1984 Kokkilai massacre (LTTE)

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Kokkilai massacre
Location map Sri Lanka Northern Province EN.svg
Location Mullaitivu District, Northern Province, Sri Lanka
Date1 December 1984 (+8 GMT)
Target Sinhalese civilians
Deaths11-13 [1]
InjuredUnknown
Perpetrators Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam

The Kokkilai massacre was a massacre of Sinhalese civilians carried out by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in the coastal village of Kokkilai. It was the group's second massacre of Sinhalese civilians.

Contents

Background

In the early 1900's, Sinhalese Catholic fishing families from Negombo settled in Kokkilai. [2] Throughout the following decades, Kokkilai was a popular fishing spot for migrant Sinhalese fishermen from Negombo. [3] During the 1958 riots and 1977 riots, Sinhalese property had been burned, but Sinhalese and Tamils generally maintained good relations in the area. [1]

During the civil war, the Mullaitivu District was hotly contested between the Sri Lankan government and Tamils. The army had evicted Indian Tamil residents of the Kent and Dollar farms and settled Sinhalese there. A day before the Kokkilai massacre, the LTTE massacred the Sinhalese on the farms. However, unlike the farms, Sinhalese residents of Kokkilai maintained that the government had not settled any Sinhalese in the village. [1]

Incident

The LTTE ordered a Tamil van driver to take them to Kokkilai. The van driver had flashed the lights as he approached the Sinhalese, allegedly to warn them of the impending massacre. When the van was near them, the militants jumped out and began throwing explosives and opening fire. Those not immediately killed ran to their boats to flee into the ocean. A child, injured in the gunfire, died in the boat. Two women were bound by their hair and shot dead at point-blank range. In total, around a dozen Sinhalese were killed. The LTTE later boasted about having killed "Sinhalese ruffians." [3]

Aftermath

The survivors of the massacre became refugees and relocated to Negombo, where they found it difficult to adjust to the new fishing conditions, and many stopped fishing outright. [1] In response to the massacres of Sinhalese at Kent and Dollar farm and Kokkilai, S. L. Gunasekara and Davinda Senanayake issued a report that recommended the increased militarization of the colonies in Weli Oya. The government implemented the recommendation by increasing army presence. A more general exodus of Sinhalese from Weli Oya occurred. The Kokkilai massacre had also led to a retaliatory Sinhalese mob attack on Tamils at Thennamarawadi. The army increased measures to drive local Tamils away. [4]

Related Research Articles

The Kent and Dollar Farm massacres were the first massacres of Sinhalese civilians carried out by the LTTE during the Sri Lankan Civil War. The massacres took place on 30 November 1984, in two tiny farming villages in the Mullaitivu district in north-eastern Sri Lanka. The Sri Lankan government labeled this as an attack on civilians by the LTTE.

The Anuradhapura massacre occurred in Sri Lanka in 1985 and was carried out by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. This was the largest massacre of Sinhalese civilians by the LTTE to date; it was also the first major operation carried out by the LTTE outside a Tamil majority area. Initially, EROS claimed responsibility for the massacre, but it later retracted the statement, and joined the PLOTE in denouncing the incident. The groups later accused the LTTE for the attack. Since then, no Tamil militant group has admitted to committing the massacre. However, state intelligence discovered that the operation was ordered by the LTTE's leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. He assigned the massacre to the LTTE Mannar commander Victor and it was executed by Victor's subordinate Anthony Kaththiar. The LTTE claimed the attack was in revenge of the 1985 Valvettiturai massacre, where the Sri Lanka Army killed 70 Tamil civilians in Prabhakaran's hometown. In 1988, the LTTE claimed that the massacre was planned and executed under the guidance of Indian intelligence agency, RAW.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">1984 Kokkilai massacres (army)</span>

1984 Kokkilai massacres refers to a series of massacres of Sri Lankan Tamil civilians when the Sri Lankan military attacked the village of Kokkilai and several neighboring villages in Mullaitivu District, Northern Province, Sri Lanka. The attack left several civilians including women and children dead and their property destroyed. The attacks resulted in widespread displacement of native residents and subsequently their lands were colonized by Sinhala settlers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1984 Manal Aru massacres</span>

The Manal Aru massacres of 1984 refers to a series of massacres of Sri Lankan Tamil civilians by the Sri Lankan military across numerous traditional Tamil villages in the Manal Aru region which spans across the Mullaitivu and Trincomalee districts. The motive behind the massacres was to drive out the local Tamil population from their villages, in order to replace them with thousands of Sinhala settlers.

The following lists events that happened during 1987 in Sri Lanka.

The following lists events that happened during 1985 in Sri Lanka.

The following lists events that happened during 1983 in Sri Lanka.

The following lists events that happened during 1990 in Sri Lanka.

The Battle of Weli Oya, took place between the militant Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the Sri Lanka Army during the Sri Lankan Civil War for control of the military bases in Weli Oya in northern Sri Lanka on 28 July 1995.

The Murunkan massacre of Inspector Bastianpillai and his team of police officers was the mass murder of a team of CID officers of the Sri Lanka Police on 7 April 1978 in the jungles of Murunkan in the Vavuniya District. Four police officers including Inspector Bastianpillai were killed by LTTE members led by Uma Maheswaran.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Refugees and Related Matters". A Sovereign Will to Self-Destruct (Report). University Teachers for Human Rights, Jaffna. 15 November 1993. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  2. Siriwardane-de Zoysa, Rapti (2018). Fishing, Mobility and Settlerhood: Coastal Socialities in Postwar Sri Lanka. Springer International Publishing. p. 160. ISBN   9783319788371.
  3. 1 2 Hoole, Rajan. "Mahaveli System L: The Weli Oya Project And The Declaration Of War Against Tamil Civilians". Colombo Telegraph. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  4. Sabaratnam, T (2004). "Pirapaharan: Vol.2, Chap.23 Manal Aru Becomes Weli Oya". sangam.org. Retrieved 2023-05-14.

Further reading