Sat, 03:02 23 May 2009 GMT17

 

Children Separated From Parents in Chaotic Sri Lankan Camps
15 May 2009 12:58:00 GMT
Save the Children
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A growing number of traumatised, malnourished children as young as five are arriving unaccompanied at camps in Sri Lanka having been separated from their parents in their escape from the violence in the North East, Save the Children said today.

Many have been forced to flee with relatives while their parents remain trapped in the conflict zone where the movement of civilians is still restricted by LTTE (Tamil Tiger) fighters.

But shockingly the vast majority of unaccompanied children, all under the age of sixteen, are becoming lost in the crowds of displaced people as they enter government controlled areas and as they arrive at the over-crowded camps.

Save the Children's acting country director in Sri Lanka Branko Golubovic said: 'the camps are chaotic. These children are coming out of combat areas where they have been severely traumatised only to find themselves in yet another harsh environment in the camps.

'Many of them are malnourished and most have witnessed horrific events. Being removed from the support of their families at this point will have serious long-term consequences for their overall development.'

A recent survey of 100 shelters found that 72 per cent of families had been separated and lost each other. Save the Children warns the number of children parted from one or both parents will have risen dramatically in the PAST few weeks when there was an influx of displaced persons fleeing Vanni.

Around 196,000 people have escaped the LTTE-controlled area since the beginning of the year, at least 40 per cent of which are children. The majority arrived in the past three weeks.

The Sri Lankan government estimates a further 50,000 civilians remain trapped in the three-squared kilometre conflict zone. Save the Children expects 20,000 of those still trapped will escape and arrive in the hugely overcrowded camps by the end of the week.

The Sri Lankan government, responsible for the registration of displaced people, estimates it will be at least six weeks until the process of reuniting separated families can begin.

In the meantime, thousands of vulnerable, unaccompanied children are relying on the ad hoc systems put in place by aid organisations including Save the Children attempting to reunite desperate parents with their missing children. Golubovic said: 'while they are few and far between, we have had rare success stories.'

Save the Children, which has more than 30 year's experience of working in Sri Lanka, is providing tens of thousands of children and their families with clothes, supplementary feeding of children, pregnant women and lactating mothers and has set up temporary learning facilities. It is also running "child-friendly spaces" to give children somewhere safe to play and help them forget what they have experienced.

For more information about Save the Children or to make a donation call 0207 012 6400 or go to www.savethechildren.org.uk

Notes to editors

Interviews available in London and Sri Lanka on request. Case studies also available on request. Please contact 020 7324 1719. A Save the Children press officer is available 24 hours a day on 0044 (0) 07831 650409.

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

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Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama (L) welcomes U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon at the international airport in Colombo, Sri Lanka May 23, 2009. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, due to land in ...



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