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Sri Lanka steps up return of war-displaced

The international community has been pressing authorities to accelerate the process of resettlement; keeping people there for too long could breed resentment.

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Sri Lanka steps up return of war-displaced
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Sri Lanka has begun allowing tens of thousands of war-displaced Tamils to return home after months of being held in government-run camps, the head of the UN office responsible for emergencies said.

Almost 300,000 civilians were forced from their homes and moved into the cramped camps in the north of the Indian Ocean island during the final months of Sri Lanka's 25-year-old civil war against separatist Tamil rebels which ended in May.

Zola Dowell, head of UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha), said that from August to the end of October around 90,000 people moved back to their areas of origin, with 30,000 returning just in the last 10 days.

"We welcome the speeding-up of the return process," Dowell told Reuters in a telephone interview late on Wednesday from Colombo. "Over the last week, between 2,500 and 4,000 people a day are being transported back."

The international community has for months been pressing authorities to accelerate the process of resettlement, saying that keeping people there for too long could breed resentment and that the poor conditions demanded they be moved faster.

But the government, which has pledged to resettle around 80% of the displaced by the end of the year, said it first needed to weed out former Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) cadres and remove tens of thousands of land mines.

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