By 1946, 33% of clerical jobs in Ceylon were held by Sri Lankan Tamils, although they were 11% of the country's population. This was partly due to the availability of Western-style education provided by the
Protestant American Ceylon Mission,
Hindu revivalists, and local Catholic missions in the Tamil-dominated
Jaffna peninsula. After gaining independence from Britain in 1948, Sinhalese politicians made the over-representation a political issue. They initiated measures aimed at correcting the over-representation by establishing
ethnic quotas for university entrants. These measures, and a series of
riots and pogroms starting from
1956 that targeted Sri Lankan Tamils and the resultant
mass murder, displacements and refugees, led to the formation of
rebel groups advocating
independence for Sri Lankan Tamils. After the 1983
Black July pogrom, full-scale
civil war erupted between the government and the rebel groups. During the course of the civil war there were a number of massacres of civilians,
war rapes, torture and
enforced disappearances attributed to both the government and allied groups as well as the various rebel formations. ==The massacre==