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1971 JVP insurrection

1971 JVP insurrection
Part of the Cold War

Attack on the Deniyaya police station
Date5 April – June 1971
Location
Result

Ceylonese government victory

  • Rebel leaders were captured and the remaining members surrendered
  • Ceylonese government re-established control of the entire island
  • Expulsion of North Korean diplomats
Territorial
changes
The JVP controlled Ceylon's Southern Province and Sabaragamuwa Province for several weeks
Belligerents

 Ceylon

Military intervention:

JVP
Supported by:
North Korea North Korea
Commanders and leaders
Dominion of Ceylon Sirima Bandaranaike
Dominion of Ceylon Sepala Attygalle
Dominion of Ceylon S.A. Dissanayake
Dominion of Ceylon D. V. Hunter
Dominion of Ceylon Paddy Mendis

Rohana Wijeweera
Wijesena Vidanage (Sanath)  
W.T.Karunnarathe
N. Jayasinghe (Loku Athula)
P. Kumarasiri  (POW)

Walter De Silva
Units involved
  • SSU
  •  Korean People's Army[1]
  • Strength
    7,000 Army
    1,900 Air Force
    2,000 Navy
    Soviet Air Forces: 60
    10,000–12,000 combatants
    80,000 followers (estimate)
    Casualties and losses

    Police: 37 killed; 195 wounded

    Armed Forces: 26 killed; 310 wounded; 1 Aircraft lost
    5,700 surrendered[2]
    North Korea Several arrested, multiple North Korean supply vessels captured by the Ceylon navy and Indian navy[3]
    Several leaders arrested[a]
    1,200 total killed[4]
    100 killed in run-up events in March[4]

    The 1971 Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) insurrection (also known as the 1971 Revolt) was the first of two unsuccessful armed revolts conducted by the communist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) against the socialist United Front Government of Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) under Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike. The revolt began on 5 April 1971 and lasted until June of that year. The insurgents held towns and rural areas for several weeks, until the regions were recaptured by the armed forces, following strong support from friendly nations that sent men and material.[5] Although this first attempt to seize power was quickly crushed by force, in 1987 the JVP launched a low-intensity insurgency in the island's southern, central and western regions that lasted several years.

    The insurrection formally began in 1971, but the first attacks took place in 1970. The JVP fought the right-wing United National Party (UNP) before launching an island-wide, militant opposition to the newly elected, pro-socialist United Front government. The government's socialist background drew the attention of many states which offered to support it. The Soviet Union sent 60 air-force troops;[6] India guarded the forts, stopping North Korean vessels and a Chinese freighter which raided the harbours. Although China provided diplomatic aid, it was accused of supporting the JVP; Chinese diplomats allegedly contacted North Korea, which supplied weapons and ammunition to the JVP.

    1. ^ "Revolution in retrospect". The Sunday Times. 1 April 2001. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
    2. ^ Kearney 1975.
    3. ^ Gunaratna 1990, p. 109.
    4. ^ a b "Ceylon/Sri Lanka (1948–Present)". University of Central Arkansas Department of Political Science. University of Central Arkansas. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
    5. ^ Halliday, Fred (September–October 1971). "The Ceylonese Insurrection". New Left Review. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
    6. ^ Iqbal 1972, p. 7: "In the past because of Ceylon's pro-West regimes, its relations to the Soviet Union had not been very close, but the victory of the left had raised Russian hopes."[verification needed]


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