The Valvettithurai Massacre

Remembering India’s crimes against Tamils

by People for Equality & Relief in Lanka, August 2, 2019

The information on this page was largely compiled from information put together by Nadarajah Anantharajah, the then-secretary of the Citizen Committee Valvettithurai and a survivor of the IPKF massacre. He was detained for two days and severely beaten by the IPKF. His meticulous documentation, including written affidavits by witnesses, provide details often missing from the public record on massacres of Tamils. The republication of his 1989 booklet on the 30th anniversary of the massacre, allows us to examine the atrocity.

The Indian army’s operations in Sri Lanka’s North-East between 1987 and 1990 were both a military nightmare and political disaster for India, turning an initially sympathetic Tamil population against the Indian Peacekeeping Forces (IPKF), due to heavy-handed tactics against civilians during its  failed attempt to demobilize the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The IPKF , numbering 80,000 at its peak, became infamous amongst the Tamil population – as its atrocities escalated, it earned the moniker “Indian People Killing Force.”

Thirty years ago, 64 Tamil civilians were killed by Indian forces in Valvettithurai, a town on the northern coast of the Jaffna peninsula famed for being the birthplace of LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. The massacre was termed “India’s My Lai” by The Sunday Telegraph.

“At the junction there were hundreds of IPKF soldiers. I saw there many cars smashed up. Most of the shops at the junction had been burnt down. I saw many dead bodies in front of the shops.” — Affidavit, Nadarajah Anantharaj, 41 yrs, August 1989.

In the months that led to the massacre, violence between IPKF troops and Tamils escalated. The IPKF’s arbitrary ransacking of homes and shops — and its assault of civilians after rounding them up — increased Tamils’ hostility. Several civilians had already lost their lives, both at the hands of the IPKF and of their Tamil militant partners. LTTE attacks and ambushes on the IPKF and Tamils aligned to other militant groups increased. On August 2, 1989, at around 11:15 am, the LTTE and the IPKF fought a pitched battle at the market square in the center of Valvettithurai, in which six IPKF soldiers were killed. In response, the IPKF went on a systematic killing spree.

Following the violence, detailed below, the IPKF imposed a curfew for two days, preventing medical personnel and other assistance from reaching Valvettithurai until August 4. Some of the injured had to wait two days for treatment.

The Indian government only said that civilians were killed in “cross-fire,” never acknowledging any of the atrocities its forces committed during the IPKF intervention. Although Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, three months later, praised the IPKF for its “outstanding discipline,” pressure grew for him to withdraw the IPKF from Sri Lanka — both from within India and from Sri Lanka.

“The IPKF were given strict instructions not to use tactics or weapons that could cause major casualties among the civilian population of Jaffna, who were hostages to the LTTE. The Indian Army have carried out these instructions with outstanding discipline and courage, accepting, in the process a high level of sacrifices for protecting the Tamil civilians.” – Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, Lok Sabha, 9 November 1987

“Now in Valvettithurai, the Indian army has enacted its My Lai,” – George Fernandez, former Indian defence secretary, 1989.

Location 1: 02.08.1989 approx 14:30

A number of civilians were seeking shelter at V. Subramaniam’s house after the clashes, around 400 metres away. When IPKF soldiers approached the house some time after the fighting had stopped, Mr. Subramaniam and others walked outside with their hands raised in the air. The IPKF opened fire, killing five of them. As the people inside the house ran for cover, the soldiers entered the residence and started shooting again, killing another four and injuring others.

  • V. Subramaniam – 50 yrs
  • I. Umarani – 26 yrs
  • A. Ellayaperumal – 70 yrs
  • R. Pushparani – 45 yrs
  • R. Javanaraj – 11 yrs
  • A. Sunderaswaran – 11 yrs
  • S. Ganeshalingam S – 35 yrs
  • Ganeshalingam Sashi – 18 months
  • Amirtham Umadevi – 26 yrs

Location 2: 02.08.1989 approx 15:30

The IPKF soldiers were burning homes as they were moving through the streets. The residents of Sivapura Road fled their homes and sought refuge on Theeruvil Road, including at the house of S. Sivaganeshan. At about 15:30, the soldiers entered his house and fired shots, causing the civilians to flee to the back of the house. The soldiers separated the eight men present from the women, elderly, and children and sat them on under a cow shed. They opened fire on the men, killing four and seriously injuring the remainder.

  • Arumugasamy Ramachandran – 41 yrs
  • Kathirgamathamby Sivanesarajah – 36 yrs
  • Ponnambalam Rajithakumar – 25 yrs
  • Nadarajah Raveendran – 32 yrs

Location 3: 02.08.1989 approx 14:15

IPKF soldiers entered the home of Kandasamy Mahendrarajah and set fire to his car and home. People hiding inside the house revealed themselves to the soldiers. The soldiers dragged them out of the house, pulling Mahendrarajah out by his hair. He was shot alongside his mother and another man. Only his mother survived.

  • Kandasamy Mahendrarajah – 49 yrs
  • Kandasamy Velummylum – 42 yrs

Location 4: 02.08.1989 approx 14:00

IPKF entered the home of Mr. Sivalingam and started ransacking his belongings and shot his brother and his nephew, while Sivalingam was detained earlier. The soldiers also burned his motorcycle, car, and house. Sivalingam was arrested on his return.

  • Rasamanickam Nadarajah – 62
  • Vinayagamoorthy Arulsothy – 25

Location 5: 02.08.1989

After the fighting stopped at the Valvettithurai marketplace, the IPKF soldiers set fire to shops and houses. Five civilians were shot and killed at random.

  • K. Sivapackiyam – 40 yrs
  • R. Rajaratnam – 35 yrs
  • K. Thangarajah – 60 yrs
  • B. Premraj – 22 yrs

03.08.1989

The next day at the same location, IPKF soldiers were harassing around 75 men and boys they had detained, by beating them and making them roll on the hot tar road. Six of the males were beaten violently. A soldier opened fire and killed all of them.

  • T. Ravichandran – 28 yrs
  • R. Mylevaganam – 55 yrs
  • S. Umasankar – 19 yrs
  • T. Nagathas – 28 yrs
  • S. Mahendrathas – 16 yrs

Location 6: 03.08.1989

Two teenagers were dragged out of a house and killed by being stabbed and shot.

  • A. Swarnadas – 16 yrs
  • K. Selvananthavel – 19 yrs

Location 7:02.08.1989

As soldiers moved from the Polikandy army camp to Valvettithurai Junction, they shot and killed five people.

  • V. Muraleetharan – 20 yrs
  • S. Rameshkumar – 18 yrs
  • P. Rasenthiram – 23 yrs
  • S. Sebamony – 35 yrs
  • P.V. Krishnawathani – 33 yrs

Location 8: 02.08.1989

A woman was shot dead by Indian soldiers in Valvetty

  • N. Nallamuthu – 70 yrs

Other locations of killings and assault:

In almost all other instances of killings, the victims were dragged out by the IPKF and shot dead. The soldiers also raped some girls and women.

At least 123 houses were burned down by the IPKF, often after the soldiers had emptied them of valuables. Another 45 shops and businesses were also destroyed. 176 fishing boats, boat motors and fishing nets were burned between August 2 and 4.

The Valvettithurai Massacre is only one of countless atrocities committed against the Tamil people. While the vast majority were perpetrated by Sri Lankan security forces, it is important to remember the atrocities committed by others, including the Indian Peacekeeping Forces. The IPKF occupation and India’s political manoeuvring fundamentally changed the relationship between India and the Tamil people on the island. India went from being seen as the saviour to being the enemy. The resistance to the IPKF presence escalated dramatically after the Valvettithurai Massacre. In 1990 the Indian army left the island, not having achieved any of their objectives and leaving vast areas of the Tamil homeland to the LTTE. A year later, the LTTE assassinated former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, cementing the gulf between Tamils and India.

To this day, many Tamils who lived through the Indian occupation remain traumatised by their experiences, particularly the arbitrary detentions and torture. No official inquiries into the Valvettithurai Massacre, or other incidents, have been conducted. No one has been held accountable for the crimes committed. The inhabitants of Valvettithurai continue to demand acknowledgment and justice for the massacre. India must lead by example and provide the answers demanded by the victims and survivors.

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