|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan government abandons thousands of citizens trapped
in Lebanon
By Vilani Peiris
26 July 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Up to 90,000 Sri Lankans, the largest group of migrant workers
from poor countries in Lebanon, have been trapped by the US-backed
Israeli military assault. One Sri Lankan woman, 28-year-old Vijitha
Mallika, has been killed but many others are feared dead or injured.
Despite this, the Sri Lankan government has turned its back on
its citizens.
Neither Sri Lankan President Rajapakse, who is chairman of
the Sri Lanka Committee for Solidarity with Palestine, nor his
government, has issued a statement protesting the assaults on
Lebanon, Gaza Strip or the West Bank. Rajapakses silence
over the US-backed Israeli war assault is aimed at securing Washingtons
support for Colombos war preparations against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
Moreover, the Sri Lankan government has bluntly declared that
it wants its citizens to remain in Lebanon and will only repatriate
those who specifically request help. Up to now only 264 Sri Lankan
workers have been repatriated, some of them having organised their
own escape to Damascus in Syria, from where they were flown to
Colombo.
Foreign Employment Bureau (FEB) chairman Jagath Wellawatta
claimed that it was logistically very, very difficult to
get in contact with that many people. He admitted, however,
that Sri Lanka had few officials in Lebanon. We dont
know where people are staying or if they are injured or not,
he said.
Last week Sri Lankas ambassador to Lebanon, Amanual Farooq,
said that the Sri Lankan government could not provide any transport
for those trapped in south Lebanon and that migrant workers had
to make their own way to Beirut. No advice or explanation was
provided about how to do that. In other words, the Rajapakse government
has simply abandoned these workers to their fate.
This was made abundantly clear last week by Sri Lankan labour
relations minister Athauda Seneviratne who said that the government
would assist, only if need arises and if there are requests
from the people.
Yesterday Seneviratne told a Colombo press conference that
the government did not want Sri Lankans in Lebanon to return home
and that local families should stop urging loved ones to do so.
I dont think a large number of people want to come
back. They are used to (conflict), Seneviratne cynically
claimed. The problem is that people here telephone them
and ask them to return. If these people dont call, they
will not return.... I want to make sure that we send another 400,000
workers to the Middle East this year.
As Seneviratne makes clear, the governments primary concern
is not the health and safety of its citizens but the foreign exchange
that they earn.
About one million Sri Lankans are working abroad, most of them
in the Middle East, providing Sri Lankas second largest
source of foreign exchange. Lebanon pays the lowest salaries compared
to other Middle Eastern countries, so most of the Sri Lankans
workers trapped there are from the most impoverished rural families.
Vijitha Mallika, the Sri Lankan woman officially confirmed
dead, for example, was from a very poor family in Balapitiya,
near Galle. Two of her sisters are still in Lebanon.
Although there are no accurate official figures, Sri Lankans
in Lebanon are mostly employed as housemaids, domestic workers,
labourers and drivers, with large numbers located in southern
Lebanon, the centre of the Israeli attacks, and therefore unable
to communicate with Sri Lanka. According to Sri Lankas international
postal service division, 60,000 letters sent by Sri Lankans to
their relatives and friends in Lebanon will be returned because
of flight cancellations.
The governments callous indifference is further underlined
by the pittance it has allocated to those affected. Last week,
the FEB announced that money for food, temporary shelter, health,
local transport, etc., would be made available, but the total
amount is only Rs.2.5 million ($US25,000).
According to the latest reports, there are hundreds of Sri
Lankans camping at the Sri Lankan embassy in Beirut and in temporary
shelters arranged by welfare organisations.
Padma, a 22-year-old domestic helper, told the BBC that her
employer did not want her to leave and had confiscated her passport.
They wont give us our passports. They want me to continue
working here and they wont pay the rest of my salary if
I go now, she said. I have been working for one-and-a-half
years in Lebanon but I have only got three months pay.
Another woman worker, Menika, 21, explained that she desperately
wanted to return to Sri Lanka but her employers were afraid she
could be killed by Israeli bombs and would not let her leave unless
the Sri Lankan embassy organised a car to take her to Beirut.
Who is going to come here? The roads are so damaged,
she said. There is hardly any way in or out.
She explained that there had been heavy bombing every night:
Someone was killed in a neighborhood close by. I just want
to go home. I want to see Sri Lanka.
Another domestic worker, Hemalatha, 30, said that her employers
had simply left her at a refuge. I have been dumped here,
she said. My husband is blind and I have to support my children.
There is no work for me back home.
International Organisation of Migrants (IOM) spokeswoman Jemina
Pandya told the BBC that the IOM was attempting to assistant migrants
from Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Bangladesh and Moldova, but many
domestic workers had no money or documents. The organisation said
that it had limited funds and was only able to help about 300
Sri Lankans.
Pandya said the IOM could only assist those in the most difficult
situations. Forty-six of these, she said, are
in the Sri Lankan embassy, which is very close to a Lebanese military
base and being bombarded all the time.
Many of the Sri Lankan migrants who have been able to leave
Lebanon, most only carrying their passports and the clothes they
were wearing, have recounted harrowing stories.
Dulani Tharanga from Chilaw who was working in south Lebanon,
told last weekends Sunday Times: There was
an attack without any warning. The glass around us shattered and
we felt the building was collapsing. I was on the fifth floor
with the lady of the house and her two children. When the aerial
attack started we decided to make a dash to the basement. When
we started going down the stairs more bombs started to fall.
We managed to get to the basement. But I felt it wasnt
safe there either. As I got out of the building there was another
attack and the building was directly hit. I ran out in time. All
I had with me was my passport and a small telephone index.
She was afraid to go back and see what happened to the family
she was working for.
She added: I just walked on. All the buildings were damaged
and there were bodies lying around and vehicles burning. I managed
to stop a taxi and go to Beirut. I had 100 US dollars and my passport
with me. The taxi ride cost me about $US25 dollars.
Jayalath Kumara arrived at Colombo airport on Friday. He told
the media that he had seen many buildings destroyed by Israeli
bombs and had heard that many Sri Lankans had been killed during
the air raids.
Sunday Times journalists reported that labour relations
minister Seneviratne, who was at the airport, interrupted Kumara,
claiming that these were unverified reports.
Seneviratnes intervention indicates that the Rajapakse
government is desperately trying to suppress information about
the real situation in Lebanon.
Muslims held demonstrations after Friday prayers last week
in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo and several places in the countrys
eastern province. Protestors shouted, Stop Israeli state
terrorism! Death to America! Death to Israel.
These protests indicate that while the Rajapakse government
is callously indifferent to the fate of its own citizens, there
is growing opposition to the Israeli military assault and increasing
concerns about the plight of the Sri Lankans in Lebanon.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |