A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, May 16, 2013
Close to home, but not close enough
However, as many as 5,000 families are about to begin a
legal battle for their land rights, said S. Sugirthan, chairman of the Valli
North Pradeshiya Sabha — the local body — in Kankesanthurai,
Jaffna.
Resettled
Tamils like Selvi and Gunaratnam (Jaffna) are unhappy in government-sponsored
dwellings.

MEERA SRINIVASAN
JAFFNA, May
14, 2013
The country’s 30-year ethnic conflict may have ended four years
ago, but for Gunaratnam Selvi — who remained displaced for considerable part of
the war — the daily battle for food is far from over.
“I
pawned my earrings a few days ago because we had no money for food,” said Ms.
Selvi, who has been residing in a thatched-roof home in an Internally Displaced
Persons (IDP) camp in Konappulam, Jaffna, since her family’s return in
2002.
“We
tried going to our land to see who lives there. We could not go very close, but
there was a name board with something written in Sinhala,” she said.
TRAUMATIC PHASE
After
a traumatic phase, families like that of Ms. Selvi were hopeful of being able to
return home someday. But when they actually did, a new problem stared at them —
their homes were not theirs anymore.
While
locals alleged that the army took over land belonging to them for its “high
security zone”, Jaffna Security Forces Commander Major General Mahinda
Hathurasinghe denied any such takeover. “The Sri Lankan army, navy and air force
require land to accommodate their troops, but only government land is used for
the purpose. In cases where private land is needed, as in Palali, we compensate
the owner as per the market value of their land,” he said.
Observing
that there was a “proportionate increase” in army presence in Jaffna peninsula
due to the overall growth of the army, Major General Hathurasinghe said the
number of army personnel had come down to 13,200 now from 26,400 in December
2009, when he took over as commander.
LEGAL BATTLE
However,
as many as 5,000 families are about to begin a legal battle for their land
rights, said S. Sugirthan, chairman of the Valli North Pradeshiya Sabha — the
local body — in Kankesanthurai, Jaffna.
According
to family members, the government has allotted the families alternative sites
for homes — such as the ones at the IDP camp — but they find them wanting in
basic infrastructure and livelihood opportunities.
Prior
to being displaced in the early 1990s to the Vanni, Ms. Selvi’s family lived in
a small home they owned on a 0.25-acre plot by the sea in Jaffna. Her husband
Gunaratnam would venture into the sea and bring back basketloads of fish that
ensured a steady income. “Now we are not close to the sea and cannot go fishing.
We are forced to take up other jobs for a small daily wage that is hardly
sufficient,” said Mr. Gunarathnam.
There
are space constraints as well. Inbaraja, who lives with his wife and three
children, said: “The IDP camp homes are rather tiny. Look, this is all we have
for the five of us [He lives with his wife and three children],” he said,
pointing to his room that seemed not more than 7X4 feet in area.
There
is a kitchen that is smaller, and some space in front of the house. The homes do
not have toilets, and there are only common toilets in the settlement. Even a
brief shower leaves the zone inundated, residents said.
“We
are just asking the government to let us live in our homes, that is where we
belong. We do not want anything else,” said Mr. Inbaraja.
OTHER NORTHERN AREAS
According
to official sources, as many as 83, 618 persons from 23,351 families in Jaffna
were displaced in 1990. Most of them are in IDP camps, while a few stay with
host families. A few others have migrated abroad and some are in
Rameswaram.
The
problem faced by those who return is not specific to Jaffna. It is also
prevalent in other parts of the Northern Province that still bears imprints of
the war.
Sankari
(name changed), who returned from Menik Farm — the largest refugee camp for
persons displaced by war, located near Vavuniya — had to part with her land in
Keppapulavu, Mullaitivu, for the near-500 acre high security zone that the army
has set up. “Close to home is one thing, but home is another. The army is
building some houses for us nearby, but nothing like our own place, on our plot
of land,” she said.
Saraswati’s
case is not very different. Her family is one of the few residing in Mullivaikal
— Mullaitivu district that was among the worst-hit during the last phase of the
war. Her home now — made largely of tin sheets and wooden planks — is right next
to the rubble of her once concrete home.
RELIC OF THE WAR
A
few yards away from her home, by the shore, stands Jordanian merchant vessel
Farah 03 as disturbing relic of the war. The damage to the giant ship, said to
be used as firing pad by the LTTE, presents a telling image of post-war Sri
Lanka. It even serves as a tourist spot for many from the south of the country,
or from outside.
The
road leading to this point too has metal scrap of vehicles damaged in the
war.
“Many
homes here were damaged very badly. While it is good that the war is over,
living in such an environment brings back memories of those days,” Saraswati
said.
(*name
changed on request)
