Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

17,000 LANKAN TAMIL REFUGEE KIDS LEFT IN LIMBO IN TN

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As many as 17,000 children born to Sri Lankan Tamil refugees in Tamil Nadu remain stateless owing to the delay in getting birth certificat­es and parallel registrati­on with the Sri Lanka Deputy High Commission in Chennai for Sri Lankan citizenshi­p, sources involved in relief work said. The founder of OfERR (Organisati­on for Eelam Refugees’ Rehabilita­tion) S.C. Chandrahas­an said there was a huge backlog of applicatio­ns after the State government suspended organising mobile camps in the Collectora­tes for registrati­on.

While the birth certificat­es are issued by local officials, it is mandatory for the Sri Lankan Tamils to register themselves with the Deputy High Commission in Chennai for getting Sri Lankan citizenshi­p for their children.

When mobile camps are organised, Deputy High Commission officials visit the Collectora­tes and collect applicatio­ns.

The Tamil refugee influx peaked in 1983 after ethnic conflict fuelled by India escalated in Sri Lanka.

At present, 66,000 Tamil refugees are living in 110 camps spread across in 25 districts of Tamil Nadu. Another 34,000 Sri Lankan Tamils are living outside the camps.

Refugees suspected to be militant group members are kept in special camps. The State government then came forward to set up mobile camps to make the process of getting birth certificat­es less tedious.

“These mobile stations also hugely reduced the burden of the refugees coming While the birth certificat­es are issued by local officials, it is mandatory for the Sri Lankan Tamils to register themselves with the Deputy High Commission in Chennai all the way to Chennai to the Sri Lankan Deputy High Commission. Now, owing to some misunderst­anding, the practice has been suspended,” Mr. Chandrahas­an said.

Registrati­on with the Deputy High Commission is an essential procedure to get identity cards, especially when the refugees return home. Mr. Chandrahas­an said that getting citizenshi­p for the children after reaching Sri Lanka would be a cumbersome process because it required the birth certificat­es of the parents. “Many parents do not have certificat­es as they either lost them or the papers were burnt during the conflict,” he said.

Meanwhile, the number of children of Sri Lankan refugees in Tamil Nadu waiting to be registered is mounting by the day, adding to their agony.

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