21.8.2008
Daya Gamage – US National Correspondent Asian Tribune
In the LTTE-controlled areas of the Wanni, the Tigers
have hindered thousands of families from moving to safer
places by imposing a strict pass system. Some individuals
have been forced to stay behind as guarantors, to ensure
the return of other family members, says Amnesty International
in a statement released on Tuesday.
"These people are running out of places to go and
basic necessities," said Yolanda Foster, Amnesty
International’s Sri Lanka researcher. “The
Tigers are keeping them in harm’s way and the government
is not doing enough to ensure they receive essential assistance.”
However the press statement says that Amnesty International
has received reports that the government is keeping those
who have been able to leave LTTE-controlled areas in temporary
shelters.
The government has given reassurances at the weekend
that they will open three safe corridors and that, for
the moment, the government is facilitating humanitarian
assistance through Omanthai checkpoint ¬- the crossing
point between government-controlled territory and the
area held by the LTTE. This aid is desperately needed
but humanitarian agencies operating in the area have voiced
serious concerns that if the conflict continues displaced
civilians will face greater hardship.
The Sri Lankan military and the opposing Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) are putting tens of thousands of
displaced civilians at risk as fighting continues in the
Wanni area of northern Sri Lanka, the AI statement further
notes.
It also noted that a major concern, as the situation
worsens, is that there is little reliable information
available from the ground, as journalists are restricted
from reporting in the area. Both sides consistently contradict
each other. This is why international independent monitors
are urgently needed on the ground to assess the situation.
There is no safe haven for the thousands of families
trying to escape the aerial bombardment and shelling of
Sri Lankan forces as they push towards the town of Kilinochchi.
Since May, government aerial bombardment and artillery
shelling has forced more than 70,000 people to flee their
homes, primarily in the Kilinochchi and Mullaitvu districts,
AI continued in the press statement.
Witnesses from Kalimoddai camp in Mannar district told
AI that more than 200 families who are held there cannot
exit the camp for any reason (except to go to school)
without obtaining a pass from the government's security
forces.
Despite calls for the displaced to be allowed to move
via humanitarian corridors to safer areas where they can
receive essential aid and assistance, they are in fact
being used as a buffer between the two opposing forces.
Sri Lankan media reported Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka,
Commander of the Army, ordering his troops in the Wanni
area to seal any routes out of the area in order to stop
LTTE infiltration. AI interprets this move of sealing
the border continues to prevent civilians from fleeing
the conflict zones.
"Both sides to this long conflict have again shown
that they will jeopardize the lives of thousands of ordinary
people in the pursuit of military objectives,” said
Yolanda Foster, Amnesty’s Sri Lanka researcher.
“In the absence of independent international monitors,
Sri Lankan civilians lack protection and remain at the
mercy of two forces with long records of abuse."
Amnesty International has established that around a third
of the displaced families were forced to live in the open
air with no shelter. Many could not receive food, tarpaulin
for temporary shelters and fuel because of a lack of access
to LTTE-controlled areas and restrictions on goods going
through Omanthai. The lack of adequate privacy for women
and girls has led to an increase in reports of sexual
and gender-based violence.
The displacement of civilians increased dramatically
in July, with 14,000 new families made homeless. As of
7 August, government figures indicate that the overall
number of displaced people is between 150,000 and 160,000,
concludes the Amnesty International release.
Courtesy - Asian
Tribune