Anger grows among Sri Lanka detainees: rights group

ALeqM5iesKlhctk8Z01y4-kwzkWhDyOGoQ A quarter of a million Tamil civilians detained in state-run camps since the end of Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict are in an increasingly "tense and ugly" situation, a rights group said Sunday.

Deteriorating conditions, drinking water shortages and the imminent monsoon have raised tensions among the detainees and sparked clashes with military guards, said the New York-based Human Rights Watch.

"If they aren?t out of there before the monsoons hit, their lives and health will be in serious danger," said the group’s Asia director, Brad Adams.

The government has said it is holding the displaced Tamils to screen them for former Tamil Tiger fighters — the separatist force that was finally defeated in May after decades of bloody warfare in north and east Sri Lanka.

Adams said the screening had become "a ruse to hold as many Tamils for as long as possible."

Most of the detainees are held at Manik Farm, a vast complex of makeshift shelters, which aid agencies and reporters are unable to visit freely.

Last month Sri Lankan troops opened fire as dozens of detainees tried to escape from the camp, injuring at least three.

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