Sri Lanka: Government Breaks
Promises That Displaced Can Go Home
19 Oct 2009 20:06:04 GMT Source: Human Rights Watch
(New York) - The
Sri Lankan government's recent statements that it aims to return only 100,000 of the original 273,000 displaced civilians confined to camps by the end of 2009 breaks a promise to camp residents and
the international community, Human Rights Watch said today. In May, the government announced that 80 percent of the displaced people would be able to return home by the end of the year.
Since
the end of the fighting in May, the government has released or returned fewer than 27,000 people, leaving about 245,000 civilians in the camps.
"Enough is enough," said Brad Adams,
Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "It is well past time to release civilians detained in the camps. Sri Lanka's international friends should tell the government that they will not accept any
more broken promises."
The Sri Lankan government has used its promises of rapid return (usually called "resettlement" by the government) to stave off international criticism over
its treatment of ethnic Tamil civilians displaced by war. The displaced Tamils have been held in detention camps, which the government euphemistically calls "welfare centers," where they are
deprived of their liberty and freedom of movement, in violation of international law.
Human Rights Watch has repeatedly called for all civilians in the camps to be allowed to leave, even if
security conditions do not permit them to return home immediately. Most could live with relatives or host families. Those who have nowhere to go could choose to stay in the camps, but this should be
voluntary. For those who did stay, conditions would be improved because the camps would be less crowded. The United Nations, the United States, the European Union, and India have all called on the
government to release civilians detained in camps as soon as possible.
The government has in its most recent statements dramatically decreased the number of people it says will be allowed to
leave the detention camps by the end of 2009:
On May 7, the official government news portal of Sri Lanka, http://www.news.lk/, announced that "[t]he
Government plans to resettle over 80 percent of the displaced families in the North before the end of this year."
Meeting with United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on May 23, Sri
Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa said, "The Government was already working on a plan to resettle most of the IDPs [internally displaced persons] within 180 days."
In a July 16
letter of intent to the International Monetary Fund, which awarded Sri Lanka a US$2.6 billion loan, the government said that it "aims to resettle 70-80 percent of IDPs by the end of the
year."
On October 6, however, Deputy Finance Minister Sarath Amunugama, attending the annual meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund in Istanbul, said that, "Sri
Lanka may resettle 100,000 people from camps by the end of the year."
On October 16, Resettlement and Disaster Relief Services Minister Rishard Bathiudeen said, "Our plan is to
resettle around 100,000 persons by the end of this year."
These recent statements suggest that only about 37 percent of the original camp population would be freed from the camps by
the end of 2009.
The Sri Lankan government has also made a number of statements about imminent releases of displaced persons from camps that proved to be untrue:
On August 29, the
government news portal announced: "Plans are afoot to resettle nearly fifty thousand persons now living in welfare camps shortly in their homes in Jaffna."
In an official statement
released on September 3, Northern Province Governor G.A Chandrasiri said: "All arrangements are in place to resettle 30,000 Internal Displaced Persons (IDPs) in 35 villages in Vavuniya
District."
On September 24, Minister of Mass Media and Information Anura Priryadarshana Yapa said: "The resettlement process of persons temporary [sic] accommodated at welfare camps
in Vavuniya is in full swing and as of today, the Government has resettled 40,000 civilians in their place of origin."
On September 25, the Ministry of Defense announced that active
preparation is under way for "resettlement of an estimated number of one lakh [100,000] of displayed [sic] civilians by mid-October."
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According to the UN, the government had returned only
13,502 displaced persons to their place of origin and released another 13,336 to host families and elders' homes as of October 9.
The media reported that on October 14, the Sri Lankan government
promised a delegation of local parliamentarians from India that it will release 58,000 internally displaced persons from camps in the next two weeks.
"The Sri Lankan government is playing
games with the lives and hopes of those displaced by the country's armed conflict," said Adams. "Its failure to address the genuine grievances of the Tamil community is disastrous for the
country."
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