Eelam War I
Eelam War I is the name given to the initial phase of the armed conflict between the government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE.
Prelude
Tensions between the government and Tamil militant groups had been brewing since the 1970s. The 1971 JVP insurrection lead to the government to conduct an extensive counter insurgency to subdue a Marxist youth insurgency leading to the imprisonment of the many that were captured though the Criminal Justice Commission. In the early 1970's several Tamil youth militant groups such as Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization, Tamil Manavar Peravai, Tamil New Tigers and Eelam Revolutionary Organisation of Students. Alfred Duraiappah, was Mayor of Jaffna and chief organiser in Jaffna District of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party the ruling parting in Colombo became the target of these militants. A first attempt on his lift was made in 1971 in a bomb attack and in the second attempt on 27 July 1975 he was shot dead. The police team investigating murder was massacred in Murunkan, by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam which claimed responsibility for massacre and the assassination in late April. 1979 saw killings of Tamil policemen in Jaffna by militants and the establishment of the Tamil Coordinating Committee in London to further the cause of Tamil Elam with the aid of the Tamil Diaspora, which gained the support of Gandi family and the declaration of the Tamil Elam day on 22 May 1979 in Massachusetts and gained recognition in the United States. The British Government responding to request by the Sri Lankan President sent a MI5 Director John Percival Morton to advice the Sri Lankan Government and assisted in the formation of the Sri Lanka Commando Regiment with training from the Special Air Service. New rebel groups began forming such as Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front and Eelam Revolutionary Organisation of Students began arming and military training in 1980. The Sri Lankan government responded with the Prevention of Terrorism Act and a counter insurgency operation in Jaffna to establish normalcy by hunting down the militants, who fled to India, bringing a degree of clam. In 1980 the People's Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam was formed following a falling out within the LTTE leadership. Fighting restarted following the PLOTE attack on the Annaicoddia police station in July 1981, killing a police officer, which became the first instance of an attack on a police station leading to rioting in Rathanapura. In October the LTTE in the first time targeting the army, killed two soldiers in Jaffna. Killing continued along with bank robberies, while fighting between PLOTE and LTTE broke out, including a shootout in the Pondy Bazaar Madras in May 1982, result in the imprisonment of Prabakaran. 1982 saw more attacks and bank robberies, use of landmines became common. Chavakachcheri police station came under attack and in February 1983 Point Pedro OIC was killed. May 1983, local government elections was election boycotts, candidate killings, and attacks on polling stations.Elam war 1 starts
Full-scale war did not break out until an attack by the LTTE on a Sri Lanka Army patrol in Jaffna, in the north of the country, on 23 July 1983, which killed 13 soldiers. The attack, and the subsequent riots in the south, are generally considered the start of the conflict.Black July
On 24 July 1983, the day the 13 servicemen killed in an LTTE ambush were to be buried, some Sinhalese civilians who had gathered at the cemetery, angered by news of the ambush, which was magnified by wild rumor, formed mobs and started killing, raping, and assaulting Tamils while looting and burning their properties in retribution for what happened. Sinhalese civilians were equipped with voter registration lists, burning and attacking only Tamil residences and business, while army and government officials stood by. Even Sinhalese civilians who harbored Tamil families in their households were set upon by the mobs.Militants take over
In August 1983, Sixth Amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka was passed requiring all members to required them to swear an oath unconditionally renouncing support for a separate state. Leader of the opposition A. Amirthalingam and other TULF members boycotted Parliament, losing their seats and fleeing Madras. creating a power vacuum in the island which was soon filled by young militants, who after a lull resumed their ambush attacks and bank robberies in 1984. 2 August Tamil Eelam Army carried out an bomb blast the Meenambakkam Air Port in Madras killing 33 people. On 19 November 1984, the northern commander, Colonel Ariyasinghe Ariyapperuma was killed along with eight soldiers when his jeep was hit by a landmine explosion in an ambush set for him by the LTTE. The next day TELO launched an attack on the Chavakachcheri Police Station killing all its staff and razing the buildings to the ground. Increased Landmine attacks on army units resulted in the army purchasing South African Buffels.Kent and Dollar Farm massacres
In November 1984, Sinhalese convicts were settled in the Kent and Dollar farms after the Tamil civilians living there were evicted by the Sri Lankan Army. The settlement of prisoners was used to further harass Tamils into leaving the area. The Sinhala settlers confirmed that young Tamil women were abducted, brought there and gang-raped, first by the forces, next by prison guards and finally by prisoners.Following this settlement, the LTTE committed their first massacre of Sinhalese civilians. The massacres took place on November 30, 1984, in two tiny farming villages in the district of Mullaitivu in north-eastern Sri Lanka.