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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bindunuwewa Massacre or Bindunuwewa Prison Massacre took place on 24 October 2000, at a detention centre of Bindunuwewa, Sri Lanka, resulting in the deaths of 26 minority Tamil political prisoners by a mob of Sinhalese.[1]
The low-security detention centre was established to house former LTTE cadres. Of the 26 killed, two were under the age of 21 and the rest were between 21 and 30.
On 24 October 2000, a mob of a few hundred villagers armed with knives, rods and torches stormed the detention centre. The Sri Lankan Army detachment that was posted there had been withdrawn the previous day, for unknown reasons.[1]
Once the massacre started, the posted police personnel refused to intervene to stop it.[1]
Initially, the government responded by saying that the detainees had rioted and that the massacre was an outcome of an attempt to control the rioting. Then it was claimed that the police were unable to protect the detainees in the face of superior mob force. Eventually, the government charged a few police officers with a crime. Most were initially convicted of murder, only to be released by the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in 2005.[2]
A number of theories have been postulated to explain the massacre:
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