Floods threaten camp detainees: SL Govt’s failure to free them Worsens Situation

“The government bears full responsibility for the situation in the camps, locking families up in squalid conditions and then blaming aid agencies for their plight is downright shameful,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

Heavy rains have flooded the camps for ethnic Tamils displaced by the fighting in northern Sri Lanka, where the government continues to detain more than 260,000 civilians in violation of international law. The rainy season, due to start in September, will greatly exacerbate poor conditions in the camps unless the government allows the displaced to move in with relatives and host families, says Human Rights Watch.

Floods caused by heavy rains unnecessarily threaten more than 260,000 displaced Tamil civilians whom the Sri Lankan government has unlawfully detained in camps in northern Sri Lanka, Human Rights Watch said today.

Permitting displaced families to move in with friends and host families would quickly address the deteriorating conditions in the camps with the onset of the rainy season, Human Rights Watch said.

“The government has detained people in these camps and is threatening their health and even their lives by keeping them there during the rainy season floods,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “This is illegal, dangerous, and inhumane.”

In violation of international law, the government has since March 2008 confined virtually all civilians displaced by the fighting between government forces and the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in detention camps, euphemistically called “welfare centers” by the government. Only a few thousand camp residents have been released and allowed to return home or to stay elsewhere. 

During the last several days, heavy rain fell on northern Sri Lanka, flooding several camps. Zones 2 and 4 of Manik farm, a large complex of camps west of the town of Vavuniya, were particularly affected by rain. More rain is expected with the onset of the rainy season next month, further worsening conditions in the overcrowded camps.

“Aanathi,” a 30-year-old woman living in zone 2 with her 1-year-old son, told Human Rights Watch: “Within seconds, the water was pouring into our tents. … After a couple of minutes, everything was flooded. We lost all of our things. We had no place to cook. We couldn’t get help from anybody, because everybody was in the same situation. It was terrible. We were already frightened, and this made it worse.”

Seven people from three families were living in Aanathi’s tent, which was designed to house five people. According to the United Nations, the majority of the camps are severely overcrowded; zones 2 and 4, with a joint capacity of 50,000 people, held more than 100,000 people as of July 28, 2009. For their protection, the residents who spoke with Human Rights Watch were not identified by their real names.

The rain caused emergency latrines to flood or collapse, causing sewage to flood several areas of the camps, heightening the risk of outbreaks of contagious diseases. “Shantadevi,” also in zone 2, told Human Rights Watch: “Some of the toilets are completely flooded. It looks like they are floating in water. The pits have collapsed and raw sewage is floating around with the storm water in a green and brown sludge. It smells disgusting.”

Aanathi explained to Human Rights Watch that the area where the camp is located usually floods during the rainy season: “If they don’t release us before then, we will be washed away by all the water, there will be outbreaks of diseases here. It will be terrible.”

The camps have already suffered from outbreaks of contagious diseases with health officials recording thousands of cases of diarrhea, hepatitis, dysentery, and chickenpox.

Observers report that camp residents are getting increasingly frustrated by the difficult conditions in the camps and that the current heavy rain caused unrest that was quickly defused by the military camp administration without the use of force. In late June, camp residents held at least two protests, which were dispersed by the security forces. Since then, the military administration of the camps, apparently fearing more unrest, has divided the camps into smaller sections, which are easier to control.

Humanitarian organizations have long advocated the release of the displaced from the camps. Many of the camp residents have relatives, including close family members, with whom they can live if they are allowed to leave. Aanathi told Human Rights Watch that she would go to live with her mother in Jaffna or her mother-in-law in Trincomalee if released.

“The camp is like a desert, there are no trees here,” she told Human Rights Watch. “When it is sunny, it gets really hot. When it rains, you can’t walk because of all the mud. With a 1-year old it is very difficult to move around, and I can’t leave him alone in the tent. It is painful to speak about my situation here. I am lonely, very lonely. If I could go to Jaffna or Trincomalee, I would have a good life again.”

The government has refused to release the displaced from the camps, contending that it needs to screen them for Tamil Tiger combatants. In response to calls to release them, Foreign Secretary Palitha Kohona, recently named Sri Lanka’s ambassador to the UN, told the BBC on August 10 that it was “mischievous to talk of rights in the absence of security.”

On August 15, the minister of resettlement and disaster management, Rizad Bathiudeen, told the Sri Lankan Daily Mirror that he held UN agencies responsible for the flooding in the camps, saying, “[T]he Government cannot be blamed for the poor condition of the drainage systems which burst and failed.”

“The government bears full responsibility for the situation in the camps,” said Adams. “Locking families up in squalid conditions and then blaming aid agencies for their plight is downright shameful.”

Liked this page? Why not share it with your friends?
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • Print

Comments

3 Responses to “Floods threaten camp detainees: SL Govt’s failure to free them Worsens Situation”
  1. Rajes Rajah says:

    Sir

    Now arleast you realise why the Tamils were appealing for 20 yrs and then fighting for their rights tfor 30 yrs to live with dignity,freedom,self respect on their own traditional lands.

    The singhala government waits for the smallest chance to demoralise the Tamils to a state of helplessnes
    and to keep us down to the lowest levels.

    The international world must see these attrocities done to these helpless Tamils and see the ruthlessness,hatred,venom dished out relentessly by the singhalese.

  2. thavam ranga says:

    The Sri Lankan authorities refer to these camps as “welfare villages”- this rather benign term suggests some benevolent institution, such as a drop-in hospital, for example, but let’s investigates the reality behind these words. The reality is that three hundred thousand innocent civilians are detained in appalling conditions with severely limited food, water and medicines. A question: what would one name such an arrangement if it was transferred to the land of western democratic country- we would name it a prison, perhaps? Certainly basic human freedoms are being denied, but at what justification? In fact, there is no justification for such contravention of basic human rights, but let’s considers the rationale given by the Sri Lankan government.
    Firstly, they argue that the Tamil people are being detained for their own good. They argue that the proliferation of mines makes many of the settlements uninhabitable at the moment. The government line is that troops in their thousands are being deployed to detect and destroy each and every bomb, which may take many weeks and months to complete. In fact, Tamil politicians claim that 80 per cent of the conflict zone of Wanni was free of mines and therefore free for immediate resettlement. Dr Nimalka Fernando said: These people came through the mines and if you simply release them they will go back through the same path.
    A recent article sheds light upon the government’s true aims:
    “A source close to the (Sri Lankan) President said that the release of IDPs has been postponed indefinitely with the government focusing on a plan to resettle them along with the new Sinhala and military settlements that are to be set up in the north. The source further noted that the plan is to resettle people in areas in Kilinochchi, Mullaitivu, below Mannar and above Vavuniya , where there are currently no people. The plan is said to remove all the old Tamil villages that existed in the respective areas.”
    Secondly, the government maintains many LTTE terrorists are numbered amongst the detainees. They wish to take their time to identify and root these elements out. This, apparently, justifies the detainment of vast majority of clearly innocent people, including tens of thousands of women and some sixty thousands children who have just experienced unimaginable horrors and, still, must continue to suffer. They are treated as war criminals when, in fact, they are victims of war.
    If we return to the prison analogy, this would be equivalent to detaining the families and wider community of suspects for an indeterminate time. Seen as such, there can be little argument, I’m sure you agree, that there is in fact any justification for the denial of these people’s human rights.
    Furthermore, such practices are demonstrably counter-productive in the fight to suppress the cause of the LTTE.
    In my opinion, they are using exaggerated and overblown claims to persuade the rest of the World to look away whilst engaging in practices which are similar in effect to ethnic cleansing and colonization of the land. They are robbing the Tamil people of their land, their tradition, their identity, making them subservient slaves and second-class citizens.
    I think any right-minded neutral observer would agree that such a state of affairs is abhorrent and should not be allowed to continue by the International Community. I ask that you support the cause of the Tamil Diaspora in their fight to be freed from their place of confinement.

  3. Roshan says:

    Mr.Rajah, why people like you always go beg the International community for eevrything? We have a democratically elected government (enforced by late Prabakaran over Ranil Wickramesinghe) and let our governement solve the problems of its people. If you have time and money to support then route it to the people of Sri Lanka than looking upto the international community. The LTTE killed bus loads of Sinhalese people, demolished the economy of this country in the name of “fighting for the rights of Tamils” so those Tamils who supported and funded terrorism must take the blame the problems faced by innocent civilians today.

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!