Anusha Palpita, a Sri Lankan government spokesman, said all civilians trapped in the war zone will be rescued within two days. "The president [Mahinda Rajapakse] assured that within the next 48 hours the thousands of Tamil civilians will be freed from the clutches of the Tamil Tigers," Palpita said on Friday. "All territory will be freed from Tiger control." The statement came as UN officials in New York said Vijay Nambiar, the chief of staff of the secretary-general, would arrive in Sri Lanka on Saturday "to help resolve the humanitarian situation".
Prior peace missions by senior diplomats have ended in failure, and on Thursday the Sri Lanka government vowed it would not cave in to pressure to halt the war.
Fighters trapped
Palitha Kohona, Sri Lanka foreign affairs secretary, told Al Jazeera that the Tamil Tigers were "sandwiched between two forces", with the miltary pushing from the north and the south.
"The fighting is mostly on the sea coast. That is not the area where the refugees are. They are concentrated in the centre of this piece of land." Kohona said the Tamil Tigers are using civilians to fight the army, a claim the group has previously denied. "The military knows there are quite a number of LTTE [Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam] combatants left. They are also throwing young people, children, armed with Kalashnikovs, against the military advance."
Humanitarian crisis
The developments came as the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which is the only aid organisation allowed to work in the conflict zone, said a boat attempting to evacuate wounded and carrying food aid had been unable to reach the area because of fierce fighting.
"Our staff are witnessing an unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe," Pierre Krahenbuhl, the ICRC'sdirector of operations, said. "No humanitarian organisation can help them in the current circumstances. People are left to their own devices." An army spokesman said on Friday that 4,000 civilians fled the conflict zone overnight. The government says people have been fleeing under fire from the Tamil Tigers, wading across a lagoon into government-controlled territory.
It is impossible to independently confirm claims from the government and the LTTE because journalists are banned from the conflict area and access for aid organisations is strictly limited.
The government says civilians are being used as human shields by the LTTE and need to be rescued, while the group says the army has been shelling the area, causing civilian casualties.
Navi Pillay, the UN's human rights chief, has said both sides may be guilty of war crimes.
"Our staff are witnessing an unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe," Pierre Krahenbuhl, the ICRC'sdirector of operations, said. "No humanitarian organisation can help them in the current circumstances. People are left to their own devices." An army spokesman said on Friday that 4,000 civilians fled the conflict zone overnight. The government says people have been fleeing under fire from the Tamil Tigers, wading across a lagoon into government-controlled territory.
It is impossible to independently confirm claims from the government and the LTTE because journalists are banned from the conflict area and access for aid organisations is strictly limited.
The government says civilians are being used as human shields by the LTTE and need to be rescued, while the group says the army has been shelling the area, causing civilian casualties.
Navi Pillay, the UN's human rights chief, has said both sides may be guilty of war crimes.
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