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  UN urges safety of civilians as Sri Lanka presses for victory
Last updated: 2009-01-31


UN urges safety of civilians as Sri Lanka presses for victory
2009-01-31

Category
Rebellion
Tamil Tiger
Nations
Sri Lanka
City
Colombo
Category
Regions
Regions
Asia
People
Ban Ki-moon
Source
(AFP)

COLOMBO (AFP) - Red Cross officials were on Saturday negotiating to evacuate more wounded from the conflict zone in Sri Lanka's embattled north as the island's military kept up its push to crush Tamil separatist rebels.

"We are negotiating with both parties (the government and the rebels) to the conflict to ensure safe passage for many more patients that need urgent medical attention," ICRC spokeswoman Sarasi Wijeratne told AFP.

She would not say how many patients "critically wounded" in the conflict and others suffering from heart ailments and other conditions might be brought out of Puthukkudiriruppu which lies behind LTTE front lines in Mullaittivu district.

On Thursday, the UN evacuated 350 wounded civilians, including 50 children, after negotiations with the Tigers, who have been accused by Sri Lanka's government of holding 250,000 civilians hostage in an area they still hold.

Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) political head B. Nadesan denied its fighters were holding civilians as "human shields", the pro-rebel Tamilnet.com website reported on Thursday.

"We have not imposed any restriction on individuals," Nadesan said.

The negotiations for the passage of more wounded came after UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Friday appealed to the warring parties to allow civilians trapped behind the front lines to exit the area.

"The Secretary General calls upon the... LTTE, in particular, to allow civilians in the conflict zone to move to where they feel most secure, including (to government-controlled) areas," Ban's press office said.

He also urged the government to ensure that civilians arriving from conflict areas were treated in "accordance with international standards", including being given freedom of movement and full access by humanitarian agencies.

The UN chief said he remained concerned about the fate of civilians, including tens of thousands of children, despite Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse's declaration of safe passage for them.

He called on both Colombo and the LTTE "to do all in their power to make this safe passage a reality and to ensure the protection of civilians in accordance with international humanitarian law".

The UN agency for children earlier asked Sri Lanka's government and the LTTE to give "absolute priority" to the safety of children and the civilian population caught up in the fighting.

UNICEF gave no figures, but the ICRC has said "hundreds" of civilians have been killed this month and "scores" wounded.

Sri Lanka's government denies it targets civilians.

"We have clear evidence that children are being caught in the crossfire, and that children are being injured and killed," said UNICEF's Regional Director for South Asia, Daniel Toole.

A group of international relief organisations, including UN agencies, appealed to the LTTE to allow civilians to leave areas under its control and asked the government to stop blocking international aid.

Sri Lanka's human rights minister, Mahinda Samarasinghe, said Friday there would be no let-up in the military campaign against the LTTE despite calls for a truce.

Sri Lanka's defence ministry says it is in the final phase of operations against Tamil Tiger guerrillas to end the long-running ethnic conflict.

The ministry on Saturday said the military recovered ammunition, hand grenades and fragmentation mines during a search of captured rebel territory in Mullaittivu the previous day.

The rebels took up arms in 1972 and had ruled a huge tract of northeast Sri Lanka, but have steadily lost territory as government forces escalated hostilities against the Tigers.

The government pulled out of a Norwegian-brokered truce with the rebels a year ago and has since been battling to dismantle the LTTE's northern mini-state.

Following months of heavy fighting, government troops have captured the LTTE's political capital of Kilinochchi and, last weekend, the rebels' main military base of Mullaittivu on the northeast coast.

Fighting is now concentrated around a 300-square-kilometre (110-square-mile) patch of jungle territory near Mullaittivu still in rebel hands.

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