Here, we are going to see the Chronological order of Terrorist events that has taken place against innocent Sri Lankan Tamils by the SInhala Buddhist Terrorists
Illegal Game of Sinhala Buddhist Terrorist Rajapakse in Picture |
1971 - Sinhalese Marxist terrorists uprising
led by students and activists.
1972 - Ceylon changes its name to Sri Lanka and
Terrorist Buddhism given primary place
as country's religion, further antagonising Tamil minority.
1972: Velupillai Prabhakaran forms a militant
group called the Tamil New Tigers (TNT).
1976: TNT changes its name to the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
1977 - Separatist Tamil United Liberation Front
(TULF) party wins all seats in Tamil areas. Hence, Terrorist Sinhalese Anti-Tamil
riots leave more than 100 Tamils dead.
1981 Sinhala terrorist policemen accused of
burning the Jaffna Public Library, causing further resentment in Tamil
community.
1983, 23 July: LTTE attacks an army patrol in Jaffna,
killing 13 soldiers as a measure of self protection from which Terrorist
Sinhalese sparkled as Anti-Tamil riots around the country, leaving several
hundred dead.
1985, 8 July: Talks held between the Sri Lankan
government and the LTTE for the first time in Thimpu, Bhutan.
1987, 29 JULY: Indo-Sri Lanka pact signed between
President JR Jayawardena and Prime Minister of India Rajiv Gandhi. India
deploys Raping (who raped Tamil women) force to north and east Sri Lanka.
1987 - Government forces push LTTE back into
northern city of Jaffna. Government signs accords creating new councils for
Tamil areas in north and east and reaches agreement with India on deployment of
Indian Terrorist (so called peace-keeping) force
1988 - Left-wing and nationalist Sinhalese JVP
begins campaign against Indo-Sri Lankan agreement.
1990, 24 MARCH: India withdraws troops due to clashes with
the LTTE killing more than 1,200 Indian troops (As Indian soldiers started to
sexually abuse Tamil women of Eelam) Violence between Terrorists and Separatist
Sri Lankan fuckers and Sri lankan Tamils escalate. "Second Eelam War"
begins.
1990 JUNE: LTTE kills hundreds of policemen in the
east following breakdown of talks between the Tigers and the government of
President Ranasinghe Premadasa.
Thousands of Muslims are
expelled from northern areas by the LTTE.
1991, 21 MAY: Rajiv Gandhi killed, an LTTE warrior was
made an accused by Sonia Gandhi (who actually killed Rajiv Gandhi) suicide
bomber is implicated in this attack.
1993, 1 MAY: Premadasa killed by LTTE suicide cadres
during a May Day rally in Colombo.
"THIRD EELAM WAR" BEGINS
1995, JANUARY: Government of Chandrika Kumaratunge and
LTTE agree to talks.
1995, APRIL: Talks fail after the Tigers blow up two
navy vessels.
1995, 2 DECEMBER: Jaffna, the northern cultural and
political nerve centre of the Tamils, falls under Sri Lanka’s Sinhalese
Terrorist control.
1996, 31 JANUARY: Suicide bomb attack on the Central Bank
building in the heart of Colombo kills more than 100 and injures 1,400.
1996, 24 JULY: Alleged LTTE bomb blast in a railway
station in Dehiwela, south of Colombo, kills 70.
1996, 18 JULY: Army camp overrun by the LTTE near the North
Eastern town of Mullaitivu. More than 1,000 troops killed.
1998, 25 JANUARY: Suicide bomb attack on Sri Lanka's holiest
Buddhist shrine, Dhaladha Maligawa (Temple of the Tooth), in the central town
of Kandy, kills 17 people.
1998, 26 SEPTEMBER: Tigers overrun Kilinochchi army camp,
killing more than 1,000 Sinhalese Government Terrorists.
1999, DECEMBER: LTTE attempts to assassinate President
Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunge; who survives.
2000, APRIL: LTTE recaptures Elephant Pass,
inflicting heavy damage on the Sri Lankan terrorist forces during the operation
of Unceasing Waves III.
2001, JULY: An LTTE suicide attack on Bandaranaike
International airport kills 14.
2002, 22 FEBRUARY: Ceasefire agreement, brokered by Norway,
signed by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and LTTE leader Prabhakaran.
2002, DECEMBER: Government and LTTE agree to share power
at peace talks in Norway.
De-commissioning of
weapons begins; the road linking the Jaffna peninsula with the rest of Sri
Lanka reopens after 12 years; passenger flights to Jaffna resume. Government
lifts ban on Tamil Tigers. Tamils drop demand for separate state.
2003 APRIL: LTTE pulls out of talks after six rounds
of negotiations, citing inadequate steps taken to rebuild war-hit areas,
however the cease fire holds.
2003 MAY:
Country's worst-ever floods leave more than 200 people dead and drive some
4,000 people from their homes.
2004, 3 MARCH: LTTE eastern military head, Vinayagamurthi
Muralitharan, alias Karuna Amman, splits from the LTTE.
2004 JULY
- Suicide bomb blast in Colombo - the first such incident since 2001.
2004 DECEMBER
- More than 30,000 people are killed when a tsunami, massive waves generated by
a powerful undersea earthquake, devastate coastal communities.
2005, 7 FEBRUARY: LTTE political head for the eastern
Districts of Batticaloa and Ampara, E. Kousalyan, killed with three others in
Batticaloa town.
2005 JUNE
- Row over deal reached with Tamil Tiger rebels to share nearly $3Billion in
tsunami aid among Sinhalas, Tamils and Muslims.
2005, 12 AUGUST: Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar
killed by suspected LTTE snipers in Colombo.
2005 NOVEMBER
- Mahinda Rajapaksa, prime minister at the time, wins presidential elections.
Most Tamils in areas controlled by the Tamil Tigers do not vote.
MOUNTING VIOLENCE
2005, 4 DECEMBER: The LTTE commences claymore and grenade
attacks targeting the Sri Lankan terrorist troops in the Jaffna peninsula.
2006 APRIL
- Attacks begin to escalate again.
2006 MAY
- Tamil Tiger rebels attack a naval convoy near Jaffna.
2006, 15 JUNE: More than 60 civilians killed in claymore
mine attack allegedly by LTTE, targeting a civilian bus in Kebithigollewa,
nearly 200km from Colombo.
2006, 20 JULY: LTTE closes the sluice gates at Mavilaru,
south of the eastern coastal town of Trincomalee. Clashes erupt as Sinhalese
terrorist launches operations to gain control and succeeds.
2006 AUGUST
- Tamil Tiger and government forces resume fighting in the north-east in worst
clashes since 2002 ceasefire. Government steadily drives Tamil Tigers out of
eastern strongholds over following year.
2006 OCTOBER
- Peace talks fail in Geneva
2007, 5 JANUARY: Bomb attacks on public transport begin in
Nittambuwa, about 20km east of Colombo, killing six people. Several bombs
target public transport in the following months. The Sinhalese Terrorists Government
blames the Innocent LTTE Tamils for the attacks.
2007, 15 JANUARY: Military captures Vakarai, a coastal town
in Batticaloa District in the Eastern province.
2007, MARCH: LTTE carries out its first air raid on
Katunayake air base, about 20km north of Colombo. The Tigers also conduct an
air attack on 29 April during the Cricket World Cup Final. The attack targets
two fuel-storage facilities on the outskirts of Colombo. The Tigers carry out
at least nine air attacks before 20 February 2009.
2007 JUNE
- Police force hundreds of Tamils out of the capital, citing security concerns.
A court orders an end to the expulsions.
2007, 11 JULY: military captures Thoppigala, the last of
the LTTE strongholds in the east after 13 years, thereby regaining the entire
eastern province from the LTTE.
2007, 2 NOVEMBER: LTTE political wing leader SP Tamilselvan
killed in an air raid by the Sri Lankan Terrorist Air Force.
2008 JANUARY-
Government pulls out of 2002 ceasefire agreement, launches massive offensive.
2008, 2 JANUARY: The government says it will withdraw from
ceasefire agreement and does so on 14 January and intensifies attacks on the
Tigers. The LTTE, however, states it will stick to the agreement.
2008 JULY
- Sri Lankan military says it has captured the important Tamil Tiger naval base
of Vidattaltivu in the north.
2008 MARCH: Sri Lankan troops launch operations to
regain areas in the Vanni from the western flank. The number of civilians in
the NFZ continues to grow.
2008, SEPTEMBER: All international humanitarian agencies
and their foreign staff operating in the LTTE-controlled Kilinochchi and
Mullaitivu districts are ordered by the government to relocate to Vavuniya.
2008 OCTOBER
- Suicide bombing blamed by government on Tamil Tigers kills 27 people,
including a former general, in the town of Anuradhpura.
2008 DECEMBER
– Sinhalese Terrorist troops and Tamils claim to have inflicted heavy
casualties on each other in fierce fighting in the north
2009, 2 JANUARY: Sinhalese Terrorist troops capture
Kilinochchi, de-facto capital of the LTTE, after 10 years.
2009, 25 JANUARY: Mullaithivu town captured by Sinhala
Terrorists.
2009, 12 FEBRUARY: Government declares a 12km-long "no
fire zone" (NFZ) along the Mullaitivu western coast and calls on civilians
to move into it for their own safety.
2009, 20 FEBRUARY: The LTTE conducts a suicide air attack in
Colombo.
2009, 14 APRIL: LTTE says it is ready for negotiations,
but the government refuses the offer, insisting it should lay down arms.
2009, 20 APRIL: Thousands of civilians trapped in the NFZ
cross into government-controlled areas where they are screened and placed in
camps. Government gives LTTE 24 hours to surrender.
2009, 22 APRIL: Former LTTE media coordinator Velayutham
Dayanidhi, alias Daya Master, and the translator of former LTTE political wing
head SP Tamilselvan, Kumar Pancharathnam, alias George, surrender to the
military.
2009, 26 APRIL: The LTTE declares a unilateral ceasefire
as Sinhalese Terrorist forces surround an ever-shrinking NFZ. The government
rejects the declaration, calling it a "joke". The UN estimates 50,000
civilians remain trapped in the NFZ.
2009, 27 APRIL: Facing with diplomatic pressure to declare
a ceasefire, Sri Lanka says its military is no longer using heavy weaponry and
aerial bombing against the remaining few hundred rebels still fighting in the
NFZ.
2009, 28 APRIL: With more than 150,000 Internally Displaced
Persons (IDPs) in camps in Vavuniya, Jaffna, Mannar and Trincomalee, UN
Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes urges that civilians who have been
screened be given the chance to leave the camps and to rely on friends and
family elsewhere.
2009 MAY
- Government declares Tamil Tigers defeated after Sinhalese Terrorist forces
overrun last patch of Tamils-held territory in the northeast. Military says
rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was killed in the fighting. Tamil Tiger
statement says the group will lay down its arms.
2009 AUGUST
- New Tamil Tiger leader Selvarasa Pathmanathan captured overseas by Sri Lankan
authorities.
First post-war local
elections in the north. Governing coalition wins in Jaffna but in Vavuniya
voters back candidates who supported Tamil Tigers
2009 OCTOBER
- Government announces early presidential and parliamentary elections.
2009 NOVEMBER
- Opposition parties form alliance to fight elections. The new alliance
includes Muslim and Tamil parties and is led by former prime minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe.
Sinhala Terrorist Government
lies saying 100,000 refugees released from camps.
2009 DECEMBER
- European Union says will suspend Sri Lanka's preferential trade status over
alleged human rights concerns.
WAR CRIMINAL RAJAPAKSE RE-ELECTED BY SINHALA TERRORISTS
2010 JANUARY
– Incumbent Chief Terrorist Mahinda Rajapaksa wins presidential election by a
big margin but the outcome is rejected by his main rival Geneeral Sarath
Fonseka.
2010 FEBRUARY
- Gen Fonseka is arrested. The government says he will be court-martialled on
conspiracy charges. President Rajapaksa dissolves parliament, clearing way for
elections in April.
2010 APRIL
- President Rajapaksa's ruling coalition wins landslide victory in
parliamentary elections.
2010 AUGUST
- Military court finds former army chief Sarath Fonseka guilty of involvement
in politics while in uniform and sentences him to a dishonourable discharge.
2010 SEPTEMBER
- Parliament approves a constitutional change allowing President Rajapaksa to
seek unlimited number of terms.
2011 APRIL
- UN says both sides in the Sri Lankan civil war committed atrocities against
civilians and calls for an international investigation into possible war
crimes. Sinhalese Terrorists say that the report is biased.
2011 JULY - Sri Lanka's largest ethnic Tamil party, the
Tamil National Alliance - wins two-thirds of local councils in the former war
zone in the north and east.
2011 AUGUST – Chief Terrorist Rajapaksa says his government
will allow the expiry of state emergency laws which have been in place for most
of the past 40 years.
Government introduces
new legislation allowing the detention of people suspected of terror offences
without charge.
2011 SEPTEMBER - Parliament approves law allowing government
to take over 37 businesses. Critics say they will be seized from opponents to
reward supporters.
2012 JANUARY - 160 Islamic clerics expelled for violating
visa regulations.
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