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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan government cracks down on protesting farmers
On-the-spot report by Nihal Fernando and W.A. Sunil
28 June 2007
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Sri Lankan police have carried out a wave of arrests after
protests by thousands of farmers in the Northwest province against
their forced eviction to make way for an irrigation scheme. The
police action came in the wake of an angry confrontation on June
11 between farmers in several remote villages near Wariyapola
and Irrigation, Ports and Civil Aviation Minister Chamal Rajapakse.
The minister, who is a brother of Sri Lankan President Mahinda
Rajapakse, was in the area for an inspection tour. As part of
an irrigation scheme, the government is building a dam across
the Deduru Oya, a major river through the province. Farmers in
several villages, including Weraherayagama, Kanogama and Potuwewa,
will be immediately displaced and are angry over the inadequate
facilities where they are being moved.
Around 2,000 farmers, their wives and children staged a demonstration
at Weraherayagama. When Rajapakse arrived around noon accompanied
by Self-Employment Minister Sarath Nawinna and Highways Minister
T.B. Ekanayake, the protesters confronted them, demanding definite
guarantees over their eviction. Having nothing to offer, Rajapakse
arrogantly declared: We cant do what you say. We cant
build the palaces you expect. Whatever the opposition, we will
continue with this project.
At that point one of the protesters snapped back: You
enjoy a comfortable life in your palaces and we are suffering
here. We want a solution for our problems. When Rajapakse
tried to leave, the protesters surrounded his vehicle and demanded
a written promise to deal with their demands. The police and ministerial
security detail immediately whisked the dignitaries away.
When we heard that minister was coming, we went to present
our problems expecting reasonable solutions because the project
director cheats us. In this area, 90 percent of the people voted
for President Mahinda Rajapakse in the [November 2005] presidential
election, a farmer told the WSWS.
S.P Luwis Singho, the president of the Organisation of Displaced
People of Deduru Oya Project, denied government allegations that
an invisible political hand was behind the farmers
protest. What they want is to discourage us and disrupt
our movement, he told the WSWS. Critical of all the major
parties, he added: These politicians are thieves. Since
the war restarted, people have been displaced and died there [in
the North and East]. Here we are also being displaced. What will
be the future for our children?
Immediately after the incident, the local police began arresting
farmers on the basis of videos taken by the ministers media
team. Twenty people were detained over two days and face charges
of unlawful assembly, sabotaging a ministers meeting, damaging
state vehicles and injuring two police.
On June 19, more than a thousand people gathered outside the
court to show their solidarity with those arrested. The villagers
demanded the immediate release of the detainees and an end to
police harassment. Armed police prevented all but lawyers from
entering the court. Another four arrests were made by plain-clothes
police who were mingling with the crowd. Those arrested have been
remanded until July 3.
Under the proposed Deduru Oya irrigation scheme, nearly 1,000
families in the Wariyapola, Yapahuwa Hiriyala and Kurunegala electorates
are to be evicted. The project, which was begun in March, is expected
to inundate more than 5,000 acres of cultivated lands. The government
promised suitable land, compensation and basic facilities such
as water, health, education and transport; but has not lived up
to its pledges.
In the first stage of the relocation in March, 72 families
were shifted to Nelumgama at Karuwalagaswewa in the Puttalam.
News of the poor conditions soon got back to other farmers. Many
women and children have not moved to the new area because of the
fear of wild animals, including elephants, boars and bears.
E.M. Karunawathie, the wife of a relocated farmer, told the
WSWS: They have given us one acre of highland and one acre
of wetland. We received only 16,000 rupees [about $US150] to build
a temporary hut. People can only build small mud huts with coconut
leaves as roofing. They only helped us to clear the land. We had
to pay all the other expenses needed to prepare the land for cultivation.
No farming equipment or seeds were provided as promised. We have
not been paid the promised compensation for our land yet and we
are not sure when they are going to pay it.
At present, we get a 6,000-rupee monthly allowance, which
they promise will continue for 18 months. But it is unbelievable
what is happening. We do not have enough water to drink and wash.
People have to travel 20 kilometres from Karuwalagaswewa to the
nearest town, Anamaduwa. They have to pay for three-wheeler taxis
because there is no public transport. The nearest hospital is
at Anamaduwa. There are only two small schools and our children
have to walk 3 to 4 kilometres to reach them.
H.M. Dharmasena, 51, a farmer and father of two, was bitter
about having to move. He has four acres at Potuwewa and took years
to build a house for his family, but has no idea what type of
land he will be relocated to. Because of the uncertainty
and difficulties, some people sent to Nelumgama have begun to
come back, he said.
Dharmasena explained that farmers were facing serious difficulties.
How can people live without an adequate income when the
price of everything is going up everyday? Farming is not profitable.
To cultivate an acre of paddy you need at least 20,000 rupees.
We have no irrigated water. If there is not enough rainfall we
have to pump water from the Deduru Oya. There are other expenses
for fertiliser and chemicals. If the harvest is poor, we dont
get enough income.
If they uproot us and settle us somewhere else without
basic facilities, it is like dropping us from the frying pan into
the fire. The government is engaged in an unending war and putting
the burden onto us. The ruling class treats peasants and workers
here like they do in [the war zones] in the northeast.
Every government makes promises but then ignores the
people. After the [opposition] UNP and the [ruling] Sri Lanka
Freedom Party cheated us, we hoped that the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) would do something for the peopleas its name says,
the Peoples Liberation Front. When they were in the [previous]
government they said they would rehabilitate village tanks [water
storage] but they didnt even come here.
Dharmasena explained that some of the local farmers went to
the Human Rights Commission office in Kurunegala to seek redress,
but in vain. The officials there accused us of lying without
even inquiring into our complaints. I am greatly disappointed
over these political parties and this system, he said.
The poverty and lack of facilities was evident in all three
villages being relocated. There are only two primary schools and
one secondary school to service the whole area and many children
must walk or travel long distances to reach them. Public buses
are infrequent. There is a hospital at Wariyapola but for serious
illnesses people have to travel to Kurunegala, 30 kilometres away.
Weraherayagama is a 50-year-old settlement but the village
still does not have electricity. Most houses are made of wattle
and daub. Water has to be collected from wells. Unemployment is
high throughout the area. Young girls must move to find employment
in free trade zones. Some work as contract labour in the Middle
East in menial jobs. Young men often join the military because
there is no alternative. Others work on a contract basis in local
brick factories.
The conditions in these villages are the product of decades
of official neglect and the implementation of the IMF agenda of
cutbacks to farm subsidies. As it intensifies the islands
civil war, however, the Rajapakse government is placing the burden
on the backs of workers and farmers. Huge increases in military
spending are being paid for by cutbacks to essential services
such as education, health and welfare and funding for projects
such as the Deduru Oya irrigation scheme.
Minister Chamal Rajapakses arrogant contempt for protesting
villagers is symptomatic of the governments response to
opposition on any issue. Whether over the war, workers wages,
or the conditions facing farmers, it responds by denouncing its
critics as traitors or under the control of a hidden hand.
If that fails to silence protests, the government does not hesitate
to trample on basic democratic rights and resort to police state
repression.
See Also:
A socialist perspective to defend Sri
Lankan university workers
[11 June 2007]
Suicides highlight
desperate conditions facing Sri Lankan farmers
[10 June 2005]
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