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| For Immediate Release: March 11, 2009 |
Contact: Austin Durrer 202-225-4376 |
Moran Pens Rice & Clinton on Human Rights in Sri Lanka |
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Washington, D.C., March 11th -- Congressman Jim Moran, Virginia Democrat, has organized a bipartisan Congressional effort calling for U.S. and international action to confront the grave humanitarian crisis in northern Sri Lanka. Over 200,000 civilians are trapped in the Vanni region of northern Sri Lanka amid fighting between Sri Lankan Government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (Tamil Tigers). Rep. Moran sent letters, signed by 35 House Members, to both Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice urging the State Department to use all its leverage to press for emergency civilian relief, safe passage from the conflict zone, and political reconciliation between ethnic Tamils and Sinhalese in Sri Lanka. “The crisis in Sri Lanka demands attention and action by all of us who care about human rights,” said Moran. “We simply cannot look away when hundreds of thousands of lives are threatened.” Members of Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and non-governmental groups focused on Sri Lanka praised Rep. Moran for his leadership in the Congress on the Sri Lankan crisis. “We thank Congressman Moran for his leadership to help end Sri Lanka's crisis,” said Tasha Manoranjan, Advocacy Director of People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL). “We deeply appreciate his support on this issue and his speaking out on behalf of civilians suffering in Sri Lanka.” Moran continued, “The attacks against civilians by the Sri Lankan Government and the Tamil Tigers should be condemned. Specific attention should be paid to the dire conditions and lack of security at detention camps where Tamil civilians have been evacuated.” Moran also organized a State Department briefing on Sri Lanka last week during which his concerns over the humanitarian situation were raised. ************************************** March 9, 2009
Dear Madame Secretary: We write with great concern regarding the grave humanitarian crisis in northern Sri Lanka. We appreciate the good work of the U.S. Embassy and the State Department, in concert with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), to arrange delivery of humanitarian aid and to press for protection of noncombatants in northern Sri Lanka. We applaud your recent statement with UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband calling for protection of all noncombatants and provision of increased food and medical supplies to head off further deaths and suffering. At the same time, given the gravity of the situation, we urge that you call Sri Lankan President Rajapaksa and press for full protection of all civilians, authorization for active involvement by United Nations agencies in humanitarian relief, and progress toward a political settlement that grants ethnic Tamils meaningful participation in national governance and an end to discrimination against them. Your active leadership at this critical time can help save thousands of lives and make progress toward a sustainable political solution to end the horrific cycle of violence in the country. We urge you to continue to condemn all attacks against civilians by the Sri Lankan Government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Both sides need to establish humanitarian corridors to allow noncombatants to travel freely and to receive humanitarian assistance. All UN agencies and aid workers, as well as journalists and human rights monitors, need to be granted access to the region, and we hope this can be arranged soon. We urge you to encourage the Sri Lankan government to fully investigate and prosecute attacks on journalists. Also of great concern to us are the conditions in the internment camps set up by the Sri Lankan Government to relocate Tamil civilians from the conflict zone. While providing refuge for noncombatants seeking to flee the violence is clearly a priority, these camps are not adequate to the humanitarian needs of the civilians there. As Human Rights Watch noted in its Feb. 20 report, these camps are “internment centers masquerading as ‘welfare villages’…where entire families detained in these military-controlled, barbed-wire camps are denied their liberty and freedom of movement.” Currently, paramilitaries operate inside the camps, and numerous women, men and children have been attacked or forcibly taken from them, and some remain missing, according to human rights monitors. All civilians in the camps need to be given the freedom either to remain in the camps or to return home when they wish, and to be treated in full accordance with international norms. We believe that the ICRC should continue playing a key role in assisting civilians to leave the conflict zone, while United Nations agencies could assume leadership in helping to administer and to provide security in the camps. We urge you to encourage the United Nations to play this role and the Sri Lankan Government to allow the UN to do so. We urge continued efforts to press other UN Security Council members to bring Sri Lanka’s crisis to the agenda of the Security Council. We also wish to point out that the Genocide Prevention Project considers Sri Lanka one of eight countries on “Red Alert” – a ranking reserved for countries experiencing ongoing or imminent genocide. While some would dispute the legal definitions of genocide at this time, there can be no doubt that ethnic-based violence is widespread in Sri Lanka, and Tamil noncombatants are deliberately victimized by Sri Lankan Government policies. Finally, we strongly encourage active U.S. leadership to bring about a long-delayed political settlement to the conflict that will guarantee Tamils full political rights and participation in their governance, and an end to the longstanding ethnic discrimination that has fueled the half-century-long violence. Until the ethnic conflict is substantively addressed, there will not be an enduring end to the conflict. As U.S. and international reconstruction aid is provided to Sri Lanka in the coming months, we urge that the Administration work with other international donors to condition assistance on meaningful participation by Tamils in the government. This is important leverage that the international community possesses, and we believe we should insist on progress toward a just political solution as part of our engagement with Sri Lanka. We appreciate your attention to this urgent crisis.
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