End of war doesn’t spell end to suffering
The Evangelical Alliance Relief Fund
PRESS
RELEASE
May 19 2009
End of war doesn’t spell end to suffering for Tamils
Although Sri Lankan’s were dancing in the streets yesterday after the Government claimed victory against the LTTE (Tamil Tigers), the suffering of the Islands minority Tamils is far from over, said TEAR Fund programmes officer, Ian McInnes.
Mr. McInnes was working with TEAR Fund’s partner in Sri Lanka and directed a team who attended every injured civilian evacuated from the so called ‘safe zone’. More than 14,000 men, women and children have received treatment and support for the most horrific of injuries, he said.
The situation in the war zone over the past few months has been horrific, he said. “I have seen every single one of my staff members in tears, myself included."
McInnes now back in New
Zealand said he heard from his team last night that 1,200
arrived at their base in an appalling state. “For the
first time patients arrived with untreated wounds. Where as
the Red Cross and a handful of doctors still operating in
the war zone had managed to bandage the injured, and
amputate infected limbs, they could not reach all who needed
it in final days of the war as artillery and gun fire had
reigned in on the remaining civilians since Saturday last
week.”
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TEAR Fund will begin shifting its focus to running a IDP camp for up to 10,000 displaced Tamils, and will continue to receive the remaining injured civilians who currently lie scattered across the war zone.
He said:
“The end of one of the 21st century’s most innovative,
tenacious and violent rebel groups may indeed be cause for
celebration, but jubilant Tamils will be in short supply on
Colombo’s streets. They are yet to be given a leader who
truly represents their interests; they are yet to be
included fully in the political process in Sri Lanka; and
more than 300,000 of them from multiple waves of conflict
now remain severed from their traditional home lands.”
The task of uniting Sri Lanka has not really even begun
but TEAR Fund has been working to build trust between
Sinhala and Tamil communities through livelihood programmes
aimed at getting Tamils and Sinhalese to work together.
Ends