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Mandai massacre

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Date
  
8 June 1980 (UTC+5:30)

Attack type
  
Massacre

Perpetrators
  
Tripuri insurgents

Target
  
Bengali Hindus

Deaths
  
350-400

Location
  
Mandwi

Mandai massacre httpswwwtelegraphindiacom1130212images12re

Weapons
  
Guns, spears, swords, scythes, bows and arrows

Mandai massacre refers to the general massacre of the Bengali Hindus of Mandai village near Agartala in the Indian state of Tripura on 8 June 1980, by tribal insurgents. According to official figures 255 Hindus were massacred in Mandwi, while foreign presses, independent sources and eyewitnesses put the figure anywhere between 350 and 400. Many of the victims had their heads crushed and their limbs severed. The children were spiked through. Pregnant women had their stomach slit open. The Amrita Bazar Patrika described the Mandai massacre as My Lai massacre put into shade. According to Major R. Rajamani, the commander of the Indian army contingent that arrived on 9 June, the My Lai massacre was not even half as gruesome as in Mandai.

Contents

Background

Mandwi was an obscure village located about 30 km north east of Agartala. The name of the village was incorrectly spelled as Mandai in the land records. The village was inhabited both by the Bengali Hindus and the Tripuris.

Events

On the night of 6 June, local TUJS(Tripura Upajati Juba Samiti) and TNV leaders chalked out a blueprint of the massacre of the Bengali Hindus. From the night of 6 June, armed tribal insurgents began cordoning off the Bengali Hindu localities. From the morning of 7 June, news of arson, violence and murder began to spread. The Bengali Hindus who stayed deep in the tribal pockets felt intimidated and started to leave for safety. Thousands of Bengali Hindus took shelter near the National Highway 44. The BDO of Jirania, had opened a relief camp at Khayerpur School and started administering initial relief to the Bengali Hindu refugees. Shankar Narayan, the District Magistrate of West Tripura was intimated by that time and he asked BDO of Jirania to provide the refugees chira and gur.

From the afternoon of 7 June, the situation worsened. In the evening there were reports of large scale arson and looting in Jirania block. At 7:00 p.m. Sharma rushed to the District Magistrate office where he appraised Additional District Magistrate M. L. Dasgupta of the situation, who requisitioned two companies of the army. The army units however were given orders of flag march only. In the meantime Sharma received reports that the situation had turned grave in Champaknagar and the rioters were committing arson on the Bengali Hindu villages in the foothills of Baramura.

On 8 June, at 3:00 a.m. in the morning, Satyendra Chakraborty, the LAMPS manager of Mandai and Sachindra Saha, a CPI(M) leader reported at the B.D.O. office that more than 500 Bengali Hindus in Mandai have been cordoned off and the armed Tripuris are about to kill them. Many Bengali Hindus had taken shelter at the police outpost in Mandai, which remained unmanned.

At 6 A.M. in the morning, a contingent of Rajasthan Armed Constabulary and a platoon of Tripura Armed Police proceed towards Mandai from Jirania. On their way they found an entire village on flames in Purba Noabadi. After dousing the flames, they proceeded towards Mandai. By the time they reached Mandai all the houses and huts were reduced to ashes, except the LAMPS building. The entire place were full of blood as most of them were hacked to death. At the police outpost two Bengali Hindu women were killed by Jiban Debbarma. After two hours, the injured were sent to GB hospital in a truck.

According to UNI reports, the attackers inserted sharp weapons in the genitalia of the victim women.

Investigation

On 8 July 1980, the Ministry of Home Affairs set up the Dinesh Singh Committee to investigate into the Mandai massacre.

References

Mandai massacre Wikipedia