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: Sri
Lanka
War in Sri Lanka creates a flood of refugees
By Nanda Wickramasinghe
21 August 2006
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Ongoing fighting initiated by the Sri Lankan military against
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) is creating a social
catastrophe. More than 160,000 people have been displaced since
the army launched what the Colombo government falsely described
as a limited, humanitarian operation on July 26 to
seize the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gate inside LTTE territory.
The offensive was the pretext for a series of air and artillery
attacks on key LTTE positions, provoking counterattacks by the
rebels. Over the past week, government positions on the Jaffna
peninsula have come under sustained assault by LTTE forces. At
least 130 soldiers have been killed in fighting near Jaffna up
to Saturday and many more wounded. The military claims to have
killed hundreds of LTTE fighters, but there is no independent
confirmation.
Tens of thousands of people have fled for safety. The exodus
has been compounded by the militarys indiscriminate use
of aerial and artillery attacks to drive back LTTE attacks. The
northern and eastern war zones of the island have already been
ravaged by two decades of war as well as the devastation caused
by the December 2004 tsunami. According to official figures, there
were already 312,000 internally displaced persons at the beginning
of this year.
The violence has been escalating since Mahinda Rajapakse won
the countrys presidency last November. For months, the military
and associated paramilitary groups have waged a covert war, aimed
at undermining the 2002 ceasefire and provoking the LTTE into
responding. Amid the worsening conflict, 50,785 people were displaced
between April to July and another 7,439 fled to the nearby southern
Indian of Tamil Nadu.
Since late July, the numbers have risen dramatically. More
than 80,000 people from the eastern province are now huddled in
camps at Kantali and Serupura in army-controlled areas and at
Vakarai in LTTE-controlled territory. Around 50,000 of these refugees
come from or near the eastern town of Muttur, which was devastated
in the fighting on August 2-4.
Officials from United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) reported that the agency had problems accommodating all
the new refugees. UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis said that
the number of internally displaced persons had jumped in just
three days from 21,000 to 50,000 on August 11. According to the
UN agency, some people had to be turned away because of the lack
of shelter.
Abdul Mujeeb from the NGO Muslim Foundation for Cultural Development
told Al Jazeera on August 9 that people were walking through
the countryside, through the fighting, to get here. At one
camp, there were 20 toilets for 6,000 people. Piles of litter
were building up and spilling out into surrounding fields.
In Pearathuweli, the largest camp near Kantale, some 14,000
people are living under tarpaulins, plastic sheeting and any shelter
they can find. They are getting water from a muddy stream that
runs past the camp. Officials are concerned that refugees, especially
children, are becoming ill.
Christian Childrens Fund spokesman Marc Nosbach told
the media: Many children here have acute respiratory illnesses
and were also seeing the beginning of scabies and diarrhoea.
He said that the camps were very overcrowded and lacking in essential
items such as food, medicines and mosquito nets. Among the refugees
were at least 4,000 children without their parents.
Abdul Hajeen from Muttur described his experience: My
house has been destroyed, along with many others. We fled to a
school, but then even that was hit. He spent four days walking
some 30 kilometres across country to reach the camp at Kantale.
Another Muttur resident Salam said he would not return home.
There is no safety. Who will provide the Muslims with security?
The LTTE did not and neither has the government. The majority
of the Muttur population is Muslim.
The situation confronting refugees in LTTE-controlled areas
is worse. An estimated 30,000 Tamil civilians fled to Vakarai
after the air force bombed Ehchilampattu near Mavilaru. Many walked
another 60 kilometres to the town of Batticaloa, due to the lack
of facilities at Vakarai.
Conditions in LTTE-held areas are being compounded by a military
blockade, including on aid workers. UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer
Pagonis said the agency was now seriously concerned about
the welfare of civilians in areas inaccessible to humanitarian
agencies because of strictly enforced travel restrictions.
She said that supplies of food and water were at alarmingly
low levels in many places.
Amid mounting criticisms by aid agencies, UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan spoke directly to President Rajapakse on August 16,
urging him to allow relief workers into the LTTE areas. Foreign
diplomats in Colombo have pressed Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera
on the same issue. The government only allowed the International
Red Cross (ICRC) to visit LTTE-held areas near Vakarai last Friday.
In the north, more than 40,000 people have fled their homes
on the Jaffna peninsula since fighting erupted there on August
11. Another 15,000 to 20,000 have also been displaced in the LTTE-held
Kilinochchi area. According to the UNHCR, about 9,500 people are
living outdoors under trees, or in communal buildings.
Seran Selliah, 85, told the pro-LTTE Tamilnet website
a week ago that thousands were walking towards Kilinochchi to
escape the fighting. He said the road was so crowded his son could
not ride his bike and had to walk. Thavamanithevi Mahalingam,
56, said that it was the fourth time she had been forced to move
as a result of the countrys civil war.
In government-held areas of the Jaffna peninsula, a disaster
is also looming. All civilian flights into the northern district
were shut down after the LTTE shelled the Palaly airforce base.
The road links pass through LTTE-controlled territory and have
also been severed. Thousands of people including foreign nationals
are stranded in Jaffna town and have joined lengthy waiting lists
to leave by sea.
Prices for essential items, such as rice, sugar and vegetables,
have skyrocketted. Fuel, including petrol, diesel and kerosene,
is in very short supply. Much of the area has been subject to
continuous electricity blackouts. After moving most of their cash
to the Palaly base for security, the banks restricted withdrawals
to just 1,000 rupees ($US10) last Friday.
The military has clamped stringent security measures throughout
the area. Curfews were in place for all but five hours each day
last weekend. Medical services at the Jaffna teaching hospital
have been severely curbed because the majority of staff was unable
to report for duty. From nearby islands, security forces only
allowed one person per family to enter Jaffna peninsula during
the lifting of the curfew to obtain essential goods.
Following pleas from aid agencies and government officials
in Jaffna, the government finally announced over the weekend that
it was sending a ship under International Red Cross escort with
4,000 tonnes of essential items, including food and medicine,
to reach Jaffna by Wednesday.
See Also:
Sri Lankan president demands media toes
the line on the war
[19 August 2006]
Sri Lankan air force bombing kills scores
of students
[15 August 2006]
War spreads to the north of Sri Lanka
[14 August 2006]
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