After deprivation, Sri Lanka's displaced nurture hopes of going home
Written by: Amjad Mohamed-Saleem
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Uprooted Sri Lankans line up for food at a camp in the northeast.
MUSLIM AID
MUSLIM AID
In the last week, some sort of order seems to be coming to the camps here in northeastern Sri Lanka. The task is momentous as the numbers of displaced people are continuously increasing. The camps are expanding, but despite all the preparations, the sheer volume means the early weeks have been chaotic. It seems those who've been displaced to Trincomalee will also end up coming to Vavuniya. That could be a good move in terms of facilitating the aid process and easing logistical difficulties. The authorities are quietly making an effort to put the camps in order. In practice, this means providing electricity and water, clearing land for more camps, and ensuring the displaced get the best help possible. Credit should be given where it's due, and in the face of such huge challenges, it's been remarkable to see the government at work. Forests are being cleared at a terrific pace, tents are being put up (according to one rumour, 12,000 were erected in a day) and within two days, pylons and wires had been rigged up with the expectation power would flow 24 hours later. As a colleague wryly remarked, "If only they could be this efficient in Colombo!" One thing that isn't so efficient are the queues. Driving up to Vavuniya, you arrive at Medavichia, about 35km to the south and regarded by some as the last point between the "north" and the rest of the country. If you're lucky, you spend only an hour at this checkpoint. If not, you can count on two to three hours, and no one is spared. Everyone is searched and then let through. Previously, vehicles weren't allowed to go past this checkpoint without a defence ministry pass. So a lot of agencies have ended up driving to Medavichia and then changing over into vehicles coming from Vavuniya. Either way your car is put on a ramp and checked. This is certainly a hassle, but imagine what it's like for those using public transport. The day we went in, there were about 40 vehicles parked in front of us waiting for clearance. Many were from corporates sending in relief items. There was also a fleet of around 10 fire and rescue vehicles and trucks from various municipal councils. We all got the same treatment. The police officer who checked us was very polite but unapologetic. "Sorry sir, we have a duty to check to ensure security and safety." They went through the car with a fine tooth comb, but at least we didn't have to unload items from a truck and then put them all back. Before you enter Menik Farm - the site of the largest camp holding the most displaced people (around 170,000) - you queue while the military police check your access pass and go through the vehicle. All precautionary security measures, as people are inevitably nervous. 'I CAN'T BE A REFUGEE' It's only once you're in that you see the real queues. People line up for water, food and other relief supplies, as well as to use the bathroom. "It has been quite orderly," remarked one aid worker. "But when we first started, there were mini riots as people surged to get things. It was as if they had not seen these things before." This is what strikes you about the current situation. The people are so desperate and have been deprived of so much for so long that anything is now a luxury. Many of the mothers who've been coming to our mobile hospital are suffering from malnutrition - not just because they've been hungry for the last couple of months but because they've been deprived of essential food and nutrients for the last three years or so. There have been allegations in the state media that some government food aid sent to areas controlled by the rebels ended up in Tamil Tiger bunkers or warehouses owned by their leadership, without going to the people. From what we're seeing on the ground, it's becoming hard to dispute such allegations. Most of the displaced have reached a psychological point of desperation, with many having been continuously uprooted since 2006. A few have expressed relief simply at the fact that they can now sleep in some degree of comfort without the threat and noise of shelling. Talk to them and you get a sense of how fruitless their lives have been, just moving from place to place, caught up in a battle of which they knew nothing and didn't want to be a part. Many speak of family members who were forcibly conscripted to fight. Yet in the midst of all this pain and suffering, there doesn't seem to be much sorrow. It's as if they've lost the capacity for sadness. Most, though, are hopeful for the future. One person told me: "I just want to go back to my place and restart my livelihood. I don't care how long that will take. I can't be a refugee." This is a sentiment you hear quite often. There's no feeling of grievance or anger against the government or the army. Many of the displaced have spoken of their surprise at the gentle way they've been treated by the perceived "other side". The main desire is to go home and start their lives again. It's a message that even the government seems to have heard. Yesterday the president convened a meeting with heads of agencies where they were told: "We need to work together to help our people return back to safety and normality. This is our responsibility, our duty and our plan." A powerful promise that now needs to be put into action.
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5 responses to “After deprivation, Sri Lanka's displaced nurture hopes of going home ”
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Amjad Mohamed-Saleem classifies himself as a 'global citizen' - born in Nigeria, educated in Ethiopia and Britain, and now based in Sri Lanka. Following careers in engineering and management consultancy, he joined British relief and development agency Muslim Aid in April 2005. He was posted to Sri Lanka to work on reconstruction after the Indian Ocean tsunami and is now country director. He also oversees Muslim Aid's Bangladesh operation and coordinates its international disaster response unit. On the rare occasions when he's not globetrotting or on the road in Sri Lanka, Amjad enjoys books, music, socialising and going to the gym.
09 May 2009 02:31:40 GMT
Mr.Amjad Mohamed-Saleem, it is interesting that sitting in the sri lankan goverment zone talking about how good tamil people feel about sri lankan army. Your placebo write up might be either very naive or very calculative.
How do you want to respond to what Channel 4 presented within the pat week about the atrocities of sri lankan army? Or, why don't you listen what the BBC reporter says in his program just aired today about the people being refugees not even in vanni, but in vakarai. I am not sure about your intention, but your write up can not convince many except the sri lankan government and its military.09 May 2009 02:32:19 GMT
Going home is a dream for displaced refugees or a traveller who was lost in wilderness for along time. These civilians have many of them own homes with water and toilets and if government speed up their security clearance, they will be free to go back to their homes and start there cultivations soon. what they needs rural schools,hospitals and roads developed so that they can start their own life,with little assistance from aid agencies.
These peoples have been displaced several times in their life and the psychological impact will only reduced if they can go home early out of these unhealthy security camps. Divided families members and missing or dead in the family also harm the health and mental state among these displaced. A proper counseling and tracing of missing people will help a lot to reduce the psychological impact these displaced civilians suffer. Any action to with hold these displaced in these unhealthy camps by increasing facilities will be inhuman and denying the fundamental rights. What happen in the eastern province last year to the displaced should not be repeated to these civilians, many aid agencies who worked in eastern province are aware of it. Most of them have their own damaged homes,needing early attention and their own farms.11 May 2009 12:42:56 GMT
Having been in the camps myself as well, i must agree with much Amjad writes. There is a sincere risk however that while the UN has stated in its guidance note (of September 2008!) that freedom of movement is essential, there appears to be extremely little progress here. And this is why there is building resentment in the camps. A UN worker has mentioned that a public awareness campaign is required to allow IDPs to be informed of their rights. At the same time this could result in public riots against the camp management. The return of some of the Mannar IDPs is a step forward, but these people were the first to come out of the LTTE controlled areas, and have been in the government controlled camps for two years!! It was said that they were rarely allowed to leave the camps (for other than medical reasons) and then only when family members stayed in the camp as a gurantee; similar 'tactics' were used over the past two decades by th! e LTTE for people leaving their control.
12 May 2009 07:31:11 GMT
Dear Amjad, keep writing! There are undoubtedly may things to report on and being in the camp, without 'minders' you have the opportunity to report independently. There are already many IDPs that are becoming aggravated with the slow response, initially they are pleased to have left the conflict zone, but after 3 months there is not much progress and they linger in the camps. First hand information shows that progres on the September Aide Memoire by the UN is minimal. with several UN agencies making unilaterial agreements with the GoSL. This not only undermines the coordinated response and assistance of the aud community to the GoSL, but in the long term with backfire as the 'interment' of the IDPs will be prolonged... with the approval of the UN!
16 May 2009 23:46:36 GMT
Amjad, You need to blog more! Thanks for this!
Charlene