INDICTMENT AGAINST SRI LANKA
Sri Lanka's Continued Ethnic Cleansing ...
- after Tamil Armed Resistance Ends on 17 May 2009
- the Record Speaks...
Six Catholic priests are being kept in isolation in the refugee
camps camps of Sri Lanka. The bishop of Jaffna has requested their
release, but has not yet received any response from the Ministry of
Defense. A humanitarian worker working in the fields in which
300,000 displaced persons live has told their story and is also
denouncing the disappearance of three government doctors who had
circulated the figures of the dead during the last days of war
between the army and Tamil Tigers. There is no news of their fate.
The aid worker said: "The Government of Sri Lanka should immediately
release the six Catholic priests who were imprisoned and kept in
secret solitary confinement in centres for Internally displaced
persons (IDPs). Four are from the diocese of Jaffna, and two belong
to the Oblate Missionaries of Mary Immaculate (OMI). These priests
unselfishly helped Tamil people during the war, until the last hours
of the military campaign. These priests have only helped people. The
Government of Sri Lanka has put them in isolation in the IDP camps
where no-one is allowed contact with them. There are fears for their
safety, their emotional and psychological conditions, and also for
their physical health."
The worker said that around 300,000 people are currently living in
camps, in tents and temporary accommodation. The tents are for five
people, but house between 15 and 16 people. There is a chronic
shortage of water and lack of health services for everyone: for
about 1, 500 people there are only two bathrooms. The request of
humanitarian agencies to build at least 2, 500 toilets is of
absolute urgency. All refugees are living in detention and
internment centres which lack adequate food supplies, medicine and
shelter, with no access to information or possibilities of outside
communication.
He said: "There is a fundamental need for treatment and
psychological support to help people who have been traumatized by
war. NGOs are not allowed to work among the people: they can visit
the camps, bringing aid but they must hand it over to the
militarywho are the only ones allowed to distribute it. They control
the camps and take keep everyone under constant surveillance. The
priests who are allowed to celebrate Mass are always accompanied by
the army."
"The world is silent before this tragedy. No journalist, no agency,
no human rights activist, and even relatives of the IDPs are allowed
to visit the camps. People who live there are deprived of their
freedom and want to know when the government will allow them to
return home. The authorities say that the areas from which the
refugees come are dotted with mines and it takes time to render them
safe, so they must remain in IDP camps."
"The government keeps the refugees segregated for fear of LTTE
militants infiltrating the camps. Plainclothes agents of the
intelligence services roam the camp, checking on every possible sign
that may reveal the presence of cells or supporters of the Tamil
Tigers; some people have disappeared."
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