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Sri Lankan police charge farmers over anti-government protest
By Nihal Fernando and W.A. Sunil
25 July 2007
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A local magistrate in Sri Lanka granted bail last Tuesday for
21 farmers who have been imprisoned on remand for more than a
month after confronting a minister over broken promises on the
Deduru Oya irrigation scheme. Police told the court the farmers
would be charged on five counts of unlawful assembly, damaging
government property and vehicles, and attacking police officers.
Anger boiled over at a protest of more than 2,000 farmers during
a visit to the northwestern town of Weraherayagama by Irrigation,
Ports and Aviation Minister Chamal Rajapakse on June 11. The protesters
were objecting to the governments plans to shift them to
make way for a new irrigation scheme and the lack of even basic
facilities, including homes, water and electricity, on their new
plots at remote Kruwalagaswewa.
When the farmers called for a written guarantee to provide
proper facilities, Rajapakse declared: We cannot build palaces
for you. Confronted with angry objections, the minister
and his party rapidly beat a retreat, protected by his armed guard.
That same night, police rounded up 17 farmers and another four
were taken into custody on June 19 during a demonstration outside
the Wariyapola court.
Last week, the arrested farmers pleaded not guilty to all charges
and were bailed on their personal assurances of 25,000 rupees
each. The magistrate warned the defendants not to obstruct the
irrigation scheme and fixed the next hearing for September 11.
Local Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) leaders stepped in to
try to defuse the issue, which has been followed closely by farmers
in the district and more widely. The SLFP, to which President
Mahinda Rajapakse and his brother Chamal both belong, is the largest
party in the ruling coalition. Reliant on support in rural areas,
the SLFP is already under fire over rising prices, cutbacks to
rural subsidies, the inadequacy of basic services and its renewed
war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Wariyapola regional council chairman D.B. Herath led a delegation
of the Displaced People of Deduru Oya Project (DPDP) to meet President
Rajapakse on July 11. According to DPDP secretary H.M. Senaviratna
Banda, the president promised to consider the withdrawal
of charges on damaging state property. He also pledged to pay
full compensation for farmers property within one year and
a tiny plot of land in the Wariyapola area for other evictees,
He has also promised to provide electricity, water, health and
transport facilities to farmers already evicted and resettled
at Karuwalagaswewa.
These promises, however, are no different from
promises made earlier by the irrigation minister. Moreover, the
local SLFP leaders said farmers must pay the damage bill for state
vehicles, amounting to 149,175 rupees ($US 1,353). For poor farmers,
the sum of money is huge, in addition to high legal fees, but
the families of those arrested collected the money. The police
have yet to agree to drop the charge of damaging vehicles.
The charges against the farmers have provoked considerable
resentment, which several middle class radical organisations have
sought to exploit. The United Socialist Party (USP), the Diyasa
Study Circle and the Ceylon Teachers Union (CTU) held a joint
meeting with the DPDP at Potuwewa near Wariyapola on July 1.
The speakers offered no explanation for the governments
actions and promoted the illusion instead that Rajapakse could
be pressured by large protests. USP leader Siritunga Jayasuriya
demagogically appealed for farmers not to limit the struggle
to the village but to bring it to Colombo. Let us
try to get the farmers in custody released by mobilising our strength
and courage. Let us march forward with the blessing of the countrys
people until the struggle is won, he said.
The failure to adequately provide for farmers displaced by
the Deduru Oya Project is part of governments broader attacks
on the living standards throughout the island. President Rajapakse
is pouring billions of rupees into a communal war to crush the
LTTE, and forcing working people to bear the burden through rising
prices and cutbacks to public spending including on development
projects and essential services.
None of the speakers at the Potuwewa meeting even mentioned
the war or its consequences for workers and farmers. Irrigation
Minister Rajapakses arrogant remarks and the subsequent
round up of protesters is just one more example of the governments
repressive methods in dealing with any opposition to its policies.
While posturing as lefts, the USP and other radical
groups are hostile to building an independent political movement
based on socialist policies to end the war, defend democratic
rights and fight for decent living standards.
The relationship of these radical groups to the SLFP and to
the government was quickly exposed by their response to the SLFP
delegation that met with the president on July 11. After the meeting
took place, the USP, the Diyasa Study Circle and the Ceylon Teachers
Union accepted Rajapakses promises as good coin and called
off a picketting campaign planned for the following day in Colombo.
The USP issued a leaflet declaring: We will vigilantly pay
attention to the next moves of the Daduru Oya farmers struggle.
All that has taken place is that the USP has given credibility
to the false guarantees of the president and the government. The
charges against the 21 farmers remain. The promises of compensation,
assistance and proper services for displaced are yet to materialise.
The governments number one priority remains its destructive
and reactionary war, for which it demands that workers and farmers
must sacrifice.
WSWS reporters spoke to several relatives of those arrested
in Divulagaspitigama, Nagollagama, Walpaluwa and Kekulawala.
D.M. Podibanda, 58, a farmer from Divulagaspitigama,
explained that two of his sonsD.M. Saman Kumara and D.M.
Anil Kumarawere detained by police. Both are still being
held in remand.
My son Saman Kumara is a disabled soldier. He did not
participate in the June 11 protest. The police came in the dead
of night at about 2 a.m. I begged them not to arrest him but to
arrest me and my other two sons instead. But they did not listen.

Podibanda said his son had been wounded in fighting in 1999
in Mannar and was treated for three months in an army hospital.
Saman Kumara was paid only 3,000 rupees for that period and was
then sent to work in an apparel factory making army uniforms.
His wounds did not heal properly and his leg had to be operated
on again, leaving him paralysed for several months. Now he can
only walk with great difficulty.
Our family depended on him when he was in the army,
Podibanda said. As he was unable to work, the army stopped
his payments. Now Saman survives by collecting sand from the river
and selling it. His 10-year-old daughter is very upset about her
fathers arrest.
Poor youth join the army because they have no other option
and they get killed. The poor are suffering. The elite do not
send their children to war. They enjoy every privilege. At the
same time, they put the burden of the war on us and use the laws
introduced for the war against us as well.
My other son, who is in the remand prison, has a 10-month-old
baby. He is suffering from fever. We are permitted only three
minutes to see him. Prison officers check all food parcels and
allow no time for us to speak. Those inside complain the prison
is overcrowded.
After Anil Kumara was arrested, his wife returned from Karuwalagaswewa
because they had no protection there. Wild elephants roamed at
night. Anils wife said: We have inadequate water to
drink and wash. Once in 15 days they release water for the paddy
fields. We use that water to wash. Because of this, my baby is
suffering from a skin disease.
Namal Samaradivakara, who has blood cancer,
was arrested on June 19 at Wariyapola during the protest over
the previous detentions. His wife Chandralatha took his medical
records to the police, but he was not released until the following
day. We have two childrena daughter and a son. We
cannot cultivate the land given to us at Karuwalagaswewa. We earn
our living here doing odd jobs. I asked about land at Nikaweratiya
but have received no reply from the officials, she said.

Her son, Sampath priyantha Samaradivakara, who is just 11,
does odd jobs to help support the family. After school I
dig sands, he said. It takes five days for me to dig
a cube of sand. For one cube, the permit holders pay just 1,000
rupees. Some days I make bricks or prepare clay for bricks. We
are paid two rupees a brick. Making clay is very difficult. Some
earth pits are very deep. Five of us can make 1,500 bricks a day.
Saturdays and Sundays we work until 7 oclock in the evening.
Many of my friends do this job to support the family.
W. Liliyan Nona said her son, Sugath Rohana,
and son in law, Nihal Pradeep Kumara, were among those arrested.
The lawyers say we cannot get our children free as quickly
as we expected. We have to pay large legal fees. My sons do not
want to pay the money, but I am sad. They face very bad conditions
in the prison. They complain about not having enough water to
wash. They are being treated in the prison like wild animals.

Nona expressed her disgust at the ongoing war: It is
the work of politicians. People are being killed and displaced.
We were displaced on March 22 by forced eviction. We take alms
to the temple. And do all those monks, who campaign for the war,
want to talk about our problems?
J.M. Heratbanda, 65, from Divulgaspitigama,
defended the protesters, saying they would not have confronted
the minister if he had solved their problems.
I settled at Divulgaspitigama with my family in 1960.
My experience is that the condition of farmers has become poorer
under every government. The farmers cannot farm or even maintain
themselves with the rising cost of living. The Janatha Vimukthi
Peramuna (JVP) boasted that it would solve farmers problems,
but we did not see any good from them when they were in office
[in 2004-05].
The recent increase in oil prices has put further burdens
on us. As the government has no proper plan to buy our crop, private
businessmen take advantage. Although governments rate it
is 16 rupees per kilo, we are compelled sell our produce at 9
to 12 rupees per kilo to these businessmen.
The unending war is pushing the country into further
chaos. While the government puts all the burdens of the war on
us, the politicians enjoy lots of privileges.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government celebrates "victory"
after army seizes the East
[23 July 2007]
War economy weighs heavily on Sri Lankan
workers
[20 July 2007]
Sri Lankan military intensifies offensive
in the East
[12 July 2007]
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