| Sri Lanka: Health as a Weapon of War?by Shiamala Suntharalingam, general practicioner, London, British Medical Journal, June 8, 2009  
	
		| Severine Ramon, coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières, said the IDPs were
  living in misery. "Due to unhygienic living conditions,   even wounds are not
  healing, prolonging the agony of those living inside the   camps," she is
  reported to have said.   Many of the adults and children are malnourished due to the lack of food,
  and   this further impedes recovery from injuries. |  See also 
    'The Human Rights to Food,      Medicine and Medical Supplies, and Freedom from Arbitrary and Inhuman Detention and      Controls in Sri Lanka' shiamala@hotmail.com
 In 2003 I   worked as an overseas volunteer doctor for six months in the Tamil
  north.   That is when I realised the extent of the physical and psychological
  trauma   that the Tamil people had faced during Sri Lanka’s 30 year civil   war.
   Throughout the conflict successive governments have used access to   medicines as
  a weapon of war against the Tamils who were living outside the   military
  controlled areas in the Tamil north east of the island.   The recent conflict, which began in 2006, is no different.
 Since 2006 the   Sri Lankan government and its armed forces have systematically
  blocked the   provision of clean water, shelter, food, and medicines by civil
  organisations   as well as local and international non-governmental
  organisations (NGOs).   In
  2008 all international NGOs working in the northern region of   Vanni,
  including Médecins Sans Frontières, were ordered out. It became a   war
 without any witnesses.
 
 In December 2004 the Boxing Day tsunami   brought more death and destruction
  to people who were already recovering from   war trauma. During this natural
  disaster the Sri Lankan authorities denied   access to the north east for long
  term relief and rehabilitation projects by   NGOs and even prevented former US
  president Bill Clinton from visiting the   affected Tamil areas.
   The   current phase of the civil war in northern Sri Lanka came to an end   last
  month. Almost 280 000 Tamil men, women, and children surrendered to the   Sri
  Lankan military after suffering continuous war, deaths, injuries, and   war
  related displacements for almost three years. At the moment they are   all
  forcibly kept under the direct custody of the Sri Lankan authorities.   The
  officials refer to these people as internally displaced persons   (IDPs).
 Independent reports indicate that these people are kept in   overcrowded camps   and are not allowed to come out or communicate with the outside   world.
  Members of the same family are forcibly kept in different locations.   Women
  have been separated from their families and sexually abused, according   to
  Britain’s Channel 4 News. Children in the camps are not allowed to go   to
  school. IDPs who are teachers are not allowed to go to work. In short   there is
  no freedom of movement. At the moment the official pronouncement is   that
  these people will be kept under these conditions for the next three   years or
  so.
 
 According to local NGOs, the sick are allowed to seek   limited medical help
  at local hospitals under military escort. The local   hospital in this
  particular area, Vavuniya hospital, is already poorly manned   and equipped
  because of the war. I have heard from colleagues in the area   that Tamil
  doctors from other regions of Sri Lanka who came forward to serve   these
  people have been refused access.
 
 During a lightning one-day   visit last week, United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon
  described the camp   conditions as "appalling" and pressed the Sri Lankan
  government to allow aid   agencies more access to work inside the camps. He
  left without receiving any   such assurance.
 
 Severine Ramon, coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières,   said the IDPs were
  living in misery. "Due to unhygienic living conditions,   even wounds are not
  healing, prolonging the agony of those living inside the   camps," she is
  reported to have said.   Many of the adults and children are malnourished due to the lack of food,
  and   this further impedes recovery from injuries.
 
 The safety of Liberation   Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fighters, both men and
  women who have   surrendered and are now prisoners of war, is questionable and
  the Tamil   diaspora fears that they will be subject to torture,
  disappearances, and   extrajudicial killings by the Sri Lankan armed forces.
 
 During the last   three years only a handful of local doctors remained in the
  war zone serving   almost 300 000 people. Among them, T Sathiyamoorthy, T
  Varatharajah, and V   Shanmugarajah provided valuable services as well as
  maintaining contact with   the media and also with NGOs such as the United
  Nations, informing the world   about the conditions they faced.   All three of these doctors have been detained by the Sri Lankan armed
  forces   and their safety is uncertain. Another doctor, J Sivamanoharan, who
  provided   mental health services in the war zone during the same period, was
  killed in   the war.
 
 The Tamil diaspora, living mainly in the West, is more than a   million
  strong, and we are in touch with our friends, relatives, and NGO   workers in
  Sri Lanka. Local health workers inform us that the Sri Lankan   Ministry of
  Health is not allowing Tamil doctors to assist the injured and   sick inside
  the camps. The Sri Lankan Medical Association has not taken any   obvious
  action over the above critical issues. I have yet to receive a reply   to my
  request on 22 May 2009 asking them to inquire about the wellbeing of   the
  three doctors mentioned above and to provide much needed medical   assistance
  to the IDPs.
 
 At this juncture I feel helpless and utterly   frustrated for my people.
 *Cite this as:* *BMJ* 2009;338:b2304
 
 
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