Tamils for bringing it upon themselves,[52] failing to take any meaningful measures to punish the perpetrators of the violence, and praising the mobs as heroes of the Sinhalese people.[56] In an interview to the Daily Telegraph on July 11, 1983, about two weeks prior to the riots, Jayewardene expressed the state's complicity in the violence against the Tamils:

"I am not worried about the opinion of the Jaffna (Tamil) people now. Now we cannot think of them. Not about their lives or of their opinion about us. The more you put pressure in the north, the happier the Sinhala people will be here... really, if I starve the Tamils, Sinhala people will be happy... ."[57]

Even though some Tamil politicians accused the ruling UNP of not taking appropriate actions to prevent the riots, according to the government it took vital counter measures from the very early stages to combat rioters and to safeguard the Tamil community. Curfew was enforced immediately after the riots broke out. The attacks, according to the government, were carefully organised, and government properties such as trains, buildings and buses were the initial targets. Prime Minister Premadasa formed a committee to organise shelter and feeding for an estimated 20,000 homeless Tamils in Colombo. These temporary shelters were situated at five school buildings and an aircraft hangar. After the number of refugees increased to around 50,000, the government, with help from India, took measures to send Tamils north by way of ships.[37]

Eyewitness accounts

The rioters initially targeted government properties. Just as many times before (and since), most of the people who gathered at the Borella Kanatta, where the dead army soldiers were supposed to be buried, directed their anger towards the government. Later it developed into full-scale violence, targeting Tamil citizens and their properties.

The murder, looting, and general destruction of property was well organised. And mobs armed with petrol were seen stopping passing motorists at critical street junctions. After ascertaining the ethnic identity of the driver and passengers, they set alight the vehicles, with the drivers and passengers trapped inside.

Mobs were also seen stopping buses to identify Tamil passengers, who were subsequently knifed, clubbed to death, or burned alive. One Norwegian tourist saw a mob set fire to a minibus with 20 people inside, killing them all.[50][58] According to an eyewitness testimony of a victim who survived the riots, Buddhist monks were among the rioters.[59]

The Tamil Guardian lists more eyewitness testimonies from various sources:[60]

London’s Daily Telegraph (July 26) wrote:

Motorists were dragged from their cars to be stoned and beaten with sticks. Others were cut down with knives and axes. Mobs of Sinhala youth rampaged through the streets, ransacking homes, shops and offices, looting them and setting them ablaze, as they sought out members of the Tamil ethnic minority. A mob attacked a Tamil cyclist riding near Colombo’s eye hospital. The cyclist was hauled from his bike, drenched with petrol and set alight. As he ran screaming down the street, the mob set on him again and hacked him down with jungle knives.

In his book, The Tragedy of Sri Lanka, William McGowan wrote:

While travelling on a bus when a mob laid siege to it, passengers watched as a small boy was hacked 'to limb-less death.' The bus driver was ordered to give up a Tamil. He pointed out a woman who was desperately trying to erase the mark on her forehead – called a kumkum – as the thugs bore down on her. The woman’s belly was ripped open with a broken bottle and she was immolated as people clapped and danced. In another incident, two sisters, one eighteen and one eleven, were decapitated and raped, the latter 'until there was nothing left to violate and no volunteers could come forward,' after which she was burned. While all this was going on, a line of Buddhist monks appeared, arms flailing, their voices raised in a delirium of exhortation, summoning the Sinhalese to put all Tamils to death.

The London Daily Express (29 July) wrote:

Mrs Eli Skarstein, back home in Stavanger, Norway, told how she and her 15 year old daughter, Kristen witnessed one massacre. 'A mini bus full of Tamils were forced to stop in front of us in Colombo', she said. A Sinhalese mob poured petrol over the bus and set it on fire. They blocked the car door and prevented the Tamils from leaving the vehicle. 'Hundreds of spectators watched as about 20 Tamils were burnt to death.' Mrs. Skarstein added: 'We can’t believe the official casualty figures. Hundreds, maybe thousands, must have been killed already. The police force (which is 95% Sinhalese) did nothing to stop the mobs. There was no mercy. Women, children and old people were slaughtered. Police did nothing to stop the genocide.'

The Times of London reported on 5 August that "...Army personnel actively encouraged arson and the looting of Tamil business establishments and homes in Colombo", and that "absolutely no action was taken to apprehend or prevent the criminal elements involved in these activities. In many instances army personnel participated in the looting of shops."

The Economist of 6 August wrote: "...But for days the soldiers and policemen were not overwhelmed; they were un-engaged or, in some cases, apparently abetting the attackers. Numerous eye witnesses attest that soldiers and policemen stood by while Colombo burned."

Paul Sieghart of the International Commission of Jurists stated in Sri Lanka: A Mounting Tragedy of Errors, two months after the riots, that “Clearly this (July 1983 attack) was no spontaneous upsurge of communal hatred among the Sinhala people – nor was it as has been suggested in some quarters, a popular response to the killing of 13 soldiers in an ambush the previous day by Tamil Tigers, which was not even reported in the newspapers until the riots began. It was a series of deliberate acts, executed in accordance with a concerted plan, conceived and organized well in advance”.[61]

Casualty estimates

The estimates of casualties vary. While the government initially stated just 250 Tamils were killed, various NGOs and international agencies estimate that between 400 and 3,000 people, believed to be Sri Lankan Tamils or Hill Country Tamils, were killed in the riots.[4][5] Fifty-three terrorism suspects alone were killed in the Welikade prison massacre. Eventually the Sri Lankan government put the death toll at about 300 dead.[62][63]

More than 18,000 houses and numerous commercial establishments were destroyed, and hundreds of thousands of Tamils fled the country to Europe, Australia and Canada.[62] Many Tamil youths also joined the various Tamil groups, including the Tamil Tigers.

Prosecutions and compensations

A presidential commission appointed during the subsequent People's Alliance government estimated that nearly 300 people were killed and 18,000 establishments, including houses, were destroyed. The commission recommended that restitution be paid. Thus far no restitution has been paid nor have any criminal proceedings begun against anyone involved.[62]

As a remembrance day

July has become a time of mourning and remembrance amongst the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora around the world. Tamil diaspora around the world come together to commemorate the loss of Tamils. This has happened in countries such as Canada, Switzerland, Norway, Denmark, Germany, France, Great Britain, Australia, and New Zealand.

Panorama of the Black July's 26th anniversary remembrance day observed at Trafalgar Square in London in 2009

Notes

  1. "Black July 1983 remembered". Tamil Guardian. 23 July 2014.
  2. Jeyaraj, D. B. S. (24 July 2010). "Horror of a pogrom: Remembering "Black July" 1983". dbsjeyaraj.com.
  3. Community, Gender and Violence, edited by Partha Chatterjee, Pradeep Jeganathan
  4. 1 2 3 Harrison, Frances (23 July 2003). "Twenty years on – riots that led to war". BBC News.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Buerk, Roland (23 July 2008). "Sri Lankan families count cost of war". BBC News.
  6. "Peace and Conflict Timeline: 24 July 1983". Centre for Poverty Analysis.
  7. 1 2 Aspinall, Jeffrey & Regan 2013, p. 104.
  8. Senewiratne, Brian (28 July 2006). "Sri Lanka's Week of Shame: The July 1983 massacre of Tamils – Long-term consequences". Ilankai Tamil Sangam. Retrieved 1 August 2006.
  9. Wilson 1989.
  10. Tambiah, Stanley (1984). Sri Lanka: Ethnic Fratricide and the Dismantling of Democracy. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-78952-7.
  11. Rajasingham-Senanayake, Darini (May 2001). "Dysfunctional Democracy and the Dirty War in Sri Lanka" (PDF). AsiaPacific Issues. East–West Center (52). Retrieved 1 August 2006.
  12. Dissanayake 2004, pp. 63–64.
  13. 1 2 3 4 O'Ballance 1989, p. 21.
  14. Skutsch, Carl (2013-11-07). Encyclopedia of the World's Minorities. Routledge. ISBN 9781135193959. Tensions reached a breaking point on July 23, 1983 when the LTTE ambushed and killed 13 Sinhalese soldiers in retaliation for the murder of Charles Antony, the LTTE's second-in-command.
  15. Pavey, Eleanor (2008-05-13). "The massacres in Sri Lanka during the Black July riots of 1983". Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence. Retrieved 2016-02-06. Even though the origins of the 1983 riots were widely attributed to the killing of 13 Sinhalese soldiers by Tamil rebels, many Tamils point out that it was the abduction and rape - by government forces - of three Tamil schoolgirls that led Tamil rebels to attack government forces. This incident took place in Jaffna during the week of July 18, 1983, following which one of the victims committed suicide.
  16. 1 2 Dissanayake 2004, p. 66.
  17. Cooray, B. Sirisena (2002). President Premadasa and I: Our Story. Dayawansa Jayakody & Company. pp. 60–63. ISBN 955-551-280-9.
  18. 1 2 3 4 Dissanayake 2004, p. 67.
  19. 1 2 3 4 Dissanayake 2004, p. 68.
  20. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Dissanayake 2004, p. 69.
  21. "Travellers warned on Sri Lankan strife". The Free Lance–Star/Associated Press. 26 July 1983. p. 11.
  22. 1 2 "Mobs burn shops in Sri Lanka". The Times/Reuters. 26 July 1983. p. 1.
  23. Dissanayake 2004, pp. 69–70.
  24. 1 2 Dissanayake 2004, p. 70.
  25. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Dissanayake 2004, p. 71.
  26. 1 2 3 4 O'Ballance 1989, p. 23.
  27. Pavey, Eleanor (2008-05-13). "The massacres in Sri Lanka during the Black July riots of 1983". Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence. Retrieved 2016-02-06. The systematic and well-planned nature of the attacks against the Tamils - to which the government itself later alluded - ruled out the spontaneous outburst of anti-Tamil hatred within the Sinhalese masses. Moreover, the possession of electoral lists by the mobs - which enabled them to identify Tamil homes and property - not only implied prior organization, for such electoral lists could not have been obtained overnight, but it also pointed to the cooperation of at least some elements of the government, who had been willing to provide the mobs with such information.
  28. Pavey, Eleanor (2008-05-13). "The massacres in Sri Lanka during the Black July riots of 1983". Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  29. 1 2 3 4 5 Dissanayake 2004, p. 72.
  30. "The Group". Capital Maharaja.
  31. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Sri Lanka ethic riots kill at least 88 people". Telegraph Herald/United Press International. 28 July 1983. p. 12.
  32. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Dissanayake 2004, p. 74.
  33. Piyadasa, L. (1986). Sri Lanka: The Holocaust and After. Zed Books. ISBN 0-906334-03-9.
  34. "Anti-Tamil Riots and the Political Crisis in Sri Lanka" (PDF). Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars. 16 (1): 27–29. January–March 1984. doi:10.1080/14672715.1984.10409780. Retrieved 1 August 2006.
  35. Dissanayake 2004, pp. 74–75.
  36. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Dissanayake 2004, p. 75.
  37. 1 2 3 4 O'Ballance 1989, p. 24.
  38. 1 2 3 4 5 Dissanayake 2004, p. 76.
  39. 1 2 O'Ballance 1989, p. 25.
  40. 1 2 Hamlyn, Michael (29 July 1983). "Colombo acts to appease mobs". The Times. p. 1.
  41. 1 2 3 4 Dissanayake 2004, p. 77.
  42. Wilson 2001, pp. 113–114.
  43. 1 2 Dissanayake 2004, p. 78.
  44. Dissanayake 2004, pp. 78–79.
  45. 1 2 3 4 Dissanayake 2004, p. 79.
  46. 1 2 3 Dissanayake 2004, p. 80.
  47. Dissanayake 2004, pp. 80–81.
  48. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Dissanayake 2004, p. 81.
  49. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Dissanayake 2004, p. 82.
  50. 1 2 Hoole et al. 1990.
  51. Swamy, M. R. Narayan (2003). Inside an Elusive Mind: Prabhakaran. Literate World. ISBN 1-59121-003-8.
  52. 1 2 Bose, Sumantra (2007). Contested lands: Israel-Palestine, Kashmir, Bosnia, Cyprus, and Sri Lanka. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-674-02447-2.
  53. "Remembering Sri Lanka's Black July". BBC. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  54. "USTPAC Remembers 30th Anniversary of "Black July"- A State-abetted Pogrom Against Tamils in Sri Lanka". PR Newswire. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  55. Pavey, Eleanor (2008-05-13). "The massacres in Sri Lanka during the Black July riots of 1983". Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence. Retrieved 2016-02-06. Government involvement in this mass uprising was highly suspected. Certain elements of the government in power were suspected of issuing copies of voters’ lists to the mobs. In some instances, it is believed that the mobs were dropped off at particular points in vehicles owned by government establishments such as the State Timber Cooperation, the Cooperative Wholesale Establishment, the Ceylon Electricity Board and the Sri Lanka Transport Board (Senaratne 1997:45). In other instances, there were unconfirmed reports that buckets petrol was kept ready in white cans for the mobs at the Ceylon petroleum cooperation. Also, many reports indicate that certain members of the armed forces stood by and watched while much of the looting and arson was taking place (Meyer 2001:121-2). In some instances, security forces even took part in the riots. President Jayawardene himself would later admit that “[…] there was a big anti-Tamil feeling among the forces, and they felt that shooting the Sinhalese who were rioting would have been anti-Sinhalese; and actually in some cases we saw them [the forces] encouraging them [the rioters]” (Tambiah 1986:25).
  56. Razak, Abdul; Imtiyaz, Mohamed (2010-03-09). "Politicization of Buddhism and Electoral Politics in Sri Lanka". Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network. The government neither condemned the violence that killed approximately two thousand Tamils, nor took any meaningful measures to punish the perpetrators of the violence. Instead J.R. Jayewardene, then President of Sri Lanka, praised the mobs as heroes of the Sinhalese people.
  57. Imtiyaz, A. R. M. (2008). "ETHNIC CONFLICT IN SRI LANKA: THE DILEMMA OF BUILDING A UNITARY STATE". In Chatterji, Manas; Jain, B.M. Conflict and Peace in South Asia. Emerald Group Publishing. p. 136. ISBN 9780444531766.
  58. "History of Tamil struggle for Freedom in Sri Lanka: A Photo Album". Ilankai Tamil Sangam.
  59. "Black July '83 - Survivors". www.blackjuly83.com. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  60. "Anatomy of a pogrom". www.tamilguardian.com. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  61. ICJ Website: http://www.icj.org/lanka-a-mounting-tragedy-of-errors-report-of-a-mission-to-sri-lanka-in-january-1984-on-behalf-of-the-international-commission-of-jurists-and-its-british-section-justice/
  62. 1 2 3 "We must search for unity in diversity – President". Daily News (Sri Lanka). 26 July 2004.
  63. Grant, Patrick (2008). Buddhism and Ethnic Conflict in Sri Lanka. State University of New York Press. p. 132. ISBN 0-7914-9353-9.

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