Binh Tai Massacre

The Bình Tai Massacre was a massacre allegedly perpetrated by South Korean Forces on 9 October 1966 of 29-168 citizens in Binh Tai village of Bình Định Province in South Vietnam.

Binh Tai Massacre
Quảng Ngãi Province
LocationBinh Tai village, South Vietnam
DateOctober 9, 1966 (1966-10-09)
TargetBinh Tai villagers
Attack type
Massacre
Deaths29[1]-168[2]:533
PerpetratorsSouth Korean Forces

Investigation

The South Korean newspaper, The Hankyoreh, investigated war crimes in Vietnam and this massacre had first came to light from a testimony by an officer whom had overseen the killing.[2]:534[3][1] Colonel Kim Ki-tae, former commander of the Seventh Company, 2nd Marine Division, testified in The Hankyoreh that on 9 October 1966 about the event.[2]:529 Colonel Ki-Tae had reported he oversaw the murder of 29 men who were 'probably just farmers' alongside other civilians, and confirmed by the Hankyoreh's onsite investigation of events.[1][4] South Korean troops set fire to the Binh Tai villagers' homes and shot the villagers who fled the burning buildings. The raid had been ordered as a punitive action by the Division Headquarters as retaliation for the killing of a ROKA Infantry Major (Soryeong) and a ROK Marine Artillery Jungsa (First Sergeant) three days before by sniper fire.[2]:530 The testimony by Kim Ki-Tae had prompted other Korean veterans to testify about mass-killings.[1] The massacre was discussed by the People's Tribunal on War Crimes by South Korean Troops during the Vietnam War in 2018.

See also

References

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