UN Refugee Agency Steps Up Aid to Sri Lankans Displaced by Recent Fighting
New York, Aug 8 2006 10:00AM
Following an upsurge of violence in Sri Lanka, the United Nations refugee agency has stepped up its efforts to provide
assistance to victims of the conflict between the Government and Tamil separatists, but aid workers are still unable to
reach thousands of others in need of help.
Since Saturday, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has been helping many of the 21,000 Sri Lankans who have
fled recent fighting in the town of Muthur, where 15 aid workers from French organization Action against Hunger were
recently killed execution-style. The incident drew strong condemnation from UN officials that was echoed today by UNHCR
spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis, who called the murders “dark page in the history of humanitarian work in Sri Lanka."
With displaced people taking shelter mainly in schools and mosques, sporadic fighting is still reported to be going on
around Muthur. UNHCR staff “can hear gunfire from time to time,” Ms. Pagonis said.
The agency, working through local non-governmental organizations (NGOs), has distributed 1,800 plastic sheets, 2,000
jerry cans and 2,000 mats to displaced people, and more aid is in the pipeline.
But UNHCR has no access to Muthur, “where 4,000 people are said to be trapped, or to Eachchilanmpattai, where some
11,000 people are said to be in dire need of humanitarian help,” Ms. Pagonis reported.
Before the latest outbreak of fighting between the Sri Lankan government forces and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE), more than 312,000 people had been displaced within Sri Lanka since 1983, some 67,000 of whom are being
assisted by UNHCR.
ENDS