10 April 2009 - Stop shelling No Fire Zone, HRW tells Sri Lanka
Human Rights Watch in a press release demanded that the Sri Lankan government stop firing heavy artillery into the ‘No Fire Zone, where they estimated some 100000 Tamil civilians were trapped.
The Asian director at Human Rights Watch described Sri Lanka’s No Fire one as ‘the most dangerous place in the world.’
Reaching out to Human Rights Watch, a doctor in the No Fire Zone, said,
"We have been reporting every day, every day providing reports to relevant authorities and to the international community, and still there are no real steps taken to save these innocent civilians."
See full Human Rights Watch press brief here.
10 April 2009 - US Tamil organisations urge state department to check reports of chemical weapons used in No Fire Zone
Eleven Tamil organisations in a meeting with the US state department urged the US Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Robert Blake, to investigate allegations and evidence of chemical weapon attacks against Tamil civilians and called for aid to be delivered to the No Fire Zone.
See press release from the US state department meeting here.
09 April 2009 - Over 300 injured civilians admitted to Puthumaathalan make shift hospital
Over 300 injured Tamil civilians were admitted to the makeshift hospital with 47 people dying after being admitted throughout the day.
Sources on the ground told Tamilnet that several civilians that were killed by indiscriminate shelling and gunfire by the Sri Lankan military had been left were they lay.
The sources further added that an estimate of the total killed and injured for the day was hard to calculate.
09 April 2009 - ICRC team leader killed in Vanni
A team leader for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Sinnathurai Kugathasan, was killed by Sri Lankan military shelling within the No Fire Zone, rescue workers told Tamilnet.
08 April 2009 - Child nutrition centre shelled by Sri Lankan military
411 civilians including 100 children were affected by the shelling of a child care centre and milk powder distribution centre at Pokkanai, within the No Fire Zone.
Reports given to Tamilnet alleged that three artillery shells were fired into the civilian facilities, leaving 129 dead and 100 children injured.
An survivor of the shelling in an eyewitness account to Human Rights Watch, said,
“There had been no distribution of milk powder for three months, and so when they announced that there would be distribution today, hundreds of people lined in queue. It was early in the morning. I heard the first shell, and hit the ground. I survived by miracle, but my 45-year old uncle died on the spot- he lost both legs.”