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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, April 29, 2000 |
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International
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UN staff withdrawn from Jaffna
By V. S. Sambandan
COLOMBO, APRIL 28. In the immediate aftermath of the fall of
Elephant Pass and the further advances by the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam, the United Nations today said it was withdrawing
from the Jaffna Peninsula its staff working in rehabilitation
programmes.
``In response to the evolving security situation, staff working
in the rehabilitation programmes will be redeployed elsewhere,''
the UN's resident co-ordinator in Colombo said in a statement.
Over 60 staff and subcontracted personnel work for the various UN
agencies in Jaffna. The UN's relief assistance, however, would
remain ``unaffected'' as the staff working in emergency relief
programmes were ``not being redeployed''.
The FAO, the UNICEF, the UNDP, the UN Volunteers, the UNFPA and
the UNHCR, are among the agencies involved in assisting war-torn
Jaffna. The UNDP's Mine Action Programme, carried out to identify
landmines in Jaffna, has also come to an abrupt end following the
decision to pull out UN staff.
UNP for war council
The political fallout of the Elephant Pass reversal emerged more
clearly with the Opposition United National Party (UNP) blaming
the policies followed by the ruling People's Alliance coalition
and scoring a political point saying the Government's strategy
had been proved wrong.
Calling for a ``war council'' comprising retired senior military
officers ``who have served the country with dedication and
efficiency'', the UNP said ``the war was exploited'' by the
present regime ``as a shortcut for their own political
advantage''.
In addition to the war council, the party suggested that the
Government prepare a ``strategic plan, including international
assistance, military and political solutions'' to overcome the
present problem. Blaming the Deputy Defence Minister, Gen.
Anuruddha Ratwatte ``for the prevailing tragic situation'' the
party said, ``he sidelined efficient and experience officers on
political grounds and the war was entrusted to inefficient and
non-professional officers.'' The ``negative policies'', the party
said, resulted in ``a massive number of heroic youths sacrificing
their lives on the war front'' and wanted the war effort to be
``depoliticised''.
On the handling of the war effort by the President, Ms. Chandrika
Kumaratunga, the UNP said, ``it was conspicuous as well as
peculiar that the President did not appoint someone to act for
her while she was out of the country at this decisive juncture.''
LTTE makes more `claims'
On the battlefront, the LTTE today claimed to have advanced
further in the Jaffna Peninsula. Sources from the north, citing
the clandestine Voice of Tigers, said heavy fighting erupted in
the Peninsula with the LTTE moving from position gained after
last weekend's battles in the Iyakachchi-Elephant Pass sector.
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