Aid ship asked to leave without unloading the cargo
Sri Lankan authorities today ordered a foreign‐owned ship carrying aid for Tamil civilians to leave the island without unloading its cargo.
Sri Lankan defence ministry said the cargo of food and other supplies had been destined for the now defeated Tamil Tiger rebels.An official stated the ship had tried to enter Sri Lankan waters without following the proper procedure but added that a search of the vessel confirmed it was not carrying any arms or ammunition.
The organisers of the mission, Mercy Mission to Wanni, said on their website that the goods were meant for Tamil civilians caught up in the decades‐long conflict.An Icelandic national, Kristjan Guomundsson, who had served as one of the monitors of a truce between Tamil Tigers and troops between February 2002 and January 2008, was also aboard the Captain Ali. The mission’s website admitted the voyage might have violated international shipping and port safety procedures.
The supplies, donated by Tamils living abroad, were loaded on to a ship in the British port of Ipswich in April ‐‐ just weeks before the government declared victory in the ethnic conflict.
According to the group’s website, the materials were then ferried from England to the French port of Fos‐sur‐Mer. From there they were loaded on to the Captain Ali on May 7.




