Humanitarian crisis in Sri Lanka as nearly 250,000 caught up in fighting
source: http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/article.cfm?id=3381&cat=field-news&ref=home-center
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- JanforGore
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'Yesterday, 226 sick and wounded civilians, 51 of them children, were evacuated by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the UN from the Vanni district of Sri Lanka's Northern Province after being wounded during fighting between government forces and rebel group the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Delays at a government checkpoint in the town of Omanthai, in Vavuniya district, meant that patients were arriving throughout the night and into the early morning at Vavuniya Hospital, where Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is providing support. Some of the patients were wounded during the recent fighting while others were suffering from festering wounds up to two or three weeks old.
During the fighting, many patients lost limbs due to shrapnel and shells. “I saw one man with a missing leg and a missing arm, a young boy with two missing arms, and countless others. Most have been wounded by shrapnel. One young boy stated that all of his siblings were killed from a shell,” MSF deputy head of mission Lisabeth List said from Vavuniya Hospital.
MSF is providing medical and logistical support, and will deploy a surgeon at the request of the hospital. MSF also provides mental health counselling for patients traumatized by the fighting. People are in shock, and extremely worried about the relatives they had to leave behind. Most people lost everything but the clothes on their backs as they fled to safety.
Nearly 250,000 people remain trapped under heavy fire in an increasingly small area in northern Sri Lanka. MSF has received information that nearly 600 civilians have been treated in small hospitals inside the LTTE-controlled area for conflict-related injuries since the beginning of January. Hospitals are overburdened and in need of medical supplies and medical staff. If needed, MSF will deploy mobile medical clinics to provide assistance in the conflict area of the Vanni, or outside it if civilians are able to move to safety.
Reports suggest that in Puthukkudiyiruppu, on the northern coast of the Vanni, there are still between 300 and 400 wounded patients in a hospital needing urgent transport to Vavuniya, and that people are still seeking safety on the Puthukkudiyiruppu hospital grounds.
Humanitarian assistance in the Vanni has been extremely restricted since the government forced all NGOs and UN agencies to leave in September 2008. Though the UN has been permitted to send food into the area, the amount has not been adequate for the needs of the population. “We supported a severely malnourished child whose father is dead, the mother very thin, he has two other siblings, and the grandmother had an amputated arm. They all arrived in the hospital together. We expect that there will be more severely malnourished children to arrive eventually. We hope to do a nutrition screening of all of the children in the hospital and admit malnourished children into the feeding program,” List said.
MSF provides mental health support in the Vavuniya area and has been working for some time in Vavuniya Hospital, providing laboratory support. Until March 2008, MSF had a surgical team in the hospital. MSF also runs ambulatory feeding programs for malnourished children in the Vavuniya area. MSF is also working in the Point Pedro hospital in Jaffna Peninsula, at the northern tip of Sri Lanka, with medical and surgical activities, obstetric and gynecological treatment and training of hospital staff."
Related: Sri Lanka
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- News and Politics
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FreedomForAll
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I think the Sri Lankan government has done a great job of barring independent media access to the region - one of the biggest reasons the international community is not aware of the urgent humanitarian needs in the region. We need to do our part to spread awareness of the issue. Here, in the USA let's keep our voices loud until we are heard. Anyone up for forming a human chain in different cities across the USA?? I'm totally in. Let's use our hearts and minds to make a positive change for peace.
- 4 years ago
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FreedomForAll
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JanforGore
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Fifty two Civilians Killed In A Day In Sri Lanka War
So now it's less than 250,000 caught in this.
This has the potential to be even more horrific than it is already. And again, where is the international community?
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Thanks for the important information. I would hope Current TV would cover this.
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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FreedomForAll
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Canadian Tamils form human chain to protest Sri Lanka's genocide: Dear Current Community, let's see if we can do something similar in the USA to help spread awareness of this urgent humanitarian cause.
- 4 years ago
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FreedomForAll
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Betico
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MIA has been doing the interview circuit calling what is happening to the Tamil people genocide by the Sri Lankan government.
- 4 years ago
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Betico
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blood77
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There was question asked to the first man to ever bring a camera on to a battle field. The question was simply "Why would you bring a camera and not a gun?"
The man responded with "Because I want to take pictures so I can show people what war really is. So that way we will have something to think about the next time we think fighting is the only solution. So that maybe there wont be another battle field for me to go to."
- 4 years ago
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blood77
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toreyray
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Civilian Casualties Rise in Sri Lanka Fighting
- 4 years ago
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toreyray
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JanforGore
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UN Concerned Over Shelling of Hospital
Are you concerned? According to this article the UN has notified both sides to not do anything to further civilian casualties.
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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derek901
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Will the UN condem the tigers?
- 4 years ago
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derek901
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JanforGore
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And here as in all wars, children are the victims.
And neither side really cares. Both sides still blame each other for the rash of civilian disappearances that have occurred in Sri Lanka.
And while I do not defend either side in this I fear for the innocent Tamil people caught up in this. On the one hand you have the government asking the LTTE to allow them safe passage instead of using them as human shields; but on the other hand you have to wonder if the Sinhalese government will even allow them to live side by side with them equally once this is over. Is it ever really over?
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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Dut
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tamilsforjustice.com
- 4 years ago
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Dut
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Bren589
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i have not watched CNN at all today since I got the news from my doctor this morning . been too damn depressed
- 4 years ago
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Bren589
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JanforGore
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I was surprised to see it on CNN.
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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unimatrix0
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good post jan
sri lanka is one of the darkest places on the planet and gets little coverage.
- 4 years ago
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unimatrix0
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Bren589
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when will the world learn that war is not the answer , the only answer is Peace . until every country finds peace , then all there will be is more death more destruction. god I hate knowing so many innocent people die everyday because of war.. GRRRRRRRRRRRrr
- 4 years ago
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Bren589
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JanforGore
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Bren589:
So true, and what a beautiful land it once was. If you have never tasted Ceylon Tea you are missing a great pleasure in life. So heartbreaking to see so much pain and war around us in such a beautiful world. That's why I love looking at space images of Earth. Unfortunately, the only peaceful images there are.
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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My previous entry on this with information regarding the history of this civil war.
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
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cerealforeal
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JanforGore:
I think the IDF could learn how to fight against rebels that hide within civilian areas from the Sri Lankan Army.
- 4 years ago
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cerealforeal
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JanforGore
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Aid groups: Sri Lanka situation "nightmarish."
But of course, "government" spokespeople always say that the aid groups and humanitarian organizations that are actually there don't know what they are talking about. Seems to be the same in any war.
I don't see what progress will be made even should the Tamils fold. There will not be peace in this region as long as they are marginalized. And that is not in defense of any side in this, just an observation.
- 4 years ago
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JanforGore
