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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
On-the-spot-report
Devastation on the east coast of Sri Lanka
By M. Aravindan and Sarath Kumara
6 January 2005
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Ampara district on the southeastern coast of Sri Lanka was
directly in the path of the December 26 tsunami and was the first
to be hit. Massive waves swept over the low-lying coast without
warning, flattening buildings and sweeping people away. It was
a fresh calamity in a district that has already been deeply scarred
by 20 years of civil war.
While the government puts the death toll at 13,703, the actual
figure is probably twice as high. Those we spoke to, including
several divisional secretaries, estimated the number killed at
nearly 25,000, with more than 2,500 still missing. It is a terrible
tragedy: out of a population of 512,000, nearly 5 percent or 1
in 20 are dead.
Many more people have been left homeless without food, clean
water and medical care. In Ampara district alone, there are nearly
100 refugee camps housing over 80,000 people. At least 166,000
of the 226,440 those living in the districts coastal areas
have been affected by the disasterin other words, three
in every four people.
In the wake of the tsunami, the east coast has also been hit
by monsoonal flooding, cutting roads and leaving thousands of
people stranded. The district itself is divided between areas
under army control and those controlled by the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). It will take weeks to establish the extent
of the destruction in the district and the number of dead.
The World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) reporting team set
out from Colombo on December 28, two days after tsunami struck.
All along the main Colombo-Kandy-Ampara road, we saw a continuous
stream of lorries and vehicles proceeding to the north and east
of the island. People were streaming from relatively unaffected
areas in the west, northwest and centre of the country to help
the victims.
We saw men and women, young boys and girls, equipped with shovels,
spades and other tools heading east. They were going on their
own initiative to help to clear away the debris, clean up the
houses and to help families get back on their feet. At this point,
neither the government nor the district administration was even
considering rehabilitation. Along the highway, in response to
an appeal announced over Sirasa TV, numerous small groups of people
were collecting supplies for the victims of the disaster.
Even more remarkable was that the overwhelming majority heading
east were Sinhalese going to help Tamils and Muslims. For decades,
the ruling elites in Sri Lanka have whipped communal antagonisms
with devastating consequences. What the crisis quickly revealed,
however, is that among ordinary working people there is an elemental
recognition that the problems they all face are the same, regardless
of language and religion.

At Kadawatha just outside Colombo, three young girls from a
Free Trade Zone were carrying a package to hand to aid convoys
going east. While these workers are among the lowest paid, receiving
a monthly wage of just 5,000 rupees [$US50], they felt that they
had to do something to help.
Anura Kumara, a young man from Meerigama involved in distributing
aid, told us: We never consider whether the victims are
Tamils or Muslims. There is real destitution here. It is heart
rending. There is no room for nationalist pretensions. The tears
and blood of all men are the same. All blood is red.
At the refugee camp in the Bandaranayke Girls School at Ampara,
Rohana and Mahinda said: An enormous multitude has suddenly
been made destitute. In a period like this, there is no room to
think of race or community. We are all human beings.
At Ampara
Ampara district has Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim communities.
The worst affected were mainly Tamils and Muslims living close
to the coastmany of them fishermen and their families. Large
sections of the low-lying coast were washed away. For up to 100
metres from the sea, next to nothing was left. Most of the houses
were flattened by waves of up to 10 metres. Locals described waves
as high as the coconut trees. In some places, the water raced
up to three kilometres inland.
Everywhere the scene was the same. Homes, hospitals, Hindu
temples and other buildings shared the same fate. Trees were uprooted
and cars, vans and buses smashed. The remains of TVs, refrigerators,
bicycles, cookers and other household goods were strewn everywhere.
A fishing boat had been stranded two kilometres inland and evidence
of the disaster was to be seen for another two kilometres.
At Kalmunai, the damage was severe. For up to a kilometre from
the sea, all buildings had been destroyed. It was like the area
had been carpet-bombed.

At Karaitivu, previously densely populated, the whole area
had been flattened. For first 50 metres, not even a broken wall
could be seen, only debris. Half a kilometre inland, water reached
the second floor of the Karaitivu Central College buildings. At
the front of the school, the water had carved out a huge trench
over a metre deep.
The Karaitivu hospital near the coast was also badly damaged.
All 25 patients and one of the nurses were killed. The rest of
the medical staff managed to survive. The hospital doctor was
engulfed by the waves, but was able to cling to the branch of
a tree.

Travelling along the coast road on December 29, we counted
20 refugee camps from Karativu to Maruthamuni. There were more
away from the main road. Every school, mosque, church and temple
where people could be housed had been turned into refugee camp.
But in many places, there was not a government official to be
seen.
Siva Kumar, a mechanic, explained: This refuge camp is
run by Sinhala people and they are looking after us very well.
We still havent received any government help. I would like
to thank the Sinhala people especially. Because of the war, we
had a misunderstanding. We now know that things are different.
The clothes I am wearing were provided by a Sinhalese woman who
worked with me at the government-owned public transport depot.
Entire families were wiped out on December 26. Thalif Deen,
a 31-year-old cook, lost seven members of his familyhis
wife, mother-in-law, father-in-law and four children were dead.
Only his daughter escaped. Fifty-year-old, Mohammad Ali, a security
guard, said that 23 of his relatives perished.
Sanitation was a major problem. Even on December 29, many corpses
could be seen. Young volunteers were busy burying or cremating
them. At Samanthurai alone, some 4,000 bodies were buried on December
28.

Many of those affected were poor fisherman, who use frail boats
and log rafts called theppams to eke out a living. Most fishermen
have to find casual jobs when they are unable to fish. Some days
they earn 200 to 500 rupees; other days they earn nothing. They
had no alternative but to live in huts near the sea.
The survivors were angry that there had been no warning. With
no previous experience or understanding, many people, especially
children, followed the sea as it receded immediately prior to
the tsunami. They and others on the shore suddenly saw the huge
waves and began to run. Taken completely by surprise, the old,
sick and the young simply perished.
On hearing the news of the catastrophe, people in Ampara town,
20km inland, rushed to help the survivors. Three-wheelers, buses,
vans and lorries headed to the coast to assist.
Senevirathne, a young three-wheeler driver, said: Somebody
told us the sea was flooding the land. It was about 9.30 a.m.
on Sunday. We rushed to the coast. When we reached the area it
was completely destroyed. In my three-wheeler I transported six
victims [to safety]. Everybody who had a vehicle was doing the
same.
Official inaction
By contrast, officials reacted with bureaucratic indifference
and incompetence. Even after the first wave had crashed in, no
action was taken.
The government agent for the district, Herath Abeyweera, told
us that he came to know of the disaster around 10 a.m. Asked about
his response, he declared rather defensively: Because Sunday
was a holiday and most officers were from other areas, they had
gone home. We started work on Monday.
Abeyweera explained that he had contacted the Department of
Meteorology. They confirmed that something had happened
but said that the impact would not be major... There was the possibility
that sea water would come inland, he said.
Asked about the role of the Disaster Management Unit established
by President Chandrika Kumaratunga, Abeyweera dismissed the question,
saying the unit was meant for floods and typhoons, not crises
of this kind.
Official apathy and the lack of information only heightened
the sense of panic. Senevirathnem, the three-wheeler driver, told
us: When I reached Ampara, I got a call from my wife. She
was afraid and there were rumors that the waves would reach Ampara
as well. So I had to go and take her to a safe place further inland.
Otherwise I could have transported more victims to safety.
While we were at the Government Agents office, a news
flash came over Shakhi TV that India faced another tsunami, which
would hit the east coast in less than an hour. Everybody panicked.
No one had any idea what to do. It took more than quarter of an
hour to ring the Meteorological Department and confirm there was
no threat. But there was no means of letting anyone know, apart
from the midday news on state-run Rupavahini TV.
In the refugee camps, there was chaos. One of our contacts,
Anura, told us there were 2,500 refugees at the camp at Eravur
in Batticaloa district when news of another tsunami arrived. Everybody
panicked and started to run leaving everything behind, even what
they were given by relief workers. They did not know where they
were running. [In some cases], we dont know where they went.
I saw children struggling. One three-year-old boy was
stuck on a barbed-wire fence, held by his shirt and trousers.
He was crying out loud. Fortunately I was able to free him.
Anura was angry that there was no information. The village
officer was there but there was no communication with the district
administration. The whole incident was unnecessary.
Most refugee camps had not received any government assistance
by December 29especially those near the Batticaloa District.
Several divisional secretaries complained to us on December 30
that no money had arrived, even though the government was publicly
saying that enough funds were being provided for relief. They
hadnt received a cent and were providing aid out of their
own pockets.
Everywhere there were complaints about the lack of resources.
One divisional secretary said that he needed at least 40 watertanks
for refugee camps, but only had 5. He had just one water truck
doing the rounds, trying to provide clean water to those who needed
it.
Five hospitals in the Ampara district were damaged. Ampara
General Hospital, the largest in the district, was overwhelmed.
Hospital workers told us that staff returned to work as soon as
they could and most were on duty by the evening of December 26.
Many began working on the morning of the disaster and continued
for three days straight.
Everyone was theredoctors, nurses, minor staff and paramedics
as well as the cleaning staff from a private contractor. No one
asked about additional pay. They worked voluntarily. Some had
lost family members. Because of this extraordinary effort, only
four of the patients died after being admitted.
A number of areas were still inaccessible. On December 31,
we travelled from Ampara with a volunteer aid team from Meerigama
taking a lorry load of relief supplies to Periya Kallar in the
Batticaloa district. Periya Kallar was hard hit by the tsunami
and left without assistance for five days. All the approach roads
had been severely damaged.
The team distributed half of the provisions to a refugee camp
at Periya Kallar and proceeded to the Kallar Bridge but could
go no further. Volunteers had to carry supplies on foot for nearly
a kilometre. As one of the team exclaimed: This is the first
time that I have carried a whole rice bag on my back. A
doctor from the Ampara hospital used a motorbike to ferry goods
to the refugees.
At Kotttai Kallaru we were again forced to stop. Local people
saw us and waded through water across a broken causeway in order
to get desperately needed supplies.
On the way back, the road was blocked by a lorry stuck in the
sand. We trudged through the rain until we came across a convoy
of police commandos who transported us to Karativu. They offered
to take us to Ampara that night but floods blocked the road and
we spent the night in their camp. The following day we made arrived
back in Ampara along roads that were under water and washed away
in parts.
The three days revealed all too clearly not only the abject
failings of the present social and economic order, but also the
latent capacities of ordinary working people to build a better
one.
See Also:
On-the-spot report
Poverty-stricken Hambantota among the worst affected areas in
Sri Lanka
[31 December 2004]
Amid the devastation
Sri Lankan president issues appeal for "unity"
[30 December 2004]
Sri Lankan tsunami
victims speak to the WSWS
"Not one politician has visited us"
[29 December 2004]
Tidal wave wreaks death
and destruction throughout Sri Lanka
[28 December 2004]
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