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Palliyagodella massacre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Palliyagodella massacre
Palliyagodella is located in Sri Lanka
Palliyagodella
Palliyagodella
Palliyagodella (Sri Lanka)
LocationPalliyagodella, North Central Province, Sri Lanka
Date15 October 1992
TargetMuslim civilians
Attack type
Armed massacre
Deaths166–285[1][2]
InjuredUnknown
PerpetratorsLiberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam

The Palliyagodella massacre was carried out by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) against the mostly Muslim population of the Palliyagodella village located on border region of the northern part of Sri Lanka that were controlled by the Tigers at the time. This was the largest massacre of Muslim civilians by the LTTE to date. Village eyewitnesses claim that some 285 men, women and children, around a third of the population, were killed by a 1,000 strong force of the Tamil Tigers;[1] however, the Sri Lankan government states that the LTTE massacred 166 to 171.[2][3] All but 40 of the victims of the Palliyathidal massacre were Muslim; the rest were Sinhalese.[1]

Before the massacre, there were growing tension between the LTTE and the Muslim community. The Palliyagodella villagers had asked the Sri Lankan military for protection from LTTE extortion. The Sri Lankan forces issued shotguns to the Muslim villagers but these were inadequate to beat off LTTE attacks. The LTTE threw grenades into mosques killing around 40 people and slaughtered another more with machetes and guns. Forty-five children were among the victims as were pregnant women and their unborn babies. The LTTE called off the massacre at 8 o'clock when army helicopters arrived.[1] Female LTTE cadres and child soldiers were also involved in this attack.[4]

Pitchathambi Ishabdeen, a local shopkeeper who survived the massacre recounted the massacre as follows:[1]

"We saw the Tamil Tigers armed with guns and knives (machetes). I heard them say 'we will kill everyone and then celebrate in your mosque'... I was lying among six bodies. Lying in their blood."

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e "Sri Lanka's forgotten massacre". BBC News. 3 August 2009. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  2. ^ a b Letter sent by the Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the Centre for Human Rights, Government of Sri Lanka, 9 August 1994
  3. ^ SOUTH ASIA INTELLIGENCE REVIEW: Weekly Assessments & Briefings Volume 5, No. 12, October 2, 2006
  4. ^ "Massacres in the Polonnaruwa District". Jaffna, Sri Lanka: University Teachers for Human Rights. Retrieved 5 July 2020.

Further reading

This page was last edited on 7 January 2024, at 16:52
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