The Lanka Academic

 
FEBRUARY 18, 2009 EST, USA
 
QUAERE VERUM
 
VOL. 9, NO. 318

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Sri Lanka Invites UN Envoy to Visit Civilians Displaced by War
bloomberg.com, Feb 18. Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka invited a United Nations envoy to visit civilians displaced by the civil war and called on the international community to press Tamil Tiger rebels to release an estimated 70,000 people held in the north.

John Holmes, the undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, will begin a three-day visit to the country today, the government and the UN said.

The military will continue its drive to defeat the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and “rescue the civilians being held hostage,” Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said yesterday, according to the government. “The onus is now upon the international community to exert its utmost pressure on the LTTE to free the civilians.”

The UN and international aid agencies say as many as 250,000 people are in conflict zones in the north and in urgent need of food and medicines. Sri Lanka’s government says it is trying to protect displaced people while the LTTE accuses the military of shelling and bombing civilian areas. More...Discuss this story
Published: Wed Feb 18 22:26:18 EST 2009


India offers Sri Lanka evacuation
bbc.co.uk, 18 February 2009. India has said it ready to help in the evacuation of tens of thousands of civilians caught up in the fighting in Sri Lanka.

Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee also told parliament the Tamil Tiger rebels had "done much damage" to the Tamil community and should lay down arms.

The UN and Red Cross have expressed deep concern for the trapped civilians.

The Sri Lankan navy has escorted a new convoy of food to the area but it is only a fraction of what is needed. More...Discuss this story
Published: Wed Feb 18 09:25:10 EST 2009 Back to the top


Sri Lanka fighting kills 38 civilians
Associated Press, feb 19. COLOMBO: Government artillery attacks and air raids inside Sri Lanka's northern war zone killed at least 38 civilians Wednesday and wounded 140 others, the area's top health official said.

Dr. Thurairaja Varatharajah said 13 members of one extended family were killed in their sleep early Wednesday when artillery shells exploded on their home in a village inside a government designated "safe zone" in rebel-held territory. The bodies were brought to the makeshift hospital Varatharajah is running out of a school in the area, he said, adding that the shelling appeared to come from government-controlled areas to the south.

Hours later, air force jets launched a pair of airstrikes in the area that killed 25 more civilians, whose bodies were brought to the hospital, he said. Witnesses in the area told him that as many as 80 civilians may have been killed in the strikes.

Several people also have died of disease without medicine to treat their ailments and hundreds need to be evacuated, he said. Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara denied targeting civilians, saying that the military only hit Tamil Tiger rebel positions.

"Some air targets were engaged, but they are all LTTE locations," Nanayakkara said, using the acronym of the rebels' formal name, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. "There are no civilians where we are conducting operations, and these are fabricated stories." Government forces have in recent months captured the rebels' main strongholds in the north and cornered them into a small sliver of land on the island's northeastern coast.

But reports of rising civilian casualties have grown, with aid groups accusing the government of shelling the overcrowded war zone and the rebels of using the civilians as human shields and shooting at those trying to escape. Both sides deny the accusations. Aid groups say some 200,000 civilians are trapped in the small territory along with the rebels but the government puts the number less than 100,000.

The government last week demarcated a 7.5-mile-long (12-kilometer-long) strip of land along the northeast coast as a refuge for civilians trapped inside the war zone. Varatharajah said that his hospital is again overcrowded with patients with more people seeking treatment for diseases caused by poor hygienic conditions, in addition to hundreds of wounded patients.

He said 11 people, including four infants and an 8-year-old child, have died since Monday without proper treatment for diseases like diarrhea, pneumonia meningitis and a lack of post-surgical care, as the makeshift hospital struggles with a serious drug shortage. About 350 people, including 12 children and 25 adults who need emergency care, need to be sent to better hospitals outside the war zone, he said.

The Red Cross has so far carried out three sea evacuations of more than 1,000 patients and their relatives. The government has repeatedly denied reports of drug shortage. Meanwhile, Sri Lankan naval boats Wednesday accompanied an emergency Red Cross shipment of food aid for tens of thousands of civilians trapped in the war zone.

The Red Cross said it was sending 30 tons of dry rations to the civilians in the north. Rebel political chief Balasingham Nadesan on Wednesday accused the government of creating a humanitarian crisis in the area. He denied U.N. accusations that it was recruiting child soldiers and holding the local civilian population as human shields against the government offensive.

"The U.N. is accusing the wrong side in addressing the concerns of the people," he told the rebel-linked Web site TamilNet. He also appealed for a truce, saying "the war has to be stopped immediately, paving way for negotiations."

Defense spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella rejected new calls for a cease-fire. The Tamil Tigers have fought since 1983 for an independent state for the country's ethnic minority Tamils. More than 70,000 people have been killed in the violence.
Published: Wed Feb 18 19:56:30 EST 2009 Back to the top


India: 70000 trapped in Sri Lanka war zone
cnn.com, Wed Feb 18, 2009. NEW DELHI, India (CNN) -- India on Wednesday urged Sri Lanka's Tamil rebels to "release" civilians, who it said numbered about 70,000 in Sri Lanka's war zone... Back to the top

Sri Lanka Sends Food by Sea for Civilians Caught in Fighting
bloomberg.com, Feb 17, 2009. Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka’s government sent food and medicines by sea to civilians sheltering on the northeastern coast to escape fighting between the army and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. “We have to find an alternative route to provide food for the internally displaced people since road transportation is impossible,” S... Back to the top

Running the gauntlet in Sri Lanka s war zone
google.com, 18 feb. TRINCOMALEE, Sri Lanka (AFP) — Shopkeeper Subramaniam Sudaharan says he is lucky to be alive after his two teenage sons were shot dead as the family fled Sri Lanka's increasingly brutal war zone... Back to the top

Sri Lankan War Nears End, But Peace Remains Distant
New York Times, February 17, 2009 . Just north of here, after a string of recent victories, the Sri Lankan military is closing in on separatist rebels in what it calls the climactic battles of the country’s long-running civil war... Back to the top

Sri Lanka to ferry food into war zone
reuters.com, Tue Feb 17, 2009 9:22am EST. COLOMBO, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka's government said on Tuesday it would ferry 50 tonnes of food and medicine to tens of thousands of people trapped in a fast-shrinking war zone... Back to the top

Sri Lankan Army, Rebels Fight in Civilian Safe Zones, UN Says
bloomberg.com, 17 feb. Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Sri Lankan civilians are being killed in fighting between the army and rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in safe zones declared in the north, the United Nations office in the South Asian island said. Both sides must find an “orderly and humane solution so that civilians, and children in particular, can be spared further bloodshed,” the office said in an e-mailed statement from Colombo yesterday... Back to the top

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