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Lanka
Over 200 dead in worst Sri Lankan floods in 60 years
By our correspondents
20 May 2003
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More than 200 have been killed and over 175,000 people left
homeless due to raging floods and related landslides, which hit
five southern districts in Sri Lanka on Saturday. According to
government officials, more than 700 people are missing, adding
to fears that the death toll may further increase. Many of the
homeless are crowded into makeshift refugee camps without even
basic facilities.
The hardest-hit district of Ratnapura, southeast of the capital
of Colombo, has experienced its worst flooding since 1947. The
other districts are Galle, Matara and Hambantota in Southern Province
and Kalutara in Western Province.
Although the rain eased on Monday, there have been further
reports of flooding and landslides. In Ratnapura district, a landslide
buried about 25 people yesterday. Electricity and telephone lines
are broken in many areas and will take days to restore.
In Ratnapura, most of the victims were buried alive in 12 major
landslides and mudslides. At Palewala in the Alapatha area, a
whole village was buried and more than 70 people were believed
to have been killed. Rescue workers managed to recover 34 bodies
by Sunday night but faced difficulty reaching the affected area
due to flooding and mudslides. At least 22 people were feared
dead after an earth slippage at Abeypura.
The town of Ratnapura is completely submerged by floodwaters,
which reached more than two metres on Saturday causing severe
damage to power and telephone lines. Thousands of houses have
been damaged and a large number have been destroyed. In the district,
9,400 families have been displaced, including 5,100 families from
the Alapatha area alone.
In Matara district, the second worst affected, 10 bodies have
been recovered and over 25,000 families have been made homeless.
About 200 houses have been buried and more than 100 people are
missing after landslides in the areas of Morawaka and Deniyaya.
In the Southern Province, the towns of Galle, Matara, Hambantota
and Tangalle received their highest rainfall since 1968. Several
hundred people have been left homeless and more than 100 missing.
In Galle district as a whole, more than 5,000 families have been
displaced.
In the district of Hambantota, 22 deaths have been reported
and 200 families rendered homeless. Of these 21 died in a landslide
at Katuwana. In Kalutara district, south of Colombo, the remote
towns and villages of Bulathsinhala, Baduraliya, Meegahatenna
and Yatigampitiya are submerged and transport has been disrupted.
More than 10,000 people have been displaced in the worst floods
in more than 70 years.
Both government and opposition leaders have visited the flooded
areas and expressed their concern about the plight of the victims.
Prominent media coverage was given to a tour by Prime Minister
Ranil Wickremesinge and his instructions to government officials
to provide relief. Not to be outdone, President Chandrika Kumaratunga
dispatched leading opposition figures and announced that she would
release assistance funds if necessary.
But when our correspondents visited a refugee camp at the Palawela
Ratnakara School, the gulf between propaganda and reality was
all too evident. More than 3,000 people were gathered at the school
from Batakada and Abeypuratwo badly affected villages. More
than 4,000 people have lost everything.
About 28 houses were buried in landslides killing an estimated
70 people. Two young men, Ranjith and Saman, told us that government
authorities had not provided any equipment to dig for the bodies.
They did not even provide us with a mammoty [a type of spade]
to remove earth, they said.
Although the refugees have been at the school since Saturday
evening, they have not even been given a mat to sleep or sit on.
Nearby villages have provided meals as the government has not
provided enough food. There are more than 500 children under the
age of five. The school has only two toilets and there is no clean
water, raising fears of an epidemic.
The people were wearing what they wore on the day they fled.
They have no candles or kerosene to light a lamp. All of the villagers
are very poor, earning their living on rubber estates, at gem
mining or as casual day labourers. Parliamentarians come
in queues when there is an election, but no one is to be seen
now. An opposition parliamentarian came and went. But that is
all, one commented.
The government and the media have attempted to portray the
tragedy as a natural disaster. It is certainly true that there
has been torrential rain in the affected areas. However, extensive
gem mining in some parts of the Ratnapura district and the clearing
of reserved forest have compounded the danger of landslides.
In parts of Palawela and Batagoda, poor people, without land
or shelter, cleared patches of reserved forest. Government officials
told them to leave but provided no place to go. Even when it was
discovered that the land was unstable and prone to landslide,
the squatters remained. To secure their votes, politicians offered
to give them title to the land, although the dangers were by then
well known.
One person explained: People in this area faced floods
and landslides in 1982. It was not as severe as this but it took
the life of several dozen people. But what the people got as relief
was just 1,000 rupees [about $US30 at the time] for each family.
Who could cope with such a meagre sum! So they went back to same
places again.
The situation is no different today. The government has announced
a payment of 15,000 rupees (about $US160) per victim. But this
is completely inadequate for families who have to try to rebuild
their lives from scratch. Moreover, nothing will be done to address
any of the underlying problems that compounded the disaster.
Once the immediate impact of the flooding has passed, the government,
the opposition and the media will drop their feigned concern and
leave the victims to their fate.
See Also:
Government leaves
thousands of flood victims in eastern Sri Lanka without adequate
aid
[1 December 2000]
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