Sun, 21:10 17 May 2009 GMT17

 
Aid agencies struggle as Sri Lanka crisis escalates
01 May 2009 15:48:00 GMT
Written by: Nita Bhalla
Civilians in the Menikfam Vanni camp, near the town of Chettekulam in northern Sri Lanka.<BR>REUTERS/Stringer
Civilians in the Menikfam Vanni camp, near the town of Chettekulam in northern Sri Lanka.
REUTERS/Stringer

Aid agencies in northern Sri Lanka, where over 100,000 people have recently fled a tiny war zone, say they're overwhelmed by the exodus and ill-equipped for the next one.

Tens of thousands of civilians remain trapped in the battle ground on the northeast coast where government troops are fighting Tamil Tiger separatists in the final days of a war that has lasted a quarter of a century.

But as troops move to wipe out the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, aid workers say they will face major hurdles in providing basic assistance to thousands more traumatised, wounded and malnourished survivors expected to stream into camps for the displaced in the coming days or weeks.

"There were big problems in the huge outflow of people that came out last week," said Gordon Weiss, a U.N. spokesman in Colombo. "There were more than 100,000 coming in the space of a few days and that obviously overwhelmed the already stretched resources of the camps and hospitals."

The U.N. refugee agency said on Tuesday that conditions in the overcrowded camps had "reached breaking point, placing severe strains on the humanitarian services available".

Around 170,000 people are in government-controlled camps which they are not allowed to leave. Of these 150,000 are in the town of Vavuniya, to the southwest of the war zone.

Aid agencies are pressing the government to identify new sites for camps where resources are more available. They also want the government to come up with a clear plan on how it will resettle people as soon as possible - something they feel may encourage donors to fund immediate relief needs.

CAMP PRESSURES

A key concern in the camps is the provision of water and sanitation facilities such as pit latrines, say aid workers.

"All the immediate water needs are being met by trucking in water bowsers," said David White, Oxfam's deputy country director. "We are looking at setting up piping systems from nearby rivers and purification units but this will take a lot of time."

White said areas such as Mannar district - where the government has housed civilians displaced earlier in the war - have sufficient water sites which would make them good locations for new camps. But he believed there was a reluctance to do this.

Already stretched medical services have also been burdened by the huge influx of civilians from the war zone - many suffering from injuries, including 150 wounded in mine explosions.

Many civilians are also seriously malnourished and anaemic, say relief workers. Around 25 percent of under-fives are acutely malnourished and U.N. workers say there is a desperate need to establish therapeutic feeding centres in the camps.

Aid agencies also want the authorities to ease pressure in the shelters by allowing civilians who do not pose a security risk to return home, including unaccompanied children, the elderly and the wounded.

Many local aid workers - 13 of whom are working for the United Nations - should also be released, relief groups say, adding that it would be helpful to have their expertise.

The government has so far only released 1,200 mostly elderly civilians. It says camp dwellers present a serious security risk and has restricted their communications as well as their movement.

In February, a suspected Tamil Tiger suicide bomber blew herself up at a refugee reception centre, killing at least 28 people and wounding 90.

FUNDING DOUBTS

Aid agencies are now launching multi-million dollar emergency appeals to help them provide for the displaced and prepare for new arrivals from the war zone.

Tents, food and non-food items are being flown in, but charities remain concerned about funding.

"All the agencies are trying to scale up their response for the next exodus, but we all need funding and this is one of the biggest reasons behind our constraints," said the country director of one international aid group.

The United Nations has raised just 30 percent of the funds it needed for a $155 million appeal made in February and is planning to launch an emergency appeal on Monday.

Some aid workers feel there is fatigue among donors over Asia's longest running conflict. Others believe donors are nervous about committing resources - possibly concerned about government plans to keep civilians in the camps for two or three years.

"The international community has expressed concern over a plan that would keep a huge population inside areas for that period of time," said Zola Dowell, head of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

"It would mean we would be asked to pour resources into supporting the government in maintaining these kind of structures as opposed to providing help for people to go back home."

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3 responses to “Aid agencies struggle as Sri Lanka crisis escalates”

Please note that comments should not be regarded as the views of Reuters.
  1. Mahes Kumaran says:

    thank you very much for your writing. Please continue to bring out the truth really what's happening for the innocent tamils in Sri Lanka. Actually, Sri Lankan government's policy is erasing tamil community from the island. Now it is going on by the government with the help of internationl world including democracy Indida.

  2. Muthyavan. says:

    Thank you Nita Bhala for presenting a very difficult human problem faced by displaced civilians in the security camps in the northern Sri Lanka. Most of these civilians are long time farmers who have been displaced several time in their life, each time losing all their belongings.Aid agencies are struggling in finding water, food and shelters for these poor civilians,while they have their own houses and properties needing immediate attentions.

    It is very cruel to lock them inside these unhealthy camps without water,food and proper shelter when they can start there own life in their own homes with little help. Aid agencies too have several practical problem dealing with the government of Sri Lanka, with many of the volunteer workers killed in the conflict areas and some even kidnap and killed by armed men's in the last three years. Sri Lanka with a bad economic dawn turn, wants aid from agencies for rehabilitation of these civilians, but not prepared to accept aid agencies preconditions in helping to maintain these camps in a humane way.

    The exact count of displaced civilians are on the increase every day, at present by passing over 200,000. Erecting permanent structures in the so called security camps for these civilians will also end up in assisting Sri Lanka government policy of keeping young peoples locked in these camps under investigations for long period. UN and other aid agencies should also not swallow all the propaganda the government is coming out about the civilians and the conflicts in sri lanka. Already world press has exposed some threatening satellite images about the destruct-ions in the so called no-fire zones.

  3. rashmy senanayake says:

    I would like to say that it is not the Sri Lankan government who is trying to wipe out the Tamil community but it is something that is brought out by the Tamil tigers themselves. Many use the word 'innocent Tamils', while these partial groups never talk about the 'innocent Sinhalese' that had suffered from frequent bomb attacks in the south of the island for many years. It is amazing that the international groups only harp out when the 'innocent Tamils' are concerned and never talk about the harms done to the 'innocent Sinhalese' and the 'innocent Buddhist monks' who have been murdered over the years in the island. It is also amazing that the above writers never refer to the 'innocent' Tamil tigers who have been the cause of many of these atrocities done not only to the Sinhalese 'innocent' people, but also to the Tamil population themselves, and it is amazing that the international community workers do not speak about the 'innoce! nt Tamils' who have been for a long time talking about the injustices done to them by their own 'Tamil tiger brothers'. It is amazing that the international community does not speak that the malnourishment is only suffered by the 'innocent Tamil groups' who were not directly connected to the tiger operation, but that there exists many 'innocent Tamils' who are not malnourished because they supported the Tamil tiger liberation movement. The international community workers also do not talk about the government food donations that have been given to the 'innocent Tamils+//3//f/9 in the north for a long time, and how the Tamil tigers have been stealing these food items and been using them for their own means. The international community is also silent on the fact that there are multiple weaponry vehicles that have been used to bomb and destroy the army as well as about the aircrafts that had been made in Europe, and imported from European countries which were used to bomb from ! air th! e 'innocent Sinhalese' in the south. Why this silence? And why! this bi asness?

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Nita Bhalla covers South Asia for AlertNet. She is based in New Delhi.

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