Sri Lankan war-refugees in India struggle to return homePublished on Wed, Mar 17, 2010 at 11:24 | Source : Reuters Updated at Wed, Mar 17, 2010 at 13:36
Many Sri Lankans who fled to Over 100,000 Sri Lankans are estimated to have sought refuge in southern The civil war ended in May last year with government forces defeating the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), but the fighting has left much of the north of the Indian Ocean island in ruins, heavily mined and hundreds of thousands of civilians are internally displaced. Tens of thousands of refugees, who belong to the minority Tamil ethnicity, have lived in camps across "The ultimate reason for being a refugee has diminished," said Christian Aid's Gordon Shannon. "Now, more than any other time during the 25-year-old war, is the most positive time to start preparations for the refugees to go back." "Both the Indian and Sri Lankan governments are positive about their return, but there is a lot of preparatory work which needs to be done and it could take another one to two years before we see mass organised repatriations," he added. No recognition According to Christian Aid, which has been supporting refugees living in 115 camps across Tamil Nadu for over 20 years, most fled the violence fearing for their lives with many losing loved ones during the fighting. After travelling in fishing boats from northern parts of Over the years, children have been born in the camps, refugees have married one another and many have gained education qualifications and vocational skills in Yet most do not have birth or marriage certificates while others do not have entitlement papers for the land they owned in There are also around 30,000 refugees who are "stateless" with no citizenship documentation. "The issue of documentation is very important and without this paperwork, they will be unlikely to return," Satchithananda Valan, project director for the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), told AlertNet by phone from Chennai, Tamil Nadu's capital. Valan, whose organisation has been supporting water and sanitation projects in the camps, said both countries were working with the refugees on how to overcome these bureaucratic hurdles.
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