"..About 1,400 people are dying every week at the giant Manik Farm
internment camp set up in Sri Lanka to detain Tamil refugees from
the nation�s bloody civil war, senior international aid sources have
told The Times. Mangala Samaraweera, the former Foreign Minister and now an
opposition MP, said: �There are allegations that the Government is
attempting to change the ethnic balance of the area. Influential
people close to the Government have argued for such a solution.�
About 1,400 people are dying every week at the giant Manik Farm
internment camp set up in Sri Lanka to detain Tamil refugees from
the nation�s bloody civil war, senior international aid sources have
told The Times.
The death toll will add to concerns that the Sri Lankan Government
has failed to halt a humanitarian catastrophe after announcing
victory over the Tamil Tiger terrorist organisation in May. It may
also lend credence to allegations that the Government, which has
termed the internment sites �welfare villages�, has actually
constructed concentration camps to house 300,000 people.
Mangala Samaraweera, the former Foreign Minister and now an
opposition MP, said: �There are allegations that the Government is
attempting to change the ethnic balance of the area. Influential
people close to the Government have argued for such a solution.�
News of the death rate came as the International Committee of the
Red Cross revealed that it had been asked to scale down its
operations by the Sri Lankan authorities, which insist that they
have the situation under control.
Mahinda Samarasinghe, the Minister of Disaster Management and Human
Rights, said: �The challenges now are different. Manning entry and
exit points and handling dead bodies, transport of patients, in the
post-conflict era are no longer needed.�
Last night, the Red Cross was closing two offices. One of these is
in Trincomalee, which had helped to provide medical care to about
30,000 injured civilians evacuated by sea from the conflict zone in
the north east.
The other is in Batticaloa, where the Red Cross had been providing
�protection services�. This involves following up allegations of
abductions and extrajudicial killings, practices that human rights
organisations say have become recurring motifs of the Sri Lankan
Government.
The Manik Farm camp was set up to house the largest number of the
300,000 mainly Tamil civilians forced to flee the northeast as army
forces mounted a brutal offensive against the Tigers, who had been
fighting for an ethnic Tamil homeland for 26 years.
Aid workers and the British Government have warned that conditions
at the site are inadequate. Most of the deaths are the result of
water-borne diseases, particularly diarrhoea, a senior relief worker
said on condition of anonymity.
Witness testimonies obtained by The Times in May described long
queues for food and inadequate water supplies inside Manik Farm.
Women, children and the elderly were shoved aside in the scramble
for supplies. Aid agencies are being given only intermittent access
to the camp. The Red Cross was not being allowed in yesterday.
Experts suggest that President Rajapaksa, the country�s leader, is
yet to make good his victory pledge to reach out to the minority
Tamil community. �The discourse used by the Government is of
traitors and patriots,� Paikiasothy Saravanamuthu, of the Centre for
Policy Alternatives, a Sri Lankan analyst, said. �There is no
indication that this mode of thinking is slipping.�
Mr Rajapaksa is known for not tolerating dissent; a trait that human
rights organisations say was demonstrated this week when five Sri
Lankan doctors who witnessed the bloody climax of the country�s
civil war and made claims of mass civilian deaths recanted much of
their testimony.
The doctors said at a press conference on Wednesday that they had
deliberately overestimated the civilian casualties. As government
officials looked on, they claimed that Tigers had forced them to
lie.
The five men added that only up to 750 civilians were killed between
January and mid-May in the final battles of the war. They were then
taken back to prison, where they have been held for the past two
months for allegedly spreading Tiger propaganda.
The number was far below the 7,000 fatalities estimated by the
United Nations. An investigation by The Times uncovered evidence
that more than 20,000 civilians were killed, mostly by the army.
The doctors denied other former testimony, including the government
shelling of a conflict-zone hospital in February for which there are
witnesses from the UN and the Red Cross.
The statements met with scepticism from human rights campaigners.
Sam Zarifi, the Asia- Pacific director for Amnesty International,
said that they were �expected and predicted�. He added: �There are
very significant grounds to question whether these statements were
voluntary, and they raise serious concerns whether the doctors were
subjected to ill-treatment.�
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