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Viewing cable 08COLOMBO1163, STAFFDEL AHUJA BRIEFED ON HUMANITARIAN SITUATION

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08COLOMBO1163 2008-12-31 06:28 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Colombo
VZCZCXRO7707
OO RUEHBI
DE RUEHLM #1163/01 3660628
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 310628Z DEC 08 ZDS ZUI RUEHSD #0177
FM AMEMBASSY COLOMBO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 9094
INFO RUEHKA/AMEMBASSY DHAKA PRIORITY 1201
RUEHIL/AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD PRIORITY 8200
RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU PRIORITY 6416
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 4620
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI PRIORITY 2479
RUEHNY/AMEMBASSY OSLO PRIORITY 4575
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO PRIORITY 3681
RUEHCG/AMCONSUL CHENNAI PRIORITY 8843
RUEHBI/AMCONSUL MUMBAI PRIORITY 6228
RUEHON/AMCONSUL TORONTO PRIORITY 0802
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA PRIORITY 3071
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI PRIORITY
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEHBS/USEU BRUSSELS PRIORITY
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 COLOMBO 001163 
 
C O R R E C T E C  COPY - CAPTION ADDED 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/INS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PGOV PREL PTER PHUM MOPS CE
SUBJECT: STAFFDEL AHUJA BRIEFED ON HUMANITARIAN SITUATION 
IN THE NORTH AND PROGRESS ON CHILD SOLDIERS 
 
Ref: (A) Colombo 1102, (B) Colombo 1071, (C) Colombo 985 
 
COLOMBO 00001163  001.2 OF 003 
 
 
 
1. (U) SUMMARY: During her December 11-16 visit, House Foreign 
Affairs Committee (HFAC) staff member Jasmeet Ahuja met with 
Government of Sri Lanka, NGO, UN, and international organization 
representatives to assess the humanitarian situation in the North. 
Humanitarian access issues for the UN and NGOs remain a serious 
concern.  Through UN and GSL convoys into the North, the basic food 
needs of internally displaced persons (IDPs) are being met, but the 
delivery of non-food relief items is being hampered by the GSL.  A 
recent agreement with the GSL to utilize the remaining NGO local 
staff in the Vanni to deliver and monitor humanitarian assistance is 
a small step in the right direction; however, the GSL continues its 
negative approach to NGOs through taxation, visa restrictions and 
public criticism.  During a trip to Vavuniya, Ahuja was briefed on 
high levels of paramilitary violence and visited a makeshift IDP 
camp.  In Colombo, GSL officials assured Ahuja that the TMVP would 
follow through on their pledges to give up the use of child soldiers 
completely. 
End Summary 
 
 
Government Pressure Mounts on NGOs 
---------------------------------- 
 
2. (SBU) On December 11, NGO representative briefed HFAC staffer 
Jasmeet Ahuja on humanitarian issues in the North and the increasing 
pressure the government is placing on their operations.  NGO 
representatives explained how their quick exit from the Vanni 
following a Ministry of Defense directive had forced them to leave 
behind equipment.  The government and nationalist media outlets have 
spun this as a concerted effort by the NGOs to assist the LTTE.  NGO 
reps reported that rather than forcing them to leave the country and 
then incurring bad publicity the government was engaged in a more 
subtle effort to impede and undermine their work in the country.  As 
an example, one NGO reported that the government had attempted to 
withdraw money from their bank account without their prior approval 
to pay back taxes.  (Note: We are investigating these reports and 
the legal grounds for such moves and will likely raise it with the 
government at the next CCHA meeting in January. End Note) 
Ambassador sympathized with the NGO representatives and encouraged 
those present to be more proactive with public outreach campaigns, 
suggesting that most Sri Lankans were unaware of the considerable 
amount of NGO work that is done outside the conflict-affected North 
and East. 
 
3. (SBU) Despite tension at the national level, NGO representatives 
praised the low-profile but effective collaboration between their 
Vanni-resident local staff - now known officially as "volunteers" - 
and the two Government  Agents (GAs) in Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu, 
districts that are still at least partially under LTTE control.  In 
September, when expatriate NGO and UN staff were ordered out of the 
Vanni, only non-Vanni resident Sri Lankan staff members were allowed 
to leave.  The majority of Sri Lankan NGO staff remained in the 
Vanni.  An agreement has been worked out between the GSL and the 
NGOs allowing these local staff members to continue their 
humanitarian relief activities with the blessing and loose 
supervision of the GAs, organizing themselves by sector 
(water-sanitation, shelter, food, education, etc.)  The "volunteers" 
have access to communication facilities so that there is some 
information flowing out on the situation in the Vanni and whether 
food is reaching the people in need.  According to the NGOs, the GAs 
publicly adhere to Ministry of Defense instructions not to ask NGOs 
for support, but privately - for example, after the recent flooding 
- the NGOs are the first place the GAs look to for help.  In a 
separate meeting with Ahuja, Presidential Advisor Basil Rajapaksa, 
stated that the reason the Vanni-resident staff are now known as 
"volunteers" -- i.e. civilians without official connections to their 
former employers -- is to avoid a repeat of the mid-2006 killing of 
ACF aid workers during ongoing hostilities in Muttur. 
 
4. (U) NGO representative noted that water and sanitation supplies 
and fuel were critical needs for the informal humanitarian 
 
COLOMBO 00001163  002.2 OF 003 
 
 
assistance volunteer network attached to the GA offices in the 
Vanni. 
 
 
Vavuniya Plagued by Paramilitary Violence 
----------------------------------------- 
 
5. (SBU) During a visit to Vavuniya on December 12-13, Ahuja was 
briefed on the impunity with which paramilitaries operate in the 
region.  As an example, contacts in the region told Ahuja that just 
days prior to her arrival an elderly woman was killed with an axe in 
front of her family at home approximately 200 meters from a Sri 
Lanka Army post outside of Vavuniya town. Four unidentified masked 
men had called her by name at the door, yet at the time of Ahuja's 
visit no one had been arrested for the crime. 
 
6. (SBU) According to reliable sources, since October 1, 88 cases of 
disappearances and 22 abductions have been reported to the Human 
Rights Commission in Vavuniya.  During Ahuja's visit, doctors at 
Vavuniya's hospital continued their strike of several days, 
reportedly to protest extortion demands made by the paramilitaries. 
 
 
GSL Ill-Prepared for Large IDP Inflows 
-------------------------------------- 
 
7. (SBU) Embassy contacts in Vavuniya told Ahuja that international 
organizations lack systematic access to the screening process for 
IDPs entering GSL-controlled Vavuniya from the Vanni.  Reports 
indicate that 421 IDPs were processed at Omanthai in late November 
after their villages were overrun by the ongoing Sri Lanka Army 
operations in northern Vavuniya.  These IDPs are now being housed 
temporarily in three Government-administered sites in Nellukulam and 
Menik Farm. 
 
8. (SBU) During her visit to one of the two temporary Menik Farm 
sites, a public school building, IDPs who were living in classrooms 
cleared of desks reported to Ahuja that they had wanted to leave the 
Vanni and that they felt more secure at Menik Farm, although they 
hoped to be allowed to move in with families or friends in the area. 
Meanwhile, the temporary shelters the GA has committed to 
constructing on 60 acres of nearby land have not been completed. 
Aside from crowding - up to 25 persons sleeping in a classroom - 
living conditions at the site were reported to be adequate: the GSL 
provided three cooked meals per day, IDPs had access to portable 
toilets and outdoor bathing facilities, and access to medical care 
was provided on site twice a week and through transport to a nearby 
hospital for more complicated cases. No protection issues were 
raised, although IDPs might have been reluctant to do so in group 
interviews. 
 
9. (SBU) According to reliable sources the GSL has struggled to 
process and house the 400+ recent arrivals and is not ready for a 
large-scale influx of IDPs, despite claims they will be able to 
handle up to 50,000 new displaced civilians. 
 
"Emergency" But No "Crisis" in the Vanni 
---------------------------------------- 
 
10. (U) Knowledgeable sources reported that the situation in the 
Vanni was an "emergency" but as of yet had not reached the level of 
a crisis; however, these same contacts expressed concern that the 
situation could deteriorate further.  Contacts in Vavuniya told 
Ahuja that monitoring the distribution of food relief, including 
USG-supported commodities sent to the Vanni through WFP convoys, is 
difficult. Only ICRC has a continuing presence in the Vanni and UN 
staff only have access to the Vanni as part of the food convoys that 
are scheduled to run weekly, but in practice move once every 10 
days. 
 
11. (SBU) Some sources speculated that GSL-imposed barriers to 
better monitoring was intended to limit the food supplied to the 
civilian population to survival amounts in order to expedite the 
exit of IDPs from the Vanni into GSL-controlled territory. 
 
COLOMBO 00001163  003.2 OF 003 
 
 
 
12. (SBU) Ahuja visited the logistics hub for the WFP's convoys, 
through which 4,990 metric tons of food relief - most of it financed 
by the USG - had been transported to IDPs in the Vanni. Artillery 
fire had halted the last convoy for more than an hour on its way in 
from Vavuniya near the edge of what is known as "no-man's land," and 
staff had seen evidence of shelling along the road when they 
returned the next day. WFP plans to feed an IDP population of 
between 200,000 and 230,000 with its food relief; current 
limitations on monitoring distribution make it difficult to assess 
whether this is adequate. 
 
13. (SBU) In a December 14 meeting in Colombo, Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs, Director General for Europe, Kshenuka Senevirathna stressed 
to Ahuja that the government has not stepped back from its 
responsibilities and will take care of IDPs who are their citizens. 
Senevirathna reported that the government has 2-3 weeks of buffer 
food stocks in the Vanni and pointed to the GSL's proven ability in 
handling a similar situation in the East during intense fighting 
there as proof that the GSL is capable of managing the humanitarian 
situation in the North. 
 
Working with the TMVP to Fulfill 
Its Child Soldier Commitments 
-------------------------------- 
 
14. (SBU) In a meeting with Presidential Advisor Basil Rajapaksa, 
Ahuja asked Rajapaksa whether he believed the TMVP will meet the 
requirements of the Action Plan TMVP leader Karuna signed on 
December 1 pledging a cessation of child recruitment and the release 
of those children currently serving the paramilitary organization 
(ref A).  Rajapaksa expressed confidence that the TMVP would comply, 
noting that there were two approaches, one legal and the other to 
cut MOD financing for the TMVP camps to ensure they fulfilled their 
commitments.  At the same time he attempted to create wiggle room 
for the government in the future by suggesting that some of the 
children on UNICEF's rolls may already have left the TMVP and thus 
will not be able to be identified. 
 
15. (SBU) In her meeting with Ahuja, MFA Director General 
Senevirathna commented that just because the TMVP has joined the 
political process doesn't mean the Sri Lankan government condones 
child soldiers.  She criticized the international community for 
holding the GSL responsible for actions of the TMVP. 
 
16. (SBU) COMMENT:  We will continue to push the GSL on the need for 
improved humanitarian access to the North for the UN and the NGOs, a 
needs assessment on the ground, non-food relief items, and 
monitoring of relief by international organizations and NGOs.  As we 
have pointed out to the government in public and in private, 
paramilitary violence and poor living conditions in IDP camps 
continue to act as disincentives for the Vanni's civilian population 
to move to government-controlled areas.  We noted with interest 
Rajapaksa's confidence that the government had enough control over 
the TMVP to assure its compliance with the Action Plan signed with 
UNICEF.  If true, we hope that the GSL will use that leverage, not 
only to release child soldiers but also to bring under control the 
systematic extra-judicial killings and forced disappearances that 
are associated with TMVP activity in the East.  End Comment 
 
17. (U) Staffdel Ahuja has cleared this cable. 
 
Moore