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Sri Lanka: IOM works with government, partners to return IDPs


In close coordination with the government and the UN, IOM has scaled up its logistics and transport operations in the past month to help return some 90,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) from the Menik Farms displacement camp to their home districts across northern and eastern Sri Lanka.

The returns, in hundreds of IOM-chartered buses, were funded by the UK's Department for International Development (DFID) and Australia (AusAID), and at one point reached 4,000 people in a single day.

Destinations included Jaffna, Mannar, Trincomalee, Batticaloa, Ampara and more recently, Mullativu and Kilinochchi districts. (Tunukai in Mullativu and Poornaky in Kilinochchi have now been identified as safe return areas)

"IOM strongly supports the government's decision to empty the Menik Farms camp and return the IDPs to their home communities by the end of January 2010. We are also planning to work with our partners in the government and the international community to help the IDPs to rebuild their lives after they return home," says IOM Sri Lanka Chief of Mission Mohammed Abdi Ker.

The IOM return operation of the past month brings the number of IDPs to leave Menik Farms, which in July housed about a quarter of a million people, to over 100,000.

"An important aspect of the government's resettlement plan is to ensure that local authorities are ready to receive the IDPs, to provide protection to vulnerable people and to ensure their access to services," says IOM Sri Lanka Emergency Operations Manager Giovanni Cassani.

Clearing landmines and unexploded ordinance before the IDPs return home to towns and villages across northern Sri Lanka is a major challenge. IOM, with US$1.3 million of funding from Australia, has provided the government's humanitarian de-mining unit with 220 mine detectors, helmets and other safety equipment. Part of the money is also helping the Swiss Foundation for Mine Action (FSD) to hire more de-mining teams.

IOM is also helping returnees through the provision of shelter kits, transitional shelters and water purification systems, as well as clearing wells, and installing drainage and sanitation facilities. It is also setting up temporary health care facilities and strengthening the capacity of local government to cope with the additional needs of the returnees. Post-return, these will include early recovery initiatives and the need for new livelihoods.

In addition to the UK and Australia, the Netherlands and Sweden are also funding various IOM Sri Lanka IDP resettlement projects.

In parallel with the IDP return operation, IOM will continue to address the ongoing humanitarian needs of displaced families still in Menik Farms camp. This support will include the provision of emergency health care, temporary shelter, water and sanitation, camp care and maintenance, distribution of non-food relief items, transport, logistics and IDP registration.

For further information, please contact Aurela Rincon at arincon@iom.int or Stacey Winston, swinston@iom.int at IOM Sri Lanka, Tel: +94.1.15325300 Copyright © IOM. All rights reserved.

With the exception of public UN sources, reproduction or redistribution of the above text, in whole, part or in any form, requires the prior consent of the original source. The opinions expressed in the documents carried by this site are those of the authors and are not necessarily shared by UN OCHA or ReliefWeb.
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By Emergency: Sri Lanka
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By Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)
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