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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Extreme Weather Hits the Poor First – and Hardest
, Sri Lanka, Oct 28 2012 (IPS) - The old adage ‘nature
is the great equaliser’ no longer holds true in countries like Sri Lanka, where
the poor bear the brunt of extreme weather events.
Gamhevage Dayananda, a farmer from the remote village of
Pansalgolla in Sri Lanka’s north-central Polonnaruwa district, can attest to
this reality, as he and his fellow farmers struggle to survive alternating
periods of drought and flooding.
Unexpectedly
heavy rains in February 2011 forced engineers to open the sluice gates of large
irrigation tanks in the area, flooding hectare upon hectare of farmland,
including Dayananda’s modest plot.
He
lost his entire rice harvest, no small setback for his family of four who depend
on this crop for their very survival.
This
year, Dayananda found himself facing another crisis when drought destroyed his
crop and put him at risk of falling deeper into debt.
“One
season it’s all rain, next it’s all sun,” Dayananda told IPS. “There is nothing
in moderation, it is all in extremes.”
The
trend of extreme weather events alternating year after year is unlikely to
change, according to W L Sumathipala, former head of the climate change unit at
the Ministry of Environment, adding that Sri Lanka is at the receiving end of
changing climate patterns.
Last
year’s annual report for the United Nations Central Emergency Response Fund
(CERF) noted, “Climate-related emergencies, such as those linked to drought,
floods, and storms, expose the poor and most vulnerable to hazards that have
lasting consequences for the health, livelihoods, and well-being of people who
have the least capacity to cope with and mitigate the effects of natural
disasters.”
Widespread
poverty
Currently
about 8.9 percent of this South Asian island nation’s 21 million people live
below the poverty line.
Of
these, according to Abha Joshi-Ghani, head of the World Bank’s Urban Development
and Local Government Unit, “the poor in urban areas are likely to be affected
more by the changing climate patterns. They are the most vulnerable because they
live in sensitive areas, on precarious land where no one else will
settle.”
The
British-based charity Homeless International estimates that 12 percent of Sri
Lanka’s urban population of about three million can be found in slums.
Defence
and Urban Development Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa was recently quoted as
saying that shanty dwellers in the capital Colombo can be found “mostly on
government lands”.
“Many
of them are on the reservations set aside around the lakes, canals, roadways,
and railway tracks,” he added.
The
biggest threat to this population is the flash flood. Since 2007, the nation’s
capital – along with other parts of the western region – has already been
submerged more than two dozen times.
Some
areas end up under water after just 30 minutes of heavy rain, as was experienced
during the third week of October.
This
situation can be traced in part to the capital’s compromised drainage capacity.
But increasingly heavy downpours over the years have made matters worse,
particularly since there are no signs this trend will let up anytime soon.
In
its Second National
Communication on Climate Change 2012, the environment ministry says that
Colombo and the rest of the western plains can only expect more wet days ahead,
with “intense” periods of rain.
By
contrast, rice farmers are probably going to have to deal with long dry spells
for some time to come. According to the environment ministry, the agrarian areas
in parts of the east and northern provinces, including Polonnaruwa, will not
only get less rain than they need, they will also experience higher
temperatures.
The
Central Bank estimates that
a 0.5-degree Celsius rise in temperatures could reduce rice yields by around
five percent.
Thus
it should come as no surprise that an Asian Development Bank report last year
identified climate change as the “greatest threat to food security”.
Local
sustainable development expert Riza Yehiya also warned, “Food security
fluctuations due to climate change will be accompanied by unsteady energy
security, modern society’s greatest prerequisite (next to food and
water).”
“The
combined effects of this triumvirate – water, food, and energy insecurity – will
render poorer sections of society extremely vulnerable unless social security
for this sector is beefed up as part of the climate change mitigation
programme.”
Last
April, farmers in Polonnaruwa took to the streets after irrigation engineers
stopped providing water because of the drought. At the time, the farmers said
more than 16,000 hectares of paddy fields feeding off the Parakarama Samudarya
irrigation tank were already in danger of going completely dry.
After
being hit by floods in the early part of 2011, which destroyed over 16,000
hectares of paddy fields and roughly ten percent of the early harvest, rice
farmers in the north and north-central regions are now facing the opposite end
of that spectrum.
Severe
drought during the first nine months of 2012 affected 1.3 million people, a
rapid assessment by the World Food Programme (WFP) found.
Experts
have estimated that close to 29 percent of an estimated harvest of 1.1 million
metric tones will be lost, while 76,000 hectares, or 19 percent of the planted
crop has already been destroyed.
“Preliminary
findings indicate substantial livelihood impact on a broad spectrum of the
population and a deterioration of food security,” according to the WFP Global
Food Security Update for October.
Muttukrishna
Sarvananthan, a prominent economist, believes that unemployment could be as high
as 20 percent in some parts of the Northern Province, though no government data
exists to support this view.
*This
story was produced as part of IPS Asia-Pacific’s ‘Climate Change: A Reporting
Lens from Asia’ series.