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ACT Alert: Sri Lanka Conflict
26 Feb 2007 15:34:00 GMT
Elisabeth Gouel
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.

Alert

Sri Lanka - 1/2007

Conflict

Geneva, 23 February 2007

Roadside blasts, suicide bombings, land and sea battles have killed thousands - Tamils, Muslims and Sinhalese - in the north and east as well as combatants and military personnel since Sri Lanka's 2002 cease-fire between the army and the Tamil Tigers. The new chapter of the two-decade conflict bodes ill as calls from the international community to cease fighting are ignored. In 2006 the death toll as a result of conflict was over 3,000 people. It is feared that the bloodshed will only get worse.

The limited food supply in the conflict affected areas has caused many problems for the internally displaced, as well as for the rest of the communities living in those areas. Medicines are also scarce and the prices of the few available items have escalated beyond the reach of most people. Abductions are reported daily.

More than 200,000 are internally displaced. With no regular supply routes by land - prices of essential items in Jaffna have gone sky-high. The soaring prices coupled with no proper means of livelihood makes the life of some 500,000 people in Jaffna Peninsular a veritable nightmare. Fishermen are banned, without warning, from going out to sea. The ban can remain in force for weeks, lifted for a short period and then re-imposed.

The 80,000 or more IDPs in the Eastern Province also suffer in the same manner. The land routes are open and food trickles in. However, there is a massive shortage of food as all the crops have been destroyed and many people have lost their means of livelihood. There is a dire lack of clean water and sanitation facilities. Medical assistance is urgently needed.

Many of the IDPs in the north and east have been impacted by one calamity after another - war, floods, tsunami and again war - without having the chance to fully recover.

ACT member the National Christian Council of Sri Lanka (NCCSL), its constituent members and partners, have been carrying out emergency relief distributions to assist the most vulnerable communities using its own resources or borrowed funds.

The ACT CO is expecting to receive and issue a proposal from NCCSL within the next week. It is planned to provide emergency relief for a period of three months to assist Tsunami/conflict affected people and communities in the north and east of the country who have had to flee the fighting and are homeless. They are currently living with host families or in camps and welfare centres set up by the churches or Divisional Secretaries of the region. The programme plans for food and non-food items, water and sanitation, medicines and some livelihood support to a value of just under US$ 600,000.

ACT CO would be grateful for indications of possible funding from donors.

Any funding indication or pledge should be communicated to Jessie Kgoroeadira, ACT Finance Officer (jkg@act-intl.org).

(ends)

ACT is a global alliance of churches and related agencies working to save lives and support communities in emergencies worldwide. The ACT Coordinating Office is based with the World Council of Churches (WCC) and The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) in Switzerland.

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

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Members of Sri Lanka's Marxist People's Liberation Front (JVP) hold placard in front of the United Nations office in Colombo, March 22, 2007. They were demanding that the world body stay away from the island's drawn out Tamil separatist conflict.