UN concerned over shelling in Lanka
Updated on
Tuesday, February 03, 2009, 00:00
IST

New York, Feb 03: The United Nations has expressed
concern over the shelling of a hospital in northern Sri Lanka,
the scene of heavy fighting between the army and the LTTE,
emphasising the ever-increasing threat to the lives of some
250,000 civilians trapped in the region.
Gordon Weiss of the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs said that the hospital, in the north-east
of the island nation, was shelled numerous times on Sunday,
resulting in the killing of 11 people altogether, including
one nurse.
Weiss said that it is uncertain where the shellfire
came from but that his office had notified both the Government
and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) about the
damage.
The hospital has around 600 patients, with new people
arriving all the time. Hundreds among them are critically
injured and cannot be treated there.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is
trying to negotiate a new convoy out of the area and into
Government-controlled territory, where the patients can be
treated properly, Weiss said.
Meanwhile, the World Food Programme is continuing
negotiations with the Government to secure an adequate window
for the next humanitarian convoy into the area, though no
convoy has gotten in since last week.
The main priority of the UN right now is preserving
the lives of the trapped civilians, Weiss told the UN News
Centre in an interview over the weekend.

Bureau Report