Document #1074952
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Comprehensive data on the above-mentioned
subject could not be found among the sources consulted by the DIRB.
However, the following may be of interest.
The attachment from Human Rights in
Developing Countries Yearbook 1994 states that "by the
beginning of 1993, 22,000 thousands persons had been resettled in
areas "cleared" as safe by the military in Trincomalee, Mannar and
Vavuniya, and over one thousand persons had volunteered to settle
in uncleared areas." (1994, 378). In a 2 November 1993
Virakesari article, mention is made of the government's
attempt to resettle refugees in the Vavyniya district in 1993.
In March 1993, the Sri Lankan Ministry of
Rehabilitation and Reconstruction, as quoted by Mayan Vije in his
June 1993 report entitled Sri Lanka: Economic Blockade,
estimated that there were 11,407 displaced persons in Vavuniya,
3271 of whom were living in its eight welfare centres (22 and 23).
In September 1993, the figures released by the NGOs consortium
amounted to more than 24,000 displaced persons in Vavuniya, more
than 7,000 of whom living in the government-run welfare centres
(Chandrakanthan 5-9 Jan. 1994, Annex 1).
In a Public Information Fact Sheet on Sri
Lanka dated 30 November 1994, the United Nation High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) reported that at the end of August 1994, 2,253
refugees were in transit at the reception centre it established in
Vavuniya. And in February 1995, according to the Colombo-based Sri
Lankan Information Monitor (INFORM), following the government's
decision to close down all refugee camps in Sri Lanka, 4,640
persons living in 39 camps in the Vavuniya, Trincomalee and
Mulaitivu districts were reportedly "due for re-settlement" (Feb.
1995, 11).
For more information, please refer to the
attachments. For information on the travel conditions from the
North to Vavuniya, please refer to the following attachments: an
extract from an address by Professor Bruce Matthews to the
Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) branch office in Toronto on 19
January 1995, an extract from Human Rights in Developing
Countries Yearbook 1994, a 29 June 1990 AP report and a 4
February 1994 Los Angeles Times article. Further information
on the requirements to leave the Jaffna peninsula can be found in
Response to Information Request LKA16960.E of 11 April 1994.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This Response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum.
Chandrakanthan, A.J.V. 5-9 January 1994.
An exodus Sans Destination: Refugees and the Internally
Displaced in Sri Lanka. Fourth International Research and
Advisory Panel Conference: Conference Papers. Oxford: University of
Oxford.
Human Rights in Developing Countries
Yearbook 1994. 1994. Edited by Peter Baehr et al. Oslo: Nordic
Human Rights Publications.
Tamil Information [London]. March/April
1995. Nos. 44 and 45. "April Diary; April 9: Resettlement of
Refugees."
Vije, Mayan. June 1993. Sri Lanka:
Economic Blockade. London: Tamil Information Centre.
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR). 30 November 1994. Public Information Fact
Sheet: Sri Lanka. (HCRViews)
The Associated Press (AP). 29 June 1990.
PM Cycle. Dexter Cruez. "Vavuniya One of Hundreds of Ghost Towns
Emptied by War." (NEXIS)
Chandrakanthan, A.J.V. 5-9 January 1994.
An exodus Sans Destination: Refugees and the Internally
Displaced in Sri Lanka. Fourth International Research and
Advisory Panel Conference: Conference Papers. Oxford: University of
Oxford, Annex 1.
Human Rights in Developing Countries
Yearbook 1994. 1994. Edited by Peter Baehr et al. Oslo: Nordic
Human Rights Publications, pp. 377-79.
Lankapuvath [Colombo, in
English]. 18 May 1992. "Refugees Resettled in Former LTTE Areas."
(FBIS-NES-92-097 19 May 1992, p. 59)
_____. 20 February 1991. "Tamil
Civilians Defy LTTE in Vavuniya Area." (FBIS-NES-91-034 20 February
1991, p. 58)
Los Angeles Times. 14 February
1993. Bulldog Edition. Minoli de Soysa. "Crossing Risky Waters; The
Mundane Becomes Deadly Serious on Sri Lankan Ferry." (NEXIS)
Matthews, Bruce. 19 January 1995. Sri
Lanka, The Civil War and The Crisis of Immigration. Address to
the IRB, Toronto, Appendix 2, pp. 2, 3.
Sri Lanka Information Monitor (INFORM).
February 1995. Situation Report. Colombo: INFORM, p. 11.
_____. October 1994. Situation
Report. Colombo: INFORM, p. 10.
Tamil Information [London].
March/April 1995. Nos. 44 and 45. "April Diary; April 9:
Resettlement of Refugees," p. 9.
_____. November/December 1994. Nos. 40
and 41. "British Minister Visits Tamil Refugees," p. 4.
_____. September/October 1994. Nos. 38
and 39. "September Diary; September 26: Returnees Reach North," p.
6.
_____. November/December 1993. Nos. 28
and 29. "December Diary; December 7: US Officials in Vavuniya," p.
9.
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR). 30 November 1994. Public Information Fact
Sheet: Sri Lanka. (HCRViews)
_____. 1994. Repatriation of Refugees
from India to Sri Lanka; 28 January to 19 February 1994.
Colombo: UNHCR, pp. 9-10, Annex 1; Tables 2, 5.
Vije, Mayan. June 1993. Sri Lanka:
Economic Blockade. London: Tamil Information Centre, pp. 22,
23.
Virakesari [Colombo, in Tamil]. 2
November 1993. "Bid to Forcibly Resettle Refugees Criticized."
(FBIS-NES-93-218 15 Nov. 1993, p. 88)