Sri LankaCaritas boosts food aid in former war zone
(Aug.05,2009): Caritas Sri Lanka recently increased its food aid to war victims
with supplies for another 10,000 displaced civilians confined to camps in the country's
war-torn north. Officials of the Ministry of Disaster Relief Services had originally
asked the Caritas team to boost food supply for 44,000 extra people. Although the
Church's social action arm found it difficult to do so, it started its program of
increasing food aid on Aug. 2. Caritas already provides food for 73,700 of the
300,000 Tamil civilians held in 30 military camps in the districts of Mannar, Jaffna,
Vavuniya and Trincomalee. The organization presently provides drinking water and cooked
food for at least one meal a day.Fr. Damian Fernando, national director of Caritas
Sri Lanka, said he was moved to do all he could, after seeing how people had to queue
for food in the camps. He added that the financing of the additional aid would be
taken from the 1 million Euros that the Italian bishop's conference had donated to
war victims. Although most humanitarian agencies are still banned from entering the
refugee camps, the government has turned to Caritas, as it is having trouble coping
with the food demands. In a bid to ease the problem, Caritas-Jaffna opened three
vocational training centers in Sandilipay, Mathagal and Illavalai villages on July
30. The centers cater for around 100 school-leavers, who will be trained in sewing,
tailoring, computer skills, outboard motor maintenance and repair for boats, and marketing.
Caritas has imported 185,000 rupees (US$1,800) worth of sewing machines for use at
the centers. The total number unemployed in the country out of a population of 20
million has risen by 40,000 to 450,000 in little over a year, with the problem most
acute in the north.