Riots and pogroms in Sri Lanka

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Following is a List of riots and pogroms in Sri Lanka.

Contents

The first reported organized riots in Sri Lanka were against the minority Sri Lankan Muslims in 1915.[1][1][2][3]7[4][5]

1958 riots popularly known as the 58 riots was a watershed event in the race relationship of the various ethnic communities of Sri Lanka.

There were riots, mostly targeting the minority Sri Lankan Tamil people, that happened when the United National Party came to power in 1977. [2]

This riot involved the destruction of the Jaffna Public Library, with the loss of over 100,000 books, artifacts and palm writings. Many irreplaceable historical documents and artifacts of civilization in Sri Lanka were lost forever. Some police and army members were accused of collusion in the riots.[3]

Main article: Black July
Tamil youth who attacked by the Sinhalese mobs, stripped naked on Colombo, 23 July 1983
Tamil youth who attacked by the Sinhalese mobs, stripped naked on Colombo, 23 July 1983

Better known as Black July. At least 1,000 Tamil civilians killed and many more made homeless and as refugees and number of places of business destroyed. [4]

Also known as Mawanella riots, shops and property belonging to the Muslim minority were targeted and destroyed.[5]

In mid 2006, a bomb blast killed 16 people, prompting a Sinhalese mob to torch Tamil-owned shops and to hunt down Tamil civilians. According to the main hospital, the blast killed 16 people, eight Tamils, five Sinhalese, two Muslims and a person who could not be identified. The reprisal attacks claimed another five: four Tamils and one Sinhalese, who were burned, stabbed and shot to death. Whether the riots were spontaneous or planned is impossible to know, although the police and the army, deployed in full force around the market, did not manage to stop them. Rohan Abeywardana, the deputy inspector general of police in charge of Trincomalee, said his forces were overpowered. Those arrested were released the next morning. [6][7]

On 17 Oct 2006 a number of Tamil owned shops were damaged and destroyed in mob violence against Tamil merchants in the port city of Galle following an attack on a Naval base by the LTTE rebel group. No reported casualties. [8][9]

  • ^ Vittachi, Tarzie (1958). Emergency '58: The Story of the Ceylon Race Riots. Andre Deutsch. OCLC 2054641. 
  • ^ Seneratne, Jagath P. (1998). Political Violence in Sri Lanka, 1977-1990: Riots, Insurrections, Counter-Insurgencies, Foreign Intervention. VU University Press. ISBN 90-5383-524-5. 
  • ^  Kearney, R.N.: The 1915 riots in Ceylon – a symposium; Introduction. Journal of Asian Studies, Feb.1970, vol.29, no.2, pp.219-222.
  • ^ Jayewardena, K.: Economic and Political Factors in the 1915 riots. Journal of Asian Studies, Feb.1970, vol.29, no.2, pp.223-233.
  • ^ Blackton, C.S.: The action phase of the 1915 riots. Journal of Asian Studies, Feb.1970, vol.29, no.2, pp.235-254.
  • ^ Rutnam, J.T.: The Rev.A.G.Fraser and the riots of 1915. Ceylon Journal of Historical and Social Studies, July-December 1971, vol.1, no.2 (new series), pp.151-196.
  • ^ Vythilingam, M.: The Life of Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan, vol.2 (1910-1930), 1977, chapters 10 (Riots-1915, pp.229-250), 11 (Riots-Speeches, pp.251-320) and 12 (Ramanathan’s Mission to England – His Return, pp.321-330).

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