A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Black July: The Testimony Of Lionel Bopage, Then General Secretary Of The JVP
Sri Lanka’s Black July – Part 6 -
In
the morning of 25th July he was near Angoda at their press, proof
reading their journal. A crowd coming from Colombo advised people to
close up and go home.Bopage drove
home to Kelaniya, passing through Colombo. In Kelaniya cars were being
stopped on the road opposite the Tyre Corporation and vehicles carrying
Tamils were being burnt with their occupants. (Sources from Kelaniya
University told us that one Omar, a well-known thug of Cyril Mathew’s,
was responsible for killing a Tamil doctor and burning him along with
his vehicle.) The thugs wanted to remove some petrol from his car.
Someone recognised him and waved him off. He then got into the road to
go to his home in Mawarandiya. A Ceylon Transport Board breakdown truck
came towards him with 25 to 30 passengers wielding clubs and long
knives.
About five of them got down and asked if he were a Tamil. He got down
and shouted, “Are you fellows mad?” They went off. This and his
experience over the next few days and testimony from JVP officers
elsewhere convinced him that the State was the main party to the
violence. Following the ban on the JVP he was detained and taken to the
CID Building. The reasons for the arrest of JVP-office bearers, Bopage
said, was ‘complicated.’ The house of a Tamil DIG, Vamadevan, was burnt
during the riots and he had accused the JVP of burning his house.
Vamadevan had earlier made a report that the JVP was re-arming, and this
had been referred to on JVP platforms. Bopage felt that this was only a
pretext. The real target he believed was the election petition against
the 1982 Referendum filed by Wijeweera, which had a strong chance of
succeeding, since these same charges were later confirmed in the
Election Commissioner’s report. Read More
Part four - Sri Lanka’s Black July: The Cover Up
Part five - 30th July 1983: The Second Naxalite Plot