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
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Will New Sri Lankan Government Prioritize Resettlement of War-Displaced?
Despite six years of peace, life is still hard in areas where Sri
Lanka's war was at its worst, especially for internally displaced people
(IDPs). Credit: Amantha Perera/IPS
JAFFNA, Sri Lanka, Aug 30 2015 (IPS) -
The new Sri Lankan government that was voted in on Aug. 17 certainly
didn’t inherit as much baggage as its predecessors did during the nearly
30 years of conflict that gripped this South Asian island nation.
"Do you know how it feels to live in other people's houses for so long?
You are always an outsider. I am getting old [...]. I want to die in my
own house, not somewhere else." -- Siva Ariyarathnam, an IDP in northern
Sri Lanka
But
six years into ‘peacetime’, the second parliament of President
Maithripala Sirisena will need to prioritize some of the most painful,
unhealed wounds of war – among them, the fate of over 50,000 internally
displaced people (IDPs), some of whom have not been home in over two
decades.
Though the fighting between government forces and the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) ended in 2009, closing a
28-year-long chapter of violence, Siva Ariyarathnam is still waiting for
a government official to tell him when he can go home.
Like tens of thousands of others, Ariyarathnam fled with his family when
the military took over his land in the country’s Northern Province in
the 1990s as part of a strategy to defeat the LTTE, who launched an
armed campaign for an independent homeland for the country’s minority
Tamil population in 1983.
The outgoing government says it plans to give the land back to 50,000
people, but has not indicated when that will happen, and Ariyarathnam
says he is running out of time.
“Do you know how it feels to live in other people’s houses for so long?
You are always an outsider,” Ariyarathnam told IPS. “I am getting old
and I want to live under my own roof with my family. I want to die in my
own house, not somewhere else.”
A decades-old problem
Ariyarathnam’s tale is heard too frequently in the former war-zone, a
large swath of land in the country’s north comprising the Vanni region,
the Jaffna Peninsula and parts of the Eastern Province, which the LTTE
ran as a de facto state after riots in 1983 drove thousands of Tamils
out of the Sinhala-majority south.
During the war years, displacement was the order of the day, with both
the LTTE and the Sri Lankan government forcing massive population shifts
that would shape ethnic- and communal-based electoral politics.
For ordinary people it meant that the notion of ‘home’ was a luxury that few could maintain.
The cost of the conflict that finally ended in May 2009 with the defeat of the Tigers by government armed forces was enormous.
By conservative accounts over 100,000 perished in the fighting, while a report by the United Nations estimates that as many as 40,000 civilians died during the last bouts of fighting between 2008 and 2009.
According to the Ministry of Resettlement, Sri Lanka’s post-war IDP returnees stood at an impressive 796,081 by the end of June.
But the same data also reveal that an additional 50,000 were still
living with host families and in the Thellippali IDP Centre, unable to
return to villages still under military occupation.
These militarized zones date back to the 1990s, when the army began
appropriating civilian land as a means of thwarting the steadily
advancing LTTE.
By 2009, the military had confiscated 11,629 acres of land in the Tamil
heartland of Jaffna – located on the northern tip of the island, over
300 km from the capital, Colombo – in order to create the Palaly High
Security Zone (HSZ).
This was the area Ariyarathnam and his family, like thousands of others, had once called home.
New government, new policies?
Many hoped that the war’s end would see a return to their ancestral
lands, but the war-victorious government, helmed by former President
Mahinda Rajapaksa, was slow to release civilian areas, prioritizing
national security and continued deployment of troops in the North over
resettlement of the displaced.
A new government led by President Maithripala Sirisena, Rajapaksa’s
former health minister who took power in a surprise January election,
promised to accelerate land release, and turned over a 1,000-acre area
from the Palaly HSZ in April.
But top officials tell IPS that genuine government efforts are
stymied by the lack of public land onto which to move military camps in
order to make way for returning civilians.
“The return of the IDPs is our number one priority,” Ranjini
Nadarajapillai, the outgoing secretary to the Ministry of Resettlement,
explained to IPS. “There is no timetable right now, everything depends
on how the remaining high security zones are removed.”
The slow pace of land reform has kept IDPs mired in poverty, according
to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), an arm of the
Oslo-based Norwegian Refugee Council.
“The main reasons why there are higher poverty levels among IDPs include
the lack of access to land during displacement to carry out livelihood
activities, [and] the lack of compensation for lost or destroyed land
and property during the war, which was acquired by the military or
government as security or economic zones,” Marita Swain, an analyst with
IDMC, told IPS.
An IDMC report released in July put the number of IDPs at 73,700, far
higher than the government statistic. Most of them are living with host
families, while 4,700 are housed in a long-term welfare center in
Jaffna, the capital of Sri Lanka’s Northern Province.
The lingering effects of the policies of the previous administration led
by Rajapaksa, which prioritized infrastructure development over genuine
economic growth for the war-weary population, has compounded the IDPs’
plight, according to the IDMC.
Despite the Sirisena government taking office in January, it has been
hamstrung over issues like resettlement for the past eight months as it
prepared to face parliamentary elections that pitted Rajapaksa-era
policies against those of the new president.
Nadarajapillai of the Ministry of Resettlement said the new government
is taking a different approach and reaching out to international
agencies and donors to resolve the issue.
The Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is helping
the government devise a plan to resolve the IDP crisis, added Dushanthi
Fernando, a UNHCR official in Colombo.
Still, these promises mean little to people like Ariyarathnam, whose
displacement is now entering its third decade with no firm signs of
ending anytime soon.
Edited by Kanya D’Almeida