INDIAN ARMY'S
WAR CRIMES - 1987
[see also Rajiv Gandhi's War
Crimes]
"The civilian population
as such, as well as individual civilians
shall not be object of attack...
Indiscriminate attacks are prohibited." -
Article 50(4), 1977 Protocol to the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949
"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 the Lok Sabha, 9 November
1987)
"The spokeswoman of the Indian High
Commission in Colombo said: 'The Indian peacekeeping
force is fighting with one hand tied
behind its back. It is carrying out
this operation under severe constraints'.
The constraints according to India are
based on the army's reluctance to use its
full fire power so as to spare civilian
casualties. Thus the advancing troops
have no air cover, and are only
occasionally using heavy weapons to
reduce Tiger defences". (Guardian 19
October 1987)
"Over a period of about 20 days
(commencing 9 October 1987) , the Indian
Army's direct attack on LTTE positions, and
defence from LTTE attacks, was coupled with
the Indian Army's attack and storming of
still unevacuated Jaffna - and many
villages and settlements throughout the
Peninsula - with widespread (insofar as
territory), indiscriminate (insofar as
targetting) and sustained (insofar as
intensity) artillery shelling. Only less
widespread, sustained and indiscriminate,
there was air-strafing from helicopter as
well. It was not "cross-fire" that
incidentally killed thousands of civilians.
The majority were killed
unavoidably inside their houses and huts
under shelling, or were shot at random by
the roads and on the streets. A
large number of people were "only" wounded
- yet, many of them died in the absence of
medical care, especially under the 24-hour
curfew over a period of about one month, to
mid-November.
... The situation became
grotesquely hopeless for many people in
some areas : while the curfew was being
rigorously enforced - that is, with an
order in place to shoot-to-kill pedestrians
-the inhabitants were simultaneously
ordered out of their houses into the
outskirt concentrations an absurd
operational overlapping inevitably leaving
a good number dead.
.... The population was not
adequately warned nor given time for
preparations, and the places to which they
were referred (three improvised "camps"
took the bulk of the people, one of them a
big Hindu temple crammed with an estimated
no less than 40000) had not been prepared
with the bare minimum hygiene facilities as
foreseen by the Law of War, not to mention
drinking-water, food, medicine and
lighting. ... the central fact is that the
Indian Army attacked Jaffna, and many other
populated places throughout the Peninsula,
shelling and firing massively and
indiscriminately rather than at the LTTE
selectively.
...In the North, the military
result has been that the LTTE guerrilla has
been dislodged - as distinct from destroyed
or disarmed - from their main position,
Jaffna town. Other consequences have
included : material ruin for much of the
population all over the Province; physical
and moral suffering for no less than 1
million people, including thousands of
civilian casualties counting both killed
and wounded; real or lasting peace for none
among the Tamils so far.
... For military reasons, besides
firing and shelling, there has. been
considerable burning of houses and huts -
massively in some rural localities - by the
Indian infantry : so as to deny the Tamil
guerrillas fighting positions and
hiding-places, especially on the sides of
roads and other routes feasible for army
convoys.
....On top of everything else
there has been the "unmilitary" or
"unsoldiery" side of events :- wanton
killings out of rage, reprisals against
non-combatants, looting of homes of middle
and wealthier classes, soldier's assault of
women, a murderous attack on the main
hospital victimising both patients and
medical personnel, and killing of a number
of unarmed and disarmed guerrilla suspects
without trial according to the Law of
War." Eduardo
Marino, Report to International Alert,
December 1987
"...The exemplary Indian Army
fought with one hand tied behind its back
and the result was that 500,000 Tamils
became refugees in their own homelands. The
exemplary Indian Army was sparing in its
use of heavy artillery, but sustained
artillery shelling destroyed more than
50,000 homes in the Jaffna Peninsula. And
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi would have his
members of Parliament believe that the
Indian Army acted with 'outstanding
discipline and courage' accepting
sacrifices 'for protecting Tamil
civilians'. (Indo Sri Lanka
Accord and the Tamil National Struggle,
Nadesan Satyendra, 1988)
"The Indians have insisted throughout
the 11 day offensive that they have used
little artillery and no air cover to
minimise civilian casualties. That claim
was sagging yesterday under a heavy, and
remarkably uniform, weight of evidence from
refugees and the few scraps of independent
confirmation coming out of the Jaffna
peninsula.
The infantry advance, the student said, was
preceded by a systematic artillery barrage.
He had heard heavy guns firing daily, and
had seen two women killed by the washing
well in the Hindu Ladies College, one of
the main refugee camps where thousands have
sought shelter from the fighting. 'The
people have no food but they are not
worried about that. Even if they are
starving, they worry only about security.
They have no cover from the shelling' he
said.
He also flatly denied the Indian claim that
there had been no air strikes. He had
seen helicopters and fixed wing aircraft of
the Sri Lankan air force attacking with
bombs and machine guns. The Sri
Lankans, indeed, have more or less openly
admitted that their aircraft were used last
week, but they have insisted that the
operations were only on the direct request
of the Indians.." - Derek
Brown, Guardian, 21 October 1987
"A senior Sri Lankan security source
admitted last night what had previously
only been rumoured - that despite Indian
protestations about their self denial of
air cover during operations, on one
occasion, air cover had been provided by
the Sri Lankans at the Indians' urgent
request.
It happened when a group of commandos had
been air dropped into an unsecured landing
ground north of Jaffna and suffered heavy
casualties. The Indians needed instant
help, and the Sri Lankans brought up
helicopters to give covering machine gun
fire to an armoured rescue. A recording
of radio messages during these operations
smuggled out of the north and circulating
in the capital makes it clear that the
Indians and Sri Lankans were working close
together" - Michael
Hamlyn, London Times, 21 October
1987
"India forbids journalists from entering
the combat zone, and no independent
confirmation of the situation in Jaffna was
available... Reports from officials and
refugees said two thirds of the city's
150,000 residents had fled or sought refuge
in schools, Hindu temples and public
buildings.." - International
Herald Tribune, 21 October 1987
"The (Indian) spokeswoman said that
Indian forces had not entered nor touched
the Jaffna Hospital. But a report from a
local correspondent, who recently returned
from the Jaffna peninsula, said it was hit
at least seven times earlier this week"
- Bruce Palling, Independent,
22 October 1987
"... (in Mannar) we heard the
familiar stories from Tamil refugees from
Jaffna. Dr. B.B. Easwaraj, 27, who had fled
the town two days earlier, said that large
sections of Jaffna's main hospital had been
destroyed by shelling. Dozens of bodies of
men, women and children lay rotting in the
mortuary.
Phillip Constantine,26, another
refugee, said that one Tamil family had
been executed by the Indians by having a
tank run over them. Mannar like many areas
in the north and east of Sri Lanka, has
been devastated by almost a decade of
fighting between the Tigers and the Sri
Lankan army and now, the Indians. Three
months ago, when the Indians arrived to act
as peace keepers, the local Tamils greeted
the Indians as saviours. But as one Sri
Lankan police officer told me, they now
regard them with the same contempt as they
once did the Sri Lankan police and army.."
- Simon Freeman, Sunday Times, 25
October 1987
"...Jaffna is a broken and silent place
of refugees clustered in churches and
temples among empty roads. The area behind
the Fort bears all the signs of two savage
campaigns, first by the Sri Lankan army and
now by the Indians. It is the Tigers who
seem to have won the battle for hearts and
minds... though they wanted peace more than
anything, the Tigers were 'their' boys and
the Indians were outsiders...
Last Thursday, he (a refugee) said that he
had been ordered from his nearby house by
Sikh soldiers, who were apparently clearing
the area before an offensive. One of the
soldiers struck him and when his daughter
protested, she too was beaten.
Another old man told how his daughter had
been killed when she returned to the family
home to fetch her jewellery...a middle aged
woman had half a leg missing - blown off by
an Indian shell. A 14 year old girl
clutched a stomach wound. A young woman
with a blood soaked plaster on her leg said
she had been unconscious when Indian
soldiers 'liberated' the hospital last
week. She was certain that the Tigers had
not been in occupation at the time, as the
Indians claimed..." -
Derek Brown, Guardian, 27 October
1987
"Tens of thousands of refugees are
living in appalling conditions in makeshift
camps in Jaffna, according to a senior Sri
Lanka Red Cross official, despite claims by
the government of President Junius
Jayawardene and the Indian Army that the
town is returning to normal...'it is a
ghost town. The streets are deserted.
Thousands of people are living in temples
because they are afraid to go back to their
homes. They have no electricity. They need
everything - clothes, medicine, even
candles and matches. Many buildings have
been destroyed. I saw three or four dead
bodies on the streets'...
20,000 refugees share three or four
toilets... It is a similar story in the
Tamil eastern coastal provinces... hundreds
of buildings in Trincomalee have been
destroyed... the countryside is just as
ravaged as the towns. He (the Red Cross
Official) said that he was describing what
he had seen as accurately as possible in
the hope that international publicity would
help the victims.." -
Sunday Times, 8 November 1987
"But on the evidence last week in
Trincomalee, many Tamils still view the
Tigers as their only defence against
Sinhalese domination. Many young Tamils
regard the Tigers stand in Jaffna as
heroic, even though it cost so many
innocent lives. The Indian and Sri Lankan
strategy of arming Tamil groups opposed to
the Tigers is also going badly wrong. Last
week the Peoples Liberation Organisation of
Tamil Eelam, PLOTE, was warned about using
weapons, supplied to kill Tigers, to rob
innocent civilians" - Simon Freeman,
Sunday Times - 8 November 1987
"Our first encounter with these young
men came shortly before we reached a Sri
Lankan army camp... They said they were
from PLOTE, the People's Liberation
Organisation of Tamil Eelam, part of a
Tamil coalition bitterly opposed the
Tigers. Plot has been armed by the Sri
Lankan authorities, who believe,
mistakenly, that the organisation and its
allies will be useful supporters in the
fight against the Tigers.
The parallels with South Lebanon are
inescapable. There the Israelis hoped that
by arming Christians they would, somehow,
help defeat the Shi'ites. Here the
Sinhalese majority seem to think that
fringe Tamil groups can be manipulated in
the fight against the Tigers..." - Simon
Freeman, Sunday Times, 25 October
1987
"At least 43 people (Tamils) are
known to have 'disappeared' following
arrest by the IPKF... The majority of the
'disappearances for which the IPKF were
reportedly responsible occurred in the
Jaffna District in October and November
1987, the period of the main IPKF offensive
on Jaffna town" - Amnesty International
Sri Lanka Briefing, 19 September
1990
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