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With at least 2.857 Tamil civilians
fleeing the LTTE held areas of the NFZ to
the Safe Zone of Government, the number of
IDPs in Government held areas of the North
is fast approaching 70,000. Many more are
expected to cross over today, as the
Security Forces carry out hostage rescue
action and help clear passages for their
escape to the Safe Zone a short distance
away from the NFZ at Mullaitivu.
On Friday April 17, the office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees –
UNHCR – in a summary of the situation
regarding IDP said the number in the safe
area in the north-eastern coastal pocket was
63,000.
It said emergency response to assist the
displaced in Si Lanka’s North had been
stepped up. UNHCR - together with the
government and other partners – is
responding with massive shelter support and
regular distribution of non-food aid items
while undertaking protection monitoring.
UNHCR welcomes positive steps by the
government to address several
protection concerns at the sites in Vavuniya.
Short visits by friends
and relatives to the sites are now allowed.
UNHCR monitored the first
round of visits on Monday (13 April).
Telephone, telegram and mail
services are now operating in almost all
sites in the district.
Meanwhile, approximately 1,800 IDPs with
special needs, particularly the elderly,
have been released from the sites, and some
1,345 separated families have so far been
reunited, according to the government.
UNHCR also calls on the LTTE to immediately
allow these people to move to areas where
they feel safe. We also urge both parties to
the conflict to adhere to International
Humanitarian Law and ensure that the safety
of the innocent civilian population is the
top priority.
Here is the full the text of summary of
what the UNHCR spokesperson said April 17,
at the Palais des Nations press briefing in
Geneva.
Emergency response stepped up in Sri Lanka,
new displacement at
63,000
UNHCR has stepped up its emergency response
in Sri Lanka’s north,
where displacement numbers are growing as a
result of heavy fighting
between the military and the Liberation
Tamil Tigers of Eelam (LTTE).
So far, more than 63,000 people have fled
the conflict zone in the
north-eastern coastal pocket and are being
accommodated at several
transit and internal displacement sites in
the districts of Vavuniya,
Jaffna and Mannar.
UNHCR -- together with the government and
other partners -- is
responding with massive shelter support and
regular distribution of
non-food aid items while undertaking
protection monitoring. The
distributions are concentrated on Vavuniya
thus far, where a majority of the internally
displaced people (IDPs) are being
accommodated. UNHCR has so far distributed
some 36,000 plastic mats, over 22,000 bed
sheets, 32,000 mosquito nets, more than
46,000 men’s and women’s clothing, 9,000
kitchen sets and thousands of hygiene kits.
The construction of emergency shelter units
by UNHCR’s shelter
partners at government-designated sites is
also progressing as planned.
Despite formidable challenges due to
adverse physical conditions at the sites,
work on one site in Vavuniya which has a
total capacity of up to 27,000 persons, is
scheduled to be completed by Monday (20
April). We have asked the government to
provide more land, including in the district
of Mannar to help alleviate overcrowding at
the current sites and to relieve pressure on
services in Vavuniya.
UNHCR welcomes positive steps by the
government to address several
protection concerns at the sites in Vavuniya.
Short visits by friends
and relatives to the sites are now allowed.
UNHCR monitored the first
round of visits on Monday (13 April).
Telephone, telegram and mail
services are now operating in almost all
sites in the district.
Meanwhile, approximately 1,800 IDPs with
special needs, particularly the elderly,
have been released from the sites, and some
1,345 separated families have so far been
reunited, according to the government.
While commending these initiatives, UNHCR
calls upon the government to accelerate
progress on other outstanding protection
concerns, including maintaining the civilian
character of the IDP sites and the
separation of ex-combatants from the
civilian population; expediting the
screening process in IDP camps; and
subsequently allowing freedom of movement.
UNHCR has made a number of concrete
suggestions on how best to proceed and will
continue to work closely with the government
to ensure that minimum international
standards are met at all sites.
UNHCR believes the ultimate objective of the
government should be to
facilitate the safe and voluntary return of
the displaced to their
villages of origin by removing obstacles to
return. Chief among them is
the challenging task of de-mining. We urge
the international community to provide the
government with technical and financial
support to carry out mine clearance in areas
of return. While responding to the
emergency, UNHCR is encouraging the
government to draw from lessons learned
during the IDP return process in the east as
it puts together a return plan for the
north. We stand ready to support this.
We remain deeply concerned about the plight
of the civilian population
still trapped inside the conflict zone.
Those fleeing into government
controlled areas provide similar accounts of
the dire humanitarian
conditions prevalent inside the area. The
situation has worsened due the ongoing heavy
rains and winds, with most families living
in flooded
areas under damaged tarpaulin tents and
beneath trees.
UNHCR calls on the LTTE to immediately allow
these people to move to
areas where they feel safe. We also urge
both parties to the conflict to adhere to
International Humanitarian Law and ensure
that the safety of the innocent civilian
population is the top priority.
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