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	38,000 Tamils face starvation in Vaharai, humanitarian 
	disaster imminent - Sampanthan[TamilNet, Sunday, 19 November 2006, 12:00 GMT]
 
	
		
			
				|  "...Under 
							human rights law, there is a recognised right to 
							adequate and available food...... whatever the full 
							contours and permeations of the right to food might 
							be, it is clear that it constitutes a violation of 
							the human rights law to deny adequate food to a 
							given population. Moreover, it would be especially 
							unlawful and egregious to deny the right to adequate 
							food as government tactic to control certain persons 
							or as a weapon of war. The most egregious violations 
							include denials of food and medicine or medical 
							supplies, especially for children.� If food 
							is likely to be used by both the general population 
							and enemy combatants, the destruction or denial of 
							food, in circumstances where one can reasonably 
							foresee that the general population will suffer, 
							will necessarily involve the indiscriminate use of 
							food as a weapon. [these] denials also 
							violate related prohibitions under the laws of war, 
							and constitute serious war crimes... 
							Fear of food falling into the hands of enemy 
							combatants is not an excuse for denying food to the 
							civilians... 
							It is time for the international community to 
							recognise that, in addition to medicine and medical 
							supplies, food should always be treated as neutral 
							property during an armed conflict. Because of highly 
							predictable consequences, both short term and long 
							term, food should never be used as a weapon of war. 
							.."  
				
							
							Professor Jordan J. Paust, Vanderbilt Journal of 
							Transnational Law, May �98
 |  Tamil National Alliance Parliamentary Group leader and MP 
	for Trincomalee District, R. Sampanthan, in an urgent letter to Sri Lankan 
	President Mahinda Rajapakse, Sunday, requested again the SL President that 
	food, medicine and other essentials be urgently rushed to the people of 
	Vakarai and Kathiraveli and urged Mr. Mahinda Rajapakse to intervene 
	personally and take every necessary step to ensure that this is done. 8,500 
	families from the villages of Trincomalee district, internally displaced to 
	Vakarai and Kathiraveli in addition to 3,500 families of the area are facing 
	malnutrition, disease and starvation. "A grave humanitarian disaster is 
	imminent," Mr. Sampanthan said. 20 November 2006
 His Excellency President Mahinda Rajapakse,
 President, Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka,
 Presidential Secretariat,
 Colombo.
 
 Your Excellency,
 
 STARVATION OF 12,000 TAMIL FAMILIES IN THE VAKARAI AND KATHIRAVELLI AREAS IN 
	NORTH BATTICALOA DISTRICT
 
 When we met you on the 16th of November 2006 together with your Secretary 
	and Principal Advisor, we raised with you the plight of the 12,000 Tamil 
	families in the above areas who had not been supplied with food, medicine or 
	other essentials for almost three weeks, and who were consequently 
	undergoing much human suffering. Your Principal Advisor clearly told us that 
	Vakarai and Kathiravelli would receive supplies by that evening, the 16th of 
	November 2006. We were greatly relieved.
 
 On the 17th of November, ten lorry loads of food were sent from the 
	Batticaloa Kachcheri to Vakarai and Kathiravelli, along with the Divisional 
	Secretary of the area. The lorries were stopped at Navalladdy � Cobra Bridge 
	� some kilometers south of Maankerni Army checkpoint by the Armed Forces, 
	and directed to return. One Brigadier Ratnayaka had later telephoned the 
	Government Agent and told him that no more lorries should be sent to Vakarai 
	and Kathiravelli areas, and that steps should be taken to evacuate the 
	people living in the said areas.
 
 We raised this matter in Parliament on the 18th of November 2006. Hon. 
	Minister Jeyaraj Fernandopulle, who intervened on behalf of the Government 
	having spoken to the Defence Secretary and others in the military 
	establishment, gave an assurance in Parliament that eight lorry loads with 
	food would go to Vakarai and Kathiravelli on that very day the 18th. 
	Accordingly eight lorries left the Batticaloa Kachcheri, with the Additional 
	Government Agent, the Divisional Secretary and Assistant Divisional 
	Secretary. They were stopped at the Maankerni checkpoint and could not 
	proceed further. They were directed to return to Batticaloa.
 
 No food has been sent to Vakarai and Kathiravelli after the 27th of October 
	2006, on which date a meagre supply sufficient only for a limited number of 
	people was sent. An adequate supply was last sent on the 20th of October.
 
 You will thus appreciate that for a period of over three weeks, no food, 
	medicine or other essentials has been sent to the people in these areas.
 
 These 12,000 Tamil families comprise of around 38,000 persons � men, women 
	and children. Of these families around 3,500 families are permanent 
	residents of Vakarai and Kathiravelli, and the other 8,500 families are 
	internally displaced people from the villages in the south, southeast and 
	southwest of the adjoining Trincomalee District.
 
 These persons are facing malnutrition, disease and starvation. A grave 
	humanitarian disaster is imminent.
 
 I have to request that food, medicine and other essentials be urgently 
	rushed to the people of Vakarai and Kathiravelli, and that you kindly 
	intervene personally and take every necessary step to ensure that this is 
	done.
 
 Yours sincerely,
 
 R. SAMPANTHAN
 TNA Parliamentary Group Leader & MP for Trincomalee District
 
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