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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, October 19, 2012
ReliefWeb
Sri
Lanka
By
Amantha Perera
VAVUNIYA,
Sri Lanka, Oct 18 2012 (IPS) - Mamaduwa, a remote village in Sri Lanka’s
northern Vavuniya district where scorching winds blow across parched earth, is
trying to forget the past.
Comprised
of 130 families, Mamaduwa lies on the southern border of Sri Lanka’s former war
zone, popularly known as the Vanni. The village is almost entirely Sinhalese,
the island’s majority ethnicity.
When
ethnic tensions gave way to full-blown civil war in 1983, this small village
found itself caught in the crossfire of a separatist conflict between the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) – who were demanding an independent
state for the minority Tamil community – and the Sinhala-Buddhist government of
Sri Lanka.
In
1985, a woman and her child were killed by suspected LTTE gunfire close to the
Mamaduwa reservoir, igniting a mass exodus that emptied the village in a matter
of years.
Since
the guns fell silent in May 2009, villagers have been trickling back in, but
three years into peacetime they are yet to see an improvement in their
lives.
“We
are happy to be back in our own village, but there is nothing else to be happy
about,” 25-year-old Sagara Sampath, who spent two decades as an internally
displaced person (IDP), told IPS.
Sampath,
at least, has a job with the civil defence force, which guarantees him a monthly
salary. But other villagers are not as lucky, particularly because the mega
development projects popping up throughout the former war zone have skipped over
Mamaduwa.
Most
of the villagers here make a living by farming, though a harsh drought across
the country has brought cultivation to a near complete halt.
Still,
even when harvests are plentiful – as they were six months ago according to
Sampath – farmers find themselves struggling to survive.
“This
land is fertile, nothing has been planted here in the last 20 years, so even
without any fertiliser, a good harvest is a guarantee,” Sampath said.
But
a bumper harvest doesn’t necessarily mean bumper profits. The faulty road
system, which excludes Mamaduwa from easy access to local markets, allowed
transporters and wholesale buyers from Vavuniya town, 30 kilometres away, to
drive down the prices of farm produce.
“If
the roads were (better), we would have been able to save some money,” Sampath
said.
Former
war zone struggling
The
problem extends beyond a dearth of transportation facilities, electricity,
schools and health centres in the interior areas of the island’s former war
zone.
Jobs,
too, are scarce. The Central Bank recently stated that
the North was one of the country’s fastest-growing regions between 2011 and 2012
– achieving double-digit growth rates as high as 27 percent after the war.
But
early this year a joint survey by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF),
the World Food Programme and the Ministry of Health found that over 37 percent
of the population in the Northern Province listed daily labour as their main
source of income.
Economists
point out that the main reason behind the province’s high growth rates is the
introduction of major infrastructure projects like roads and
electrification.
That
trend, according to economist Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, principal researcher at
the Point Pedro Development Institute based in northern Jaffna, is not helping
job creation.
Sarvananthan
told IPS most development projects are reliant on technology or heavy machinery
rather than labour, which is abundant in the north.
“In
a post-war geographic area where the educational and skill levels of the local
population – especially of the youth – are low, it would have been prudent to
deploy labour-intensive construction methods,” he said.
To
make matters worse, large companies and investment firms have been reluctant to
physically set up facilities in the former war zone. The only major exception
appears to be MAS Holdings, a large international apparel supplier that is
setting up three factories in the Vanni.
Anush
Wijesinha, an economist with the Institute of Policy Studies, also blames the
employment deficit on the lack of incentives given out to local small and
medium-scale enterprises, which could boost growth across the region.
Public
officials in the region told IPS that the government has recognised the slow
pace of social empowerment, and has taken adequate steps to improve the
situation.
Roopavathi
Ketheeswaran, the top public official in the Kilinochchi District, told IPS that
vocational training facilities for youth were being set up in the region, with
an eye on providing manpower for long-term reconstruction efforts.
“Special
steps have been taken to engage the youth in the development process. Vocational
training is provided to many youth,” she said.
Robert
Peiris, the additional secretary at the North East Reawakening Programme, which
operates under the ministry of economic development, agrees that one of the ways
to break the employment jinx is to work with the available labour force.
“For
that, we need time to develop workers’ skills,” he pointed out, adding that the
ministry is indeed paying close attention to the skills required for the
construction sector.
“If
we can impart these skills, the trainees can find jobs even outside the region,”
Peiris said.