The following report was provided by an elderly person who visited
several relatives being held in one of the internment camps set up
by Sri Lankan authorities to house nearly 300,000 civilians who fled
during the final weeks of fighting between the army and the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Manik Farm is about 30 kilometres from the northern town of
Vavuniya. It is the biggest camp established by the army, housing
more than 160,000 Tamil refugees. They fled from the last strip of
territory held by the LTTE after facing constant shelling by the
military.
One reaches Manik Farm only after the harrowing process of passing
through several army checkpoints. What one sees is a huge open
prison with men, women, children, the elderly and the injured. It is
behind barbed and razor wire fences and guarded by heavily armed
security personnel.
There are rows and rows of small tents or rooms made of aluminum
seats or wooden planks. Basic facilities like water and sanitation
are inadequate. At least two families live in each tent or room.
When the wind blows or a vehicle passes by, people are showered with
dust.
There are four camps at Manik Farm: Ramanathan, Kadirgamar,
Arunachalam and Anandakumaswamy. Each houses nearly 40,000 people.
Armoured vehicles travel up and down the road near the camps
frequently. People are not allowed to walk along the main road from
one camp to another. They have to hire a three-wheeler taxi and pay
100 to 150 rupees for one or two kilometres.
Visitors have to walk through the barbed wire fences to an open
space near the camp. Small huts act as waiting rooms. Hundreds of
visitors are waiting to see their loved ones and there is not enough
room in the huts. Many have to stand outside in the burning sun.
There are no toilets. For drinking water there is a plastic water
barrel in each hut. Outside there are small shops that serve tea and
a few snacks.
The police officers arrive after 9 a.m. to register your details,
including your name and the unit number and block number of the
detainee you are going to visit. Mobile phones and cameras are
banned. You have to leave them at one of the shops. Some shopkeepers
charge 50 rupees just to look after a mobile phone.
There are several of my relatives in camps in Manik Farm. I first
went to Ramanathan camp hoping to see one of my sisters and her
sons. A Tamil-speaking man in civilian clothes arrived and started
to collect the details of detainees each of us was going to visit. I
gave my details to him. He abruptly said I couldn�t visit that day.
They have allocated separate days for each camp.
Although I argued that I had come from Colombo, he told me that
nothing could be done. He refused to let me speak to a senior
officer to complain. I was compelled to abandon the idea of meeting
my relatives there. Then I visited Kadirgamar camp and had to go
through the same process.
They called my brother but he was on the other side of a barbed wire
fence. He was crying. I saw several persons crying after seeing
their relatives. Some have been separated from their parents. Some
have been separated from their spouses.
Meeting a relative is like speaking to a prisoner. You only get 15
to 30 minutes. The police on guard come to tell you when the time is
up. No one gets more time. You can give basic gifts such as food and
clothing but only after they are thoroughly checked. The police are
checking all the time you are talking.
My brother explained to me that because of the war he had to move
from one place to another from mid-December. Finally they reached
Mathala in the Mullaithivu coastal area. There were tens of
thousands of people there. They did not have enough food and just
had the clothes they arrived in. They kept running from one trench
to another under the thunder of shelling. Many died.
Finally they decided to leave in April. They trekked about 8
kilometres. The army first tried to shoot them. Then they were asked
to wait several hours. Thereafter the army took them to Manik Farm.
For two weeks they were provided with pre-cooked food parcels.
Now they have been given 4 vessels and a few spoons to cook with.
Each person receives 3 kilograms of rice, 3 kg of flour and 300
grams of sugar and a little dhal [lentils] for a month. The army has
opened a few shops to sell vegetables and other food items. But
without any money most people cannot buy anything. They cannot
imagine eating vegetables and other food and have to live on what
they are given.
Drinking water is supplied by lorries, but that too is not enough.
There is a river running through the camp but with very little water
to have a bath. People have no soap. The toilets are built with
polythene or aluminum seats. However, there are not enough.
Soldiers or policemen in civilian clothes roam around the camp even
checking the toilets. No one is allowed to even stand in the shade
outside a hut. They are scolded and told to leave.
Most parents with teenagers never sleep at night because they are
worried their sons and daughters will be abducted. The names of
young people are often called out and they have to go to the office.
The officials say they are being investigated. Some of them come
back, others do not. Even the parents are not informed where they
have been taken and why.
It is a terrible situation.