60 Elderly Persons burried in one mass grave

by senthil5000 | May 28, 2009 at 07:31 pm
109 views | 7 Recommendations | 2 comments

Deaths at the IDP camps of Sri Lanka gets increasing due to lack of proper food and medicine. Sri Lanka government has not given full access to the aid agencies who are willing to help the people inside the camp.    


Elderly people and babies are the most affected ones. Everyday atleast 5 to 8 deaths occur in the camps. Presently 60 elderly people and 6 babies are burried in one mass grave.

Bodies of sixty elderly persons and six babies, members of displaced families from Vanni region due to military operation by the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) and sheltered transit centres in Vavuniyaa were buried in one burial grave in Poonthoaddam general cemetery in Vavuniyaa Sunday morning, media reports said.

Death among the IDPs sheltered in Cheddiku'lam transit camp is on the increase. Five to eight elderly IDPs die daily in the transit camp.

Bodies of elderly persons and others are buried at State costs with the permission of the Vavuniyaa District Court as those bodies were claimed by their relatives and friends.

Meanwhile social activists said no action is taken to transfer elderly IDPs now being sheltered in transit camps to elders’ homes for proper care and maintenance.
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3
lalith

Tamilnet again!!!!!

I wonder what the editors have to say about this post.

0
Suranee

The Sri Lanka government says it is not abnormal that some elderly IDPs die while in the camps.

Deputy Minister in charge of social services Lionel Premasiri told BBC Sandeshaya that majority among nearly 270,000 IDPs are elderly and children.

"So it is natural that some elderly people die in the camps," he said.

He added that the police have taken over from the military on resettling elderly people.

Minister Lionel Premasiri admitted that the conditions in the camps are not ideal.

"Of course conditions are not similar to their own homes or hotels but we have provided them with adequate facilities," he said.

The minister said the government has to be careful while handing over elderly displaced people to their relatives as there is a risk of them being abused by the relatives.

In a report issued on Friday, Human Rights Watch says that a significant number of people in these camps have close relatives in the region with whom they could stay if they were let out.

The government has prevented everyone in camps it controls between the ages of 10 and 60 from leaving, citing security reasons.

The government has earlier announced that the elderly IDPs over 60 year will soon be handed over to the relatives.

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First Flagged at 8:29 PM, May 28, 2009 by jjenet

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