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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Two years after the Asian tsunami: Sri Lankan survivors face
civil war and squalor
By Panini Wijesiriwardane
30 December 2006
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It is two years since the Asian tsunami devastated large swathes
of coastline in 14 countries, including Indonesia, Sri Lanka,
India and Thailand. At least 230,000 people died and 1.7 million
were left homeless after the huge waves swept away tens of thousands
of homes, schools and hospitals. The poor were the hardest hit,
losing their homes, family members, scanty possessions and livelihoods.
After Indonesia, Sri Lanka was the second worst affected country.
More than 35,000 people were killed, around 120,000 houses destroyed
and 516,150 people displaced. Two years later, many are still
living in squalid temporary accommodation, struggling to survive
from day to day with little or no government assistance.
In an official message this week, President Mahinda Rajapakse
piously called for unity among the diverse community in
order to face the challenges and build a safer nation. His
government has proclaimed December 26the day the tsunami
struckas Sri Lankas National Safety Day.
Rajapakses hypocrisy is breathtaking. In the first year
after the tsunami, as prime minister, he presided over the governments
totally inadequate relief operations. Attempts to establish joint
relief operations with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
were stymied by the opposition of Sinhala chauvinist groups such
as the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP).
As a candidate in the November 2005 presidential election,
Rajapakse promised to solve the severe housing shortages created
by the tsunami within six months. He also pledged
to create a permanent peace, despite signing a formal election
agreement with the JVP that included a more aggressive stance
against the LTTE.
Over the past year, far from establishing unity,
Rajapakse and his government have plunged the country back to
civil war. The coastal areas in the war zones of the east and
north were among the most damaged by the tsunami. Those under
LTTE control have received little or no government assistance.
Now the victims confront further devastation wrought by Sri Lankan
military offensives and indiscriminate bombing.
Like all his other election promises, Rajapakse failed to provide
proper housing for tsunami victims within six months. While tens
of thousands of people lack the basic essentials of life, his
government has boosted the defence budget by 45 percent to prosecute
a communal war.
According to the Reconstruction and Development Agency (RADA),
of the 114,069 permanent houses needed only 63,469 have been completed.
The rebuilding or repair of 47,859 is currently in progress.
Most new houses have been constructed by the non-government
organisations (NGOs), in some cases with funding from international
agencies such as the World Bank. Home owners are responsible for
the rebuilding or repair of their housesreceiving 250,000
rupees ($US2,500) for a full restoration and 100,000 rupees for
a partial restoration. As soon as the money is provided, the house
is added to the completion statistics.
The standard of new housing is poor. Most housing projects
lack proper access roads and internal roads. Some houses have
been built on steep slopes and risk collapse. One can already
see cracked walls, broken doors and windows, and damp floors.
Many do not have running water, drainage and proper garbage disposal
systems.
The tsunami displaced 60,280 families in the eastern districts
of Amparai, Batticaloa and Trincomalee and 43,382 are still in
temporary shelters. Thousands of these families have now been
displaced again by the war. In the northern Jaffna, Mullaitivu
and Kilinochchi districts, 16,433 families were displaced and
11,641 are still living in temporary camps.
Care International said it was able to fulfill about 90 percent
of the target number of new houses in the south of the island.
In the north, however, it met only 10 percent of its target. NGOs
have been subjected to a barrage of communal accusations by Sinhala
extremist organisations such as the JVP, alleging they have provided
assistance to the LTTE. Restrictions have now been imposed on
their operations in the war zones.
Much of the temporary accommodation is grossly inadequate.
Many shelters are made of tin sheeting and have leaky roofs of
palm leaves. There is a shortage of toilets and those that do
exist often overflow in heavy rain. Unhygienic conditions have
led to a variety of skin and waterborne diseases. Many families
have no hope of getting new dwellings. Anyone who found shelter
with relatives after the tsunami, or married in the relief camps,
is no longer eligible for a new house.
Schools and hospitals have not been rebuilt. According to a
survey by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), only 18 of the
schools that were destroyed have been rebuilt. Only 38 of the
255 partially damaged schools have been repaired. As a result,
about 30 percent of children have no schools. An education ministry
official told the Daily Mirror that the rebuilding of 25
schools in Jaffna and Mullaitivu and 13 schools in Trincomalee
had been put on hold due to the security situation.
The IPS found a similar situation with hospitals and clinics.
Reconstruction and repair had only been completed on 33 medical
institutions. Work on 69 more was still in progress, but had not
even started on the remaining 189.
A study by economist Muttukrishna Sarvananthan has revealed
that over the past two years, the level of poverty among tsunami
survivors in the north, east and south has increased from 64 percent
to 80 percent. The government has ended its limited financial
assistance to survivors, claiming they now have employment. But
the study showed that the jobless level among the victims has
increased from 37 percent to 54 percent.
The social crisis confronting those whose lives were devastated
by the tsunami is an indictment not only of the Sri Lankan government,
but of those world leaders such as US President George Bush and
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who, belatedly, promised to
help the victims.
See Also:
Sri Lankan tsunami victims speak out
[30 December 2006]
Two years after the Asian tsunami: thousands
still suffering in India
[29 December 2006]
A socialist and internationalist
perspective to confront the Asian tsunami disaster
[9 February 2005]
The social roots of
the tsunami disaster
[22 January 2005]
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