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News - Red Cross double murder condemned
04 Jun 2007 14:59:00 GMT
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The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement has strongly condemned the abduction and murder of two Sri Lanka Red Cross staff members in the capital Colombo on 1 June.

Sinnarasa Shanmugalingam (32) and Karthekesu Chandramohan (26) had worked for the Batticaloa branch of the Sri Lanka Red Cross, in the east of the country for many years. They had been in Colombo attending a training workshop organised by the Sri Lanka Red Cross national headquarters.

We are shocked by these brutal murders and wish to convey our sincere condolences to the family members and colleagues of the dead.

Neville Nanayakkara, Sri Lanka Red Cross director general

At about 6.45pm on 1 June, they were abducted from Fort railway station in Colombo by unknown men while waiting to return to Batticaloa. Their bodies were found the next day in Kiriella, Ratnapura district.

Shock

"We are shocked by these brutal murders and wish to convey our sincere condolences to the family members and colleagues of the dead," said Sri Lanka Red Cross director general Neville Nanayakkara.

The British Red Cross has expressed its sorrow for the murders. The organisation has been carrying out post-tsunami recovery work in Batticaloa since 2005. It has also been helping thousands of people affected by renewed violence in the area.
 
Razmi Farook, British Red Cross operations officer for Sri Lanka, said: "We are deeply saddened by this news. I have worked with many of the staff and volunteers at the Sri Lanka Red Cross branch in Batticaloa and have been inspired by their passion and commitment to serving the tsunami and conflict affected members of their community, to work in what can often be very difficult and unstable conditions."

Investigation
 
The Movement is calling upon the Sri Lankan authorities to carry out an immediate and comprehensive investigation into the killings. It has reminded the parties to the conflict that murder is prohibited under international humanitarian law, and that they must respect the work of humanitarian agencies and refrain from any acts that might jeopardise humanitarian staff or activities.

It also urges them to take all necessary measures to ensure that aid workers assisting the civilian population and persons not or no longer taking part in the hostilities are spared from attack and can move freely and safely.

The Movement will carry on with its conflict-related and post-tsunami work in Sri Lanka.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Colombian Gustavo Moncayo, father of Colombian soldier Pablo Emilio Moncayo who has been held hostage for nearly a decade by guerrillas, is helped by a red cross paramedic in Jamundi, Colombia June 29, 2007. Gustavo Moncayo is in the middle of a hiking across the country in hopes he can help break a deadlock over freeing rebel kidnap victims.



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