HomeNewsTrendsBoris Johnson faces calls to apologise for Pal-Dadhvav in India. Colonial-era massacre explained

Boris Johnson faces calls to apologise for Pal-Dadhvav in India. Colonial-era massacre explained

Boris Johnson -- who has been assailed by controversy over Downing Street parties during the coronavirus pandemic -- is yet to comment on the incident.

April 21, 2022 / 13:16 IST
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Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson (C) spins cotton on a a spinning wheel during his visit at the Sabarmati Ashram also known as Gandhi Ashram in Ahmedabad on April 21, 2022.
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson (C) spins cotton on a a spinning wheel during his visit at the Sabarmati Ashram also known as Gandhi Ashram in Ahmedabad on April 21, 2022.

During his two-day visit to India, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been faceing calls to apologise for Pal-Dadhvav -- a colonial-era massacre -- 100 years after about 1,200 people were killed for protesting against imperial rule.

The incident had happened in Gujarat and also happens to be where Johnson landed on Thursday.

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According to Indian historians, the Pal-Dadhvav massacre took place on March 7, 1922, in the Pal-Chitariya and Dadhvaav villages of Sabarkantha district in Gujarat. Around 2,000 tribal people had gathered -- led by social reformer Motilal Tejawat -- to protest against the land revenue tax imposed on the peasants by the British.

The Gujarat government stated that British Major HG Sutton ordered his troops to open fire at the protestors. "Like a battlefield, the entire area was filled with corpses," it said. Two wells, it added, were "overflowing with bodies," the government stated in a release as it observed 100 years of the incident on March 7, 2022.