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New Delhi, May 22. India dispatched
a team of 27 doctors and paramedics to the war
ravaged northern Sri Lanka, where the large civilian
Tamil population is still reeling under the effects
of the civil war.
An Indian Air Force (IAF) IL-76 transport aircraft
took off from New Delhi for Colombo soon after
the Sri Lankan forces captured the northern areas,
carrying on board the medical team, including
a surgeon and a paediatrician.
“The team is also carrying about 30 tonnes of
medicines worth over Rs.3 crore (Rs.30 million)
to replenish stores at the field hospital run
by the Indian armed forces in a camp for the internally
displaced persons (IDPs),” IAF spokesperson Wing
Commander Tarun Kumar Singha said.
Supplies worth another Rs.15 crores (Rs.150 million)
will be dispatched to Sri Lanka shortly to provide
temporary housing for the IDPs. Assistance is
also in the pipeline for demining operations,
creation of infrastructure and reconstruction
of houses.
India has deployed a selfcontained emergency
medical unit and hospital in Sri Lanka since March
2009. The 110-bed facility is run by a 62-member
team that includes eight doctors and paramedics.
It has been operating out of Pulmoddai town on
the northeastern coast of Sri Lanka.
The hospital provides urgent medical care to
civilians evacuated out of the former conflict
zone by the Red Cross. The
hospital has so far treated more than 3,000 war
wounded and trauma patients.
“In view of the greater requirement in and around
Vavuniya, India’s Emergency Medical Unit with
Hospital is being shifted to Menik Farm Area Zone
1 near Vavuniya, which has a significant population
of internally displaced people in need of medical
care,” Singha said.
India has been providing urgent relief assistance
to civilians affected by the conflict in northern
Sri Lanka. The Indian government has also approved
a grant of Rs.100 crore (Rs.1 billion) for humanitarian
relief assistance to civilians. The Tamil Nadu
government has separately pledged Rs.25 crore
(Rs.250 million).
India’s relief assistance so far has included
food, clothing, medicines and other essential
supplies. Since November 2008, the Indian government
has provided 170,000 family relief packs for the
population affected by the conflict. The packs
include dry rations, personal hygiene items, clothes,
utensils and water purification tablets.
(IANS)
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