Human Rights Watch
(New York) - The Sri Lankan government should immediately release the 
250,000 displaced Tamils still held in detention camps, Human Rights Watch 
said today. Deteriorating conditions, including a shortage of water since 
October 5, 2009, combined with the prospect of flooding during the imminent 
monsoon season, have led to rising tensions among camp residents and clashes 
with the military.
Human Rights Watch called on international donors such as Japan, the United 
States and European Union member states to send a clear message to the 
Government of Sri Lanka that continued detention of the displaced will have 
serious consequences for Sri Lanka's relationship with the international 
community.
"With all these people penned up unnecessarily in terrible conditions, the 
situation in these camps is getting tense and ugly," said Brad Adams, Asia 
director at Human Rights Watch. Â "If they aren't out of there before the 
monsoons hit, their lives and health will be in serious danger."
The Sri Lankan government has confined virtually everyone displaced by the 
recent conflict to detention camps, unlawfully depriving them of their 
liberty and freedom of movement. According to the UN, by the end of 
September - more than four months after the end of the armed conflict - the 
government continued to hold 255,551 displaced persons in camps and 
hospitals, the majority in a large complex of camps called "Manik Farm" in 
Vavuniya district.
The government has come under increasing criticism for its refusal to 
release the displaced Tamils. On September 29, Walter Kälin, the 
representative of the UN secretary-general on the human rights of internally 
displaced persons, criticized the slow pace of release, saying that 
"immediate and substantial progress in restoring freedom of movement for the 
displaced is an imperative if Sri Lanka is to respect the rights of its 
citizens and comply with its commitments and obligations under international 
law."
Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has warned that Sri Lanka risks creating 
"bitterness" if it fails to resettle Tamil refugees quickly, and on October 
6, the British development minister, Mike Foster, said after a visit to the 
camps that, "freedom of movement is critical if a humanitarian crisis is to 
be averted."
Human Rights Watch said that the government's screening of camp residents 
for LTTE supporters has been non-transparent and protracted and that even 
people who have apparently been screened and cleared have not been released. 
In September, the Sri Lankan foreign minister announced that 162,000 camp 
residents had been screened. According to the UN, however, the government 
had released fewer than 15,000 as of September 28.
On several occasions the government has falsely claimed that it has allowed 
thousands detained in Manik Farm to return home. On September 24, for 
example, it announced that 40,000 people had returned to their districts. In 
reality, many of the people that the government claims to have released have 
been transferred from Manik Farm to other detention camps, while others are 
still held at a "way station," a temporary holding facility, in Vavuniya. 
According to the UN, more than 1,500 people who were transferred from Manik 
Farm to the way station on September 13 and were due to be released, are 
still held there, surviving in rapidly deteriorating conditions.
"While the government has the right to screen the displaced persons for 
security reasons, the process has turned into a ruse to hold as many Tamils 
for as long as possible in the camps," Adams said.  "The government's 
untruthful statements and promises should not fool anybody anymore."
The international community should demand that the Sri Lankan government 
release the people in the camps and ensure their well-being, Human Rights 
Watch said.
Deteriorating conditions in the camps
Several displaced persons told Human Rights Watch that camp conditions have 
recently deteriorated, creating tension and unrest.
Residents in several sections, called "zones," of Manik Farm have had only 
limited access to water since a main pipeline pumping water from a nearby 
river was turned off on October 5 because of low water levels in the river. 
Camp administration officials have restricted the amount of water per family 
to 30 liters. The UN refugee agency recommends a minimum of 15 liters of 
water per person per day.
Thirty-eight-year-old "Jeevitha," a camp resident in Zone 2, told Human 
Rights Watch:
"This morning I managed to get only 20 liters for our family of five. I 
won't be able to get more until tomorrow and this water is all we have for 
drinking, cooking, washing and bathing. For the last three days we have not 
been able to take a bath or clean properly. It is agony, and the camp 
administration here does not seem to care about us."
"Aanathi," a 30-year-old woman living in Zone 2 with her 1-year-old son, 
told Human Rights Watch:
"I stood in line for four-and-a-half hours today, but I gave up in the end. 
I am so tired. Yesterday, I lined up around midnight and I was only able to 
get water at nine in the morning. I got 30 liters for me and my one-year-old 
son. We managed with that, but I know of families with 10 or more family 
members who have to survive on the same amount."
"Maadhavi," a 32-year-old resident in Zone 1, said that people are getting 
desperate because of the water shortage. On the morning of October 7, when 
the water suddenly came back for about 30 minutes, people were scrambling to 
fill their buckets and a fight broke out:
"People were shouting and throwing stones at each other. We went to the camp 
administration, but they just told us that we have to endure it. If they 
don't get us water by tomorrow, we will tear down the fences and go to find 
water ourselves!"
Over the past two weeks, the Manik Farm camps have also been hit by strong 
winds, causing damage to shelters and exacerbating the already difficult 
living conditions. Twenty-year-old "Kumaravel," who lives in one of the 
camps with his family of five, told Human Rights Watch:
"The winds are tearing branches off the trees and tin sheets off the huts, 
which then fall on the tents. We are forced to cook outside and the wind 
blows dust and mud into our food, making it practically inedible. It is very 
difficult to live here."
Because of overcrowding in the Manik Farm camps, Kumaravel's family shares 
their five-person tent with another family of four. The section in Manik 
farm where they live, Zone 2, holds more than 52,000 people even though 
there should be fewer than 29,000 people there under UN standards. At night, 
the women sleep inside the tent while the men either sleep outside or in one 
of the camp's makeshift classrooms. Kumaravel is worried about what they 
will do during the rainy season, which usually starts in October:
"We had heavy rains about a month ago. It was hell. The ground here cannot 
absorb water so it just gathers. We couldn't even walk around. The 
authorities have done some work to improve drainage, but I doubt it will 
help much."
Rains in mid-August caused serious flooding, as water destroyed tents and 
other shelter, made cooking impossible for many, and caused roads to 
collapse, preventing delivery of crucial aid, such as drinking water. Water 
also flooded latrine pits, causing raw sewage to flow among the tents. Since 
then, shelter in Manik Farm - most of which was set up during the large 
influx of displaced persons in April and May -has further deteriorated. The 
emergency tents or shelter kits in which most people live were designed to 
last for three to six months.
Clashes between residents and the military
The mounting frustration among the displaced caused by the deteriorating 
conditions and lack of free movement has led to conflicts with the military 
guarding the camps. On September 26, soldiers opened fire on a group of camp 
residents, wounding at least two. A military spokesperson claimed the guards 
were compelled to fire when the group tried to escape and started throwing 
stones and a hand-grenade. The authorities also quickly concluded that, "The 
wounded suspects and the crowd had links with the terrorists."
However, witnesses gave Human Rights Watch a different account, explaining 
that Manik Farm camp residents are sometimes allowed to cross between two 
Zone 1 and Zone 2 to visit relatives or to collect firewood (which is 
unavailable in Zone 1). At around 5:30 p.m. on that day, a long line of 
people were waiting for permission to cross the road separating the camps 
when a soldier called on a man carrying firewood to come forward. Four 
witnesses independently told Human Rights Watch that the soldiers suddenly 
attacked the man. Â Kumaravel, who was one of the witnesses, told Human 
Rights Watch:
"A soldier started beating the man. Then another joined in. The people in 
the line tried to intervene, but one of the soldiers opened fire and the 
other took out a hand grenade and threatened to throw it. Soon, other 
soldiers arrived and started beating people."
Two witnesses told Human Rights Watch that after the soldiers had dispersed 
the crowd, the first soldier placed a hand grenade among the wood the man 
had been carrying and photographed it with his cell phone. Witnesses said 
that the man was taken away and that the wounded were taken to hospitals. 
The government said 19 displaced men were arrested after the incident. Human 
Rights Watch has obtained credible information that at least some of the 
arrested were beaten during their detention. At least some of those detained 
were later released.
The incident came just days after soldiers clashed with camp residents in 
another camp in Vavuniya. On September 23, residents at the Poonthotham camp 
attacked soldiers and police officers and their vehicles after the police 
took one of the camp's residents away. The riot, which lasted for three 
hours, ended when the police brought the man back.
"These incidents should serve as a wake-up call for the government and 
donors," said Adams. "It's time for international donors to send a clear 
message to Colombo that continued and blatant disregard for international 
standards will come at a price."
<http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/HRW/b54725641f810245411655a4c08b504b.htm>
-- 
Patrick Mac Manus
Midgaardsgade 13, 3. th.
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+45 22 45 41 78
Foreningen Oprør / Rebellion (Denmark): www.opror.net/blog/
Ny udgivelse: Den tilkæmpede historie - fabler og fortællinger. Forlaget 
Arbejderen 2009. http://arbejderen.dk/bestil_materialer.asp#Manus
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