283,000 displaced
When Sri Lanka's three-decade-long war officially came to an end on 19 May, more than a million people had, over the course of the conflict, been forced to leave their homes. Yet more than a month after that ignominious 'end', the socio-political issues involving these people are yet to be resolved, even while humanitarian and development concerns, as well as political and security unease, loom ever larger and more complicated. For many, such concerns are now overshadowing the Sri Lankan Army's military victory.
As the hundreds of thousands of displaced are now under the territorial jurisdiction of the Sri Lankan government, the primary responsibility for their welfare and protection lies with the respective governing authorities. At the moment, there are 34 camps for these internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the north, with most concentrated in the district of Vavuniya. According to the government, there are some 283,000 displaced persons spread across the northern districts of Mannar, Jaffna, Trincomalee and Vavuniya.