IDPs getting back on track: Rebuilding lives
Wasanthamala was waiting for three of her daughters to return from school in the Kilinochchi town. Her other two girls had stayed home that day. Wasanthamala and her six children – five daughters and an infant boy – live in Kilinochchi in their half-built house on a small plot of land.
Wasanthamala’s life story depicts the shocking reality of a victimised family of a lost terrorist. Her husband had been a member of the LTTE and had gone missing at Puthumathalan during the last phase of the conflict. The family left Kilinochchi in November 2008.
Wasanthamala, with the months-old infant followed her beloved husband with her girls from Kilinochchi to Murusomotai, then to Dharmapuram to Vishvamadu, Udayarkattu, Sugandirapuram, Tharavipuram, Iranapallai and in the last phase to Puthumathalan, where she got injured. During the last two to three days of the conflict, Wasanthamala, grieving after the loss of her husband, reached Vattuvakal in Mullaitivu seeking the safety of the Sri Lanka Army. Then having safely arrived at the Cheddikulam relief villages, she resettled in her home in Kilinochchi early this year.
Today, she encounters life with great difficulty, solely depending on the dry rations she receives every month. “Earlier, before displacement, I used to work as an accountant in an LTTE fund-raising organisation. After resettling I couldn’t find any job,” she said. She and her husband bought the land where they now live, which is about 40 perches. It has a well, a budding banana cultivation and a chillie plot. The area was dry and dusty, but the slightly darkened environment forecast a possible shower in the evening. Every dark cloud has a silver lining!
Loaded with the responsibility of raising girls in their early teens, toddlers and an infant boy, Wasanthamala finds it difficult to leave home for work. She is planning to start backyard poultry as a household industry. As a 24-year-old girl, Wasanthamala married against her parents’ wishes. Therefore, she cannot seek her parents’ help today. Her parents opposed their marriage as her husband was of an ‘unsuitable’ caste. “My husband’s family has many girls and they are also not in a position to assist us,” she said with great grief. Tears welled in her eyes.
Life is not a bed roses for Wasanthamala. However, with funds and a helping hand from the United Nations Human Settlements Program (UN-Habitat) she repaired her house to some extent. A neighbour helped her build a hen-house for her backyard poultry business. Today, with the guns going silent and no bomb or mine explosions, this single mother raises her children in a peaceful environment. Her top priority now is to find a steady income generating method which she believes she can find in the near future.
Ajanthan
Wasanthamala is not the only victim of the conflict. Twenty-four-year-old Annathurai Ajanthan from Paranthan puts a great effort to rebuild his life, taking care of his mother and sister Gnaneswari who is still schooling. During the last phase of the conflict Ajanthan got injured in Puthumathalan. He was given just basic treatment. His left leg was amputated and he was suffering without proper medical care. Medical attention was given only to LTTE cadre. With great difficulty Ajanthan had got crutches from the hospital and on May 16, 2009 he reached Vadduvakal with his mother and sister, seeking the protection of the Army. “The Army made announcements for us to reach their areas and thousands of people escaped,” Ajanthan said.
“I got proper medical treatment at the Ananda Coomaraswamy relief village in Cheddikulam, Vavuniya,” he said. Ajanthan was lucky. He had an aunt to take care of him, his mother and sister after the disaster. Before getting displaced he had owned a small boutique.
LTTE leader Theepan had bought the plot of land next to Ajanthan’s house and built his camp there, in the latter part of 2008, terrorising the people in the vicinity. “It was the normal practice. They would forcibly take over someone else’s property, set up their camp and the entire neighbourhood had lived in fear,” Ajanthan said, recollecting memories of the gloomy past. With the sound of gunfire at a distance he, with his mother and sister, had run to the bunker few feet away. Such was life for Ajanthan and his family before their displacement.
Today he has started building his house with the support of fellow villagers and assistance from the UN-Habitat. As scheduled in the project, he should build the house with one lockable room and completely tiled roof in another four months.
Sundaralingum and his wife Subashini lived in the Kandawalai DS Division, Paranthan with their daughters. This is the second time they had got displaced with increased LTTE hostilities. In 1996 too they were displaced and lived away from home for six years.
Their house was on the west side of the A9 highway, over 10 miles away. During the Eelam War IV, they left their meagre possessions and ran for safety on November 18, 2008. Amidst the firing and explosions, they lost their whereabouts. Somehow, they crossed the A9 road and reached Puliyanpokkanai. After three months, on January 15, 2009, they reached Mailvaganapuram from where they went to Pudukuduyirippu, Sugandhirapuram, Kombavil and then to Puthumathalan. To their greatest relief, they at last heard the Army announcing that they have cleared a path for the civilians to reach safety. Thus they reached Iranapalai on April 29, 2009. Then they settled down in the Ramanadan relief village. Sundaralingum earns his living as a labourer settling back in their original plot of land, life has become a hard task. They have started building their house after resettling on March 3.
Kanthimadi (68) of Mundimuruppu village, was more than happy to return home. She was eagerly listening to the details provided at the village meeting held in the kovil premises on funds they are entitled to receive to rebuild their houses.
Starting from Thunukkai, Kanthimadi moved to 21 places with her children and grandchildren until they reached Puthumathalan. “We hardly had time to figure out the directions. We ran to whichever the direction from which there was no firing,” she said disclosing her unpleasant experience.
Subashini with her daughter | Ajanthan (on right) |
Today she lives alone in her crooked house. Relatives still live around the place, to her comfort. “All my 11 children are married and live with their families. I can’t ask them to leave their families to come and look after me. How can I ask them for help when they are also struggling”, she questioned.
Karupaiah Palawan was also at the meeting. He spoke Sinhala fluently. “I’m from Ratnapura. As a 26-year-old man, I came to this village in 1976 with my uncles to cultivate paddy fields,” said the old man with much happiness. “My mother is Sinhala,” he said. “I lost my eldest son in 1999 – he was 19. He was wounded in an LTTE artillery attack and the LTTE refused to treat him though we took him to the nearest hospital. I was helpless at that point and I could not do anything. The LTTE did not even try to treat my son,” Palawan said. Three days later his son’s leg was amputated, but on the same day he died.
“When we were escaping the LTTE, we ran for miles and I carried one of my old aunts. We did not rest for one night until we were far away from the sounds of gunfire,” he said. At Sungandirapuram, Palawan and his family along with other groups managed to escape the LTTE grip and reach Sri Lanka Army personnel. “The LTTE was blocking us from all sides. They questioned where we are heading at every point. Misleading them many times and risking our lives, we reached the safety of the Army,” he said.
“Now I have started cultivating two acres of paddy land and I’m a tenant farmer as well,” he said explaining his efforts to rebuild his life. “I never thought we will return home alive. The Army saved us from misery and thanks to them we live in peace today,” Palawan said with great gratitude.
Families selected
The Mundimuruppu Grama Niladhari Division has six villages. According to Grama Niladhari Aiyathurai Thruwarudchelvan, 112 families have been selected from the GN division for UN-Habitat assistance. During these meetings the villagers are educated on the process and documentation they need to produce. The project is fully funded by the Australian Government. The UN-Habitat gives each selected family Rs. 325,000 to reconstruct or rebuild their houses. To lay the foundation Rs. 75,000 is given and with close monitoring Rs. 100,000 is given at the second stage to raise the walls. The next instalment would be Rs. 117,500 to build the roof. The last instalment would be Rs. 32,500.
Health concerns
The villagers are not supposed to use asbestos or tin sheets for the roof, taking the health impact into consideration. They should use roof tiles. The Divisional Secretary facilitates the villagers by permitting sand, cement and timber transportation without delay. Special consideration is given to these people as resettling them is a top priority for the Government. The villagers get-together and buy the items collectively from selected places at reasonable prices. With all this support, a family is generally capable of building the house with a completed roof and one lockable room. With time and as they start earning money, the family has to complete their house.
Using an owner-driven approach, the program helps families to actively take charge of their own recovery. They plan, implement and monitor their own progress. Their early involvement ensures that the end result is a home that reflects their own aspirations. The process also rekindles the local economy. Material and labour are procured locally. This ensures that funds remain within the communities, while the families earn or save by contributing their labour.