Several hospitals in northern Sri Lanka face increasing challenges

Statement by International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC):

The limited number of staff available to care for routine cases alongside war casualties has become a critical issue for several hospitals in northern Sri Lanka. In addition, the lack of regular deliveries of supplies from the country’s health ministry has resulted in clinics and hospitals in the Vanni (the four northern districts of Sri Lanka) running out of basic medicines such as paracetamol, antibiotics and vaccines.

By agreement with Sri Lanka’s health ministry, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is providing hospitals in Anuradhapura, Batticaloa, Jaffna, Kilinochchi, Mannar, Mullaitivu and Vavuniya districts with medical equipment and supplies for the treatment of sick and war-wounded people. In addition, it has supplied devices to Murankuran hospital to stabilize broken limbs.

The ICRC is also lending its support to the health ministry’s child immunization programmes and to ante-natal care provided for pregnant women in Vavuniya North. Almost 50 children were vaccinated and nearly 20 women received ante-natal care during the month of March.

‘We accompany Ministry of Health staff–one doctor and two midwives–to Nedunkerni and Kanakarayankulam, where they run clinics for pregnant women and ensure that children follow the prescribed immunization programme,’ says Yvonne Ginifer, an ICRC health delegate based in Vavuniya.

Under international humanitarian law applicable in armed-conflict situations, people not involved in fighting, including the wounded and sick, whether they be civilians or fighters, must be given any medical care they may require as quickly as possible.

Jaffna residents cannot obtain certain health-care services on the peninsula. To ensure that appropriate levels of health care are nevertheless available to them, the ICRC airlifts patients between Jaffna and Colombo twice a week. In March alone, 54 patients requiring specialized surgery, medical tests or treatment, accompanied by 35 caretakers and 10 medical staff from the Jaffna Teaching Hospital, were transported to Colombo on ICRC-chartered flights. In addition, medical equipment, vaccines prescribed for children through the national immunization programme and drugs for pregnant women were routinely transported on Jaffna-bound flights.

‘The ICRC flights are a great help for patients, especially those with complicated illnesses. For them, access to appropriate care is a matter of life and death,’ says a doctor working at the Jaffna Teaching Hospital who accompanies patients on the flights. Jaffna’s health-service personnel also use the ICRC-chartered aircraft to travel to other parts of the country for their medical training.

‘Vaccines must be stored and transported at a certain temperature. The only way to bring them to Jaffna while meeting this requirement is by air. Transporting them by ship is not an option because of the lack of cold-chain facilities and the length of time needed,’ says Toon Vandenhove, the ICRC’s head of delegation in Colombo.

Serving as a neutral intermediary at Omanthai crossing point

ICRC staff are on hand six days a week at Omanthai crossing point to facilitate the smooth passage of vehicles and civilians between areas controlled by the government of Sri Lanka and those controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). In March, the ICRC ensured the safe passage through the crossing point of over 3,000 vehicles and 33,000 civilians, including more than 170 ambulances and almost 900 patients crossing in both directions.

By conveying the remains of fallen fighters across the front lines, the ICRC has helped to clarify what became of many who might otherwise have remained unaccounted for. The remains are transferred only with the agreement of both sides. In March, the ICRC transferred the remains of some 50 fallen fighters from Kilinochchi, Mannar, Vavuniya and Welioya through the Omanthai crossing point. To help preserve the bodies, the ICRC upgraded the cold storage facilities in the mortuary of Anuradhapura hospital and started carrying out similar work in Padaviya hospital.

Protection of civilians and of persons held in connection with the conflict

The ICRC has continued to monitor violations of international humanitarian law affecting civilians throughout the country and to discuss them with the parties to the conflict. There have been regular reports of missing or arrested relatives, extra-judicial killings and ill-treatment.

With the cooperation of both government officials and the LTTE, the ICRC has been visiting a growing number of people arrested for security reasons. The aim of the visits is to monitor treatment and conditions of detention. On nearly 60 visits to 40 places of detention, ICRC delegates met with almost 730 detainees and provided them with recreational items, clothing and toiletries.

The families of more than 400 detainees recently received financial assistance to visit their loved ones in various places of detention. More than 30 released detainees received funds to return home via public transportation.

Restoring family links

In cooperation with the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society, the ICRC has taken steps to ensure that members of families separated by the conflict can maintain contact with one another. It collected over 400 family messages and distributed 230 during the month of March.

For further information, please contact:

Carla Haddad, ICRC Geneva, tel: +41 22 730 24 05 or +41 79 217 32 26

Aleksandra Matijevic, ICRC Colombo, tel: +94 11 250 33 46 or +94 777 289 682

Sarasi Wijeratne, ICRC Colombo, tel: +94 11 250 33 46 or +94 773 158 44

5 Comments »

  1. aratai said,

    April 17, 2008 @ 4:29 pm

    So what?

  2. Devinda Fernando said,

    April 17, 2008 @ 10:23 pm

    How many years now have the Sri Lankan government been providing the following to the North and the East?

    Medical Supplies
    Teachers Salaries
    Newspaper Paper Print
    Electricity
    Water

    ALL FOR FREE to LTTE controlled areas…ALL PAID FOR BY THE SRI LANKAN TAX PAYER – De facto state? Defacto WELFARE STATE of EELAM.

    Comment # 1 is correct? SO WHAT!???

  3. JeyP said,

    April 21, 2008 @ 8:06 pm

    If we are to go by comments 1 and 2 above lets stop giving aid medical supplies, salaries etc to the north and the East. Lets do that! Then we can well and truly say that there are two nations!

    Dont those in the N & E also pay taxes like the rest of us? Arn’t taxes deducted from the Teachers salaries like in the rest of the country? Dont they pay VAT which is automatically added on to the price of items? So if they pay taxes like this are’nt they also eligible for all the things that those in the rest of the country are?
    Idiots who don’t understand anything except the law of the gun thats who you both # 1 & 2 are! I didn’t know that there was GOSL supplied electricity in the LTTE controlled areas. I think #2 just says things for fun. Check your facts man before talking BS on a website!
    If as the GOSL says this is nothing but a terrorist problem then they have to give the same benefits to those in the so called uncleared areas as the rest of the country. Otherwise dont give any aid and they let the GOSL say that there are indeed two countries!

    HAhahahahahah

  4. Devinda Fernando said,

    April 22, 2008 @ 1:50 pm

    *** Dont those in the N & E also pay taxes like the rest of us? Arn’t taxes deducted from the Teachers salaries like in the rest of the country? Dont they pay VAT which is automatically added on to the price of items? ***

    JeyP
    GoSL does supply those things (check with the Ministry of the Interior if you don’t believe me) including the Medical Supplies. If we stopped supplying those things it would be Human Rights Violations under the UN charter…

    Electricity and Water have been provided for Free… Do your Income Taxes in the South of Sri Lanka provide you with Free Electricity and Water? Obviously not…

    How do you think places like Killinochchi hospital function? 24 hours a day Generators? LOL!

    there is Electricity provided to the whole North (and East prior to its Liberation) for FREE!

    Yes teachers pay taxes,… and whom ever is on the government payroll… but everyone else? They have been getting a Free ride on the South for so long.

    But don’t worry, when we go in there and Gut out the LTTE and clean up the Cancer that has formed …this year we’ll restore order to the North once again. Sit tight.

  5. JeyP said,

    April 23, 2008 @ 2:32 pm

    Devinda,

    My point is that if the GOSL delays in supplying these things as is obviously happening, then there is a valid argument for considering that the areas form two separate states, by implication.

    Anyone who is paid a salary had their taxes taken out after a certain limit is reached. Just like the rest of the country. The fact that the GOSL cant implement it is not the concern of the population but of the government just like the GOSL is not/ unwilling to collect it. People in SL will never willingly give money to a government doesnt matter if TAmil or Sinhalese.

    My counter argument to your initial views were based on the statement “so what” that you seemed to enjoy stating. That shows a lack of concern for people just like you and me. It is the very same attitude that was prevalent during JR’s time when dealing with the Tamil problem that made it into a terrorist problem and it is the same attitude prevalent in the this government as well. It is the Tigers defeating the Army in previous encounters of Eelam War 2 & 3 and the somewhat humanitarian/liberal outlook of CBK and Ranil that attitudes in the South (read Sinhalese) changed towards the ethnic problem. Now that the Forces won a few battles the thought line I mentioned earlier has resurfaced. Dont think that this war is going to be over soon. Check todays news, how many people loose their lives? I despise the Tigers showing dead bodies in the news, but the GOSL does it was well. Who is going to tell a
    little four year old girl that her father isnt coming home any more? Will you go and do it?

    If the GOSL does not adopt a more humane attitude in dealing with the Tamils, even if they “liberate” the Wanni they will never liberate the hearts of the Tamils. And until that happens you will never restore order in the North or for that matter anywhere else in the Country? Do you by the way call what we have in the South order? Order of the wild ass more like it!
    Where is the hearts and minds campaign of this government?
    If you still have the attitude “so what” then we will never learn.
    I think you should give the hearts and minds campaign portfolio to Champika Ranawake or Wimal Weerawansa dont you?

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