The
The ICRC on Thursday, July 9, said it had been ordered by
The BBC’s correspondents say that the announcement is significant because if the ICRC cuts back staff considerably, it could mean that eventually there is no independent monitoring of barbed-wire ringed camps in which over three hundred thousand people are interned.
The ICRC has had a strained relationship with the Sri Lankan government which accused the Geneva-based charity of inciting panic over civilian deaths.
As fighting escalated in the final days of the conflict with the Tamil Tigers, the ICRC had spoken of an unfolding "humanitarian catastrophe" in the war zone amid a surge in civilian casualties.
The ICRC was the only outside agency with access to the area of combat, taking in aid and evacuating wounded people by ship, the BBC pointed out.
Sarasi Wijeratne, ICRC spokesperson in
"The ICRC is in the process of reviewing its setup and operational priorities in
Meanwhile, the
A statement posted on the website of the British foreign office said that Minister Lord Malloch- Brown had urged the government of
“Although the conventional conflict in Lanka has now ended, this does not mean that the presence of the ICRC ceases to be necessary as significant challenges still remain, particularly in relation to the civilians in camps for the IDPs,” Brown said.
“We urge the government of
In recent times, the government has imposed about one percent tax on foreign donations received by NGOs. Visas to expatriate workers, including the head of agencies, are also restricted and in some cases reduced to six months with provisions to renew, which becomes a cumbersome process mired in bureaucracy. Expatriates normally serve a 3-year period.