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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan tsunami victims speak out
By our reporters
30 December 2006
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On the eve of the second anniversary of the 2004 Asian tsunami
disaster, a WSWS reporting team visited Matara to meet tsunami
survivors. Matara, one of the worst hit areas, is a coastal town,
160 kilometres south of Colombo, the Sri Lankan capital.
In the Matara district, 82,067 people from 20,675 families
were affected by the tsunami. According to official reports, the
death toll was 1,321, with 6,652 injured and 601 missing. Of the
9,491 people displaced, 3,086 were put in 22 camps, while 6,405
lived with host families, mainly relatives and friends. A total
of 2,233 houses were destroyed and 6,075 partially damaged.
The Rassandeniya Tsunami Housing Project, five kilometres from
Matara town, is one of the schemes for victims. There are 30 houses
in the scheme, built on sloping coconut land. Most residents came
from a fishing community in Matara fort. When WSWS correspondents
arrived, people were preparing to commemorate the deaths of their
loved ones.

Sarath, a fisherman, recalled the disaster.
That day I was at home and was having a chat with my wife.
Suddenly we heard a huge noise from the seaside and I saw people
running, shouting, toward the land. Within a few seconds, a massive
wave came and took me away. I lost consciousness for some time
and found myself in hospital. Later I learnt about the death of
my wife and many relatives. However, my children survived.
Since then we have gone through terrible conditions.
Many fishermen had to abandon their livelihoods for a long time
because they lost their boats and other utilities. Without a permanent
residence, you cant fish. Some people couldnt mentally
prepare for fishing again, and abandoned it. Many people who were
engaged in jobs related to the fishing industry also lost their
livelihoods.
Lasintha Ruwani, a young housewife, said:
As a fishing community we lived very close to the sea. Despite
our objections, the authorities provided houses for us five kilometres
away from our fishing port. My husband has to leave for work before
4 a.m. and, due to the poor transport service, he has to ride
his bicycle. We have to leave our boats on the seashore without
any security. Every day we face the risk of losing boats.

Piyadasa, a postal worker asked us to see
the housing projects infrastructure. Look at the access
and inner roads they have provided. Just gravel roads without
tar and side gutters. All the roads have washed away due to the
heavy rain and you can see deep and broad ruts in the roads. In
emergencies we cant take patients to hospital because drivers
refuse to drive on these roads.
A group of housewives gathered and angrily
expressed their concerns. Come inside and see the dangers
that we face, one said. Cracks are developing in the
walls because the houses are built on filled soil on a slope without
building standards or professional supervision. After just two
months, doors and windows have gone out of shape and they cant
be opened or closed.
Soil was washed away by rain and one house was about to collapse.
Some residents had left to avoid another tsunami-like disaster,
one housewife said. Residents received running water only after
9.30 p.m. Overhead tanks were not provided, leaving people to
struggle to collect water for the next day.
A few days ago we were informed that [government minister]
Mangala Samaraweera would come to see our housing scheme. We were
waiting to lobby him and ask him to solve our problems regarding
the construction. When he heard about our anger, we think he cancelled
his visit. This is the response of the ministers to our problems.
At another camp at the Kitulewela Buddhist temple, many families
still live in temporary shelters with wooden walls and galvanised
roofs.
M.T.S. Tharindu, a young boy, explained his
experiences. In the beginning there were 60 families in
this camp. We had to live in tents, with two families in each
20 foot by 20 foot tent. There were various charity organisations
and social groups, but they disappeared after a few months. We
were neglected and isolated from society.
Life became terrible and we all suffered. After some
time, the authorities provided these temporary shelters. A few
months ago, 29 families left for houses provided by different
donor organisations. Another 10 families are supposed to receive
houses but no one knows when. These temporary shelters are becoming
permanent for us.
Another 21 families were not included on the housing beneficiary
lists and would never receive houses. According to what
we have heard, the authorities are going to dismantle these camps
before December 31 and all of us will have to take to the streets,
he said.
L. H. Norton, a 50-year-old fisherman, said:
We hate all the politicians and political parties in this
country. They have badly neglected us. Minister Chandrasiri Gajadheera
[Matara district MP for the Communist Party] discriminated against
us because we belonged to another caste. What is his communism?
In selecting beneficiaries, he gave priority to his own caste
people.
We realised the real nature of some Buddhist monks in
this horrible situation. It is a shame to tell you. The leading
monk of Walukaramaya in Pamburana strongly opposed
us having the adjoining land for a housing scheme just because
we were other caste people.
L.H. Madushani Hasanthi, the camps welfare
society secretary, angrily denounced the governments war
against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Now President
Mahinda Rajapakse is intensifying the war. Who is losing in this
war? The poor like us. Children are losing their fathers. Wives
are losing their husbands. Parents are losing their children.
We are losing our brothers. Why do they join the army? Only because
of unemployment. They dont have any other alternative.
We are still in these temporary huts. They dont
have money to provide houses for us, but they waste billons on
this war. Look at the cost of living. Now one kilo of sugar is
55 rupees, a kilo of rice is 30 and a coconut is 25 rupees. How
can we afford that? No one in this camp has a permanent job and
many people work as daily-paid labourers. On rainy days they dont
have work, and families have to starve. In these circumstances,
why this war?
A uniformed soldier arrived and began to talk.
I am also a tsunami victim. I lost my house and Im
still living in a camp with another 30 families. That camp was
established for the affected families of security forces and police
personnel. Over the past two years, nobody received a house. The
president and the other politicians say we are the guardians of
the country, but they treat us in this manner.
W. Nimalsiri, a Ministry of Public Administration
worker, said all 27 houses at the Laurien City housing project
in Pamburana had been built for government workers and handed
over to them in October. However, because electricity and water
were yet to be supplied, only one family had moved in. There were
no pavements, gutters and drains, and the toilet pits were less
than one metre deep.
The quality of construction is very poor and the doors
and windows are made of cheap wood. Within a few months they will
collapse. The roofs have not been fixed properly with hooks for
the asbestos sheets. The sheets will come off even in a small
wind. What will happen with a cyclone or tornado? I went to meet
the politicians and other authorities several times regarding
electricity and water supplies but all the time their answers
were just no allocations.
We are living in a rented house, paying 3,500 rupees
per month. I cant afford this anymore and that is why I
am in a hurry to go. I lost my son in the tsunami and I wanted
to commemorate the anniversary of his death in the new house but
it became a dream. I applied for a bank loan for alms-giving to
commemorate my loving son, but the bank rejected me because I
am a public servant who draws a small salary.
See Also:
Two years after the Asian tsunami: Sri
Lankan survivors face civil war and squalor
[30 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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