1991 Punjab killings
1991 Punjab killings | |
---|---|
Location | Ludhiana district, Punjab, India |
Date | 15 June 1991 |
Deaths | 80-126 |
Coordinates: 30°52′59″N 75°51′00″E / 30.883°N 75.85°E
The 1991 Punjab killings was a massacre of train passengers that occurred on June 17, 1991 in Ludhiana district, Punjab state, India, where Sikh militants killed at least 80 to 126 passengers[1] travelling in two trains near the city of Ludhiana in India. The militants stopped the two trains about a kilometre from Ludhiana station by pulling their emergency cords, triggering emergency brakes. They proceeded to open fire inside the trains, killing at least 80 passengers. Survivors stated that on one of the two trains Hindu passengers were singled-out to be shot. Attackers on this train apparently went through the train identifying Hindus and then went back to kill them, while sparing Sikhs. On the second train, the militants fired indiscriminately. After the attackers fled, the train moved back to Badduwal station, where the rescue team arrived with doctors. Local villagers helped the survivors with food, water, medicine, and mental support. Between April, when elections were announced, and the June attack, a total of 700 people had died in the state.[2]
Later that year, in December 1991, militants killed 49 more passengers, mostly Hindu, travelling on train from Ludhiana to Ferozepur.[3]
References
- ↑ "Sikhs attack India trains, killing 126". Chicago Sun-Times. June 17, 1991.
- ↑ Extremists in India Kill 80 on 2 Trains As Voting Nears End, The New York Times (June 16, 1991)
- ↑ 49 Slain by Gunmen on Train in India, The New York Times (December 27, 1991)