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The recent statement issued by the
International Committee of the Red Cross in
Geneva fails to note current ground
realities in Sri Lanka said the Ministry of
Disaster Management and Human Rights.
The ICRC statement appealed ‘to both sides’
to allow and facilitate the safe and
voluntary movement of civilians out of the
combat zone’ and notes that ‘Hundreds of
patients need emergency treatment and
evacuation to Vavuniya Hospital in the
government-controlled area.’
"The ICRC staff in Colombo is well aware
that it is the LTTE that has barred the
movement of civilians, despite which,
braving execution by the LTTE, several
thousands have now found their way to
government controlled territory," the
Ministry said.
Full statement issued by the Ministry
of Disaster Management and Human Rights
The Ministry of Disaster Management and
Human Rights regrets a recent statement made
in Geneva by the International Committee of
the Red Cross, which fails to note current
ground realities in Sri Lanka. The statement
appeals ‘to both sides’ to allow and
facilitate the safe and voluntary movement
of civilians out of the combat zone’ and
notes that ‘Hundreds of patients need
emergency treatment and evacuation to
Vavuniya Hospital in the
government-controlled area.’
The statement was issued on the very day
that the LTTE refused passage to ambulances
which were to leave the LTTE controlled area
for the hospital in Vavuniya which has
throughout the last few years provided
treatment to all patients sent there by the
government doctors who continued to man all
hospitals in the LTTE controlled area. The
statement was issued a few days after two UN
agencies finally issued categorical requests
that the LTTE permit the civilians it has
been detaining for so long to move into
government controlled areas.
The ICRC staff in Colombo is well aware that
it is the LTTE that has barred the movement
of civilians, despite which, braving
execution by the LTTE, several thousands
have now found their way to government
controlled territory. The ICRC staff in
Colombo are aware that the UN thought that
it had painfully negotiated permission to
leave for members of staff and their
dependents, only to find them stopped, so
that two international staff too felt
obliged to stay behind for the safety of
these hapless civilians. On the day the ICRC
in Geneva issued its demarche, the LTTE
refused permission for those two
international staffers, along with the
ambulances, to leave LTTE controlled
territory.
The ICRC staff in Colombo may not be aware
that the LTTE have been firing from the area
which the government had declared a safe
zone. Initially the international community,
which clearly never learned the
philosophical skill of induction, was not
sure who had fired. The Bishop of Jaffna, as
befitted his training, was sharper. In
asking the government to extend the safe
zone, he declared that he and his colleagues
‘are urgently requesting the Tamil Tigers
not to station themselves among the people
in the safety zone and fire their
artillery-shells and rockets at the army.
This will only increase more and more the
death of civilians thus endangering the
safety of the people’.
Later that day the UN also realised the
truth and asserted that ‘we believe that
firing this morning most likely was from an
LTTE position.’ The fact that Geneva seems
oblivious to all this suggests either wilful
ignorance or naivete. It is true that the
ICRC code of operation demands neutrality.
Neutrality however demands objectivity in
analysis and reporting, not generalizations
that portray the government in a negative
light.
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