Friday, January 29, 2016

கேரளாவில் உள்ளது போல் கிழக்கு கடலேரிகளில் சொகுசு படகு வீடுகள்.



இலங்கையின் கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தில் முதலீடுகளை ஈர்க்கும் நடவடிக்கைகள் முன்னெடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன என மாகாண முதலமைச்சர் ஹாஃபீஸ் நசீர் அகமட் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
Image captionமுதலீட்டாளர்கள் மாநாட்டில் கலந்துகொள்ள வந்திருந்த பிரதமர் ரணில் விக்ரமசிங்க மற்றும் அமைச்சர் ரவூஃப் ஹக்கீம்
அவ்வகையில் 25க்கும் மேற்பட்ட நாடுகளில் இருந்து 500க்கும் அதிகமான முதலீட்டாளர்கள், இது தொடர்பில் நடைபெற்ற ஒரு மாநாட்டில் கலந்துகொண்டனர் என அவர் கூறுகிறார்.
கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தில் சுற்றுலாத்துறை , கைத்தொழில், விவசாயம், கால் நடை மற்றும் மீன்பிடி என பல்வேறு துறைகளில் முதலீடு செய்வது தொடர்பாக மாகாண சபை தயாரித்துள்ள திட்டங்கள் இந்த மாநாட்டில் முன்வைக்கப்பட்டன எனவும் அவர் மேலும் கூறுகிறார்.
இந்த திட்டங்கள் மற்றும் யோசனைகள் தொடர்பாக சாதகமான பதில்கள் முதலீட்டாளர்களிடமிருந்து கிடைத்துள்ளதாகவும் அவர் நமது கிழக்கிலங்கைச் செய்தியாளர் உதயகுமாரிடம் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
Image captionமாநாட்டில் பங்குபெற்ற சில முதலீட்டாளர்கள்
இந்திய நிறுவனமொன்று கேரளாவில் உள்ளது போல் கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தின் கடலேரிகளில் சொகுசு படகு வீடுகளை அமைக்க முன்வந்துள்ளது எனவும் ஹாஃபீஸ் நசீர் அகமட் கூறுகிறார்.
உத்தேச முதலீடுகள் செயல்வடிவம் பெறும்போது கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தில் வேலை வாய்ப்புகள் பெருகி அங்குள்ள மக்களின் சமூகப் பொருளாதார வாழ்க்கை மேம்படும் என தாங்கள் நம்புவதாகவும் மாகாண முதலமைச்சர் நமது செய்தியாளரிடம் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தில் இந்தியா, சவுதி அரேபியா உட்பட பல நாடுகள் முதலீடுகளைச் செய்ய உறுதியளித்துள்ளன.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

The tale of two cities by the Lagoon – Batticaloa & Venice


 

article_image
By B. Nimal Veerasingham

Growing up barley a few hundred yards away from the meandering and mesmerizing Batticaloa lagoon had its magical moments. The swilling frothy waves dancing in the sun rays, and gently touching the sandy shores were a sight that never fades from memory. The mangroves, prawns, jelly fish, green algae, and the distinct lake smell –are elements that embody the surrounding of a lagoon dweller.

To me, the Saturday morning bike ride with my father, along the Southern edge of Lake Road dotted with colonial government bungalows with panoramic views, gave me reason to be awestruck. It’s largely due to the wholesome lagoon effect -everything from the moored cranes and sea birds on the marooned tree trunks, the smell of seaweeds hauled by fishermen trying their nets from the shore, the glitter of the rising sun, and the circles of outrigger canoes where groups of fishermen try their luck. Occasionally, my father would call the fishermen to see whether there was anything to buy for lunch.

Then there were the howls of foxes, mostly during the fading evening light across the lake, where the vast paddy lands crisscross the hinterland. My grandmother would at times point to their movements interpreting them as a call to the pack, foretelling the death of livestock. The jolt of fire that could be seen moving on the waves during dusk is not a mystery to insiders. I am not talking of the release of Methane gases in the mangroves or some fiery ghosts showing their prowess over the lagoon – but the skillful youth floating bounded banana trunks together, to host a burning log fire on the cap of a tar barrel!

The December monsoon brings another round of excitement – the rising lagoon waters that engulf, initially the lake road and gradually move inland. Our house was on higher ground, so the lake water hardly reaches. But to compensate for that, we walk on the flooded lake road, usually by a foot or two - like the moon-walkers, and try our luck on casting the rod for the fish flowing in from the surrounding tributary ponds.

I realised the unique DNA of the Batticaloa lagoon and its surroundings’ enormity, only when I came of age - during my escapades with the roots of my worldly journey. Everyone at one point of their lives will want to go back to see the beginnings, as they age with related enlightenment. It is kind of what Salmon does – going back to the swamps all the way from the sea it lived, to where it all began – the place where it was originally hatched – to lay its eggs before it breathes the last.

The very name ‘Mattakalapu’ in Tamil simply denotes a ‘flat lagoon’. It could be said that Batticaloa’s entwinement with culture, arts, poetry, literature, cuisine, drama and folklore has a strong association with the lagoon and the surrounding regional landscape - providing a romantic mysticism that could only be felt intimately when you succumb to the call of the lagoon.

The lagoon Veneto

So it is no accident when I met my aunt after almost 30 years this summer in Italy, it is not about the once majestic Roman empire and its remnants that excited me – rather the reminiscing of our common lagoon environs. She is a transplanted Roman citizen living there for almost 30 years. The gastronomy she has developed is worthy to mention – a fine interloping between Tiber River and Batti lagoon. She has mastered everything from antipasto to risotto saltato and gnocchi to calameritifritti – and makes the best cappuccino (along with mutton rolls.) The manifestation of love and affection through a satisfied palate – a mantra, that’s heavily wired and followed. Mediterranean catch almost matched the traps of the Batticaloa lagoon – my aunt’s dining table is well represented with devilled prawns and stone crabs.

To the North of the country, lies the most visited city of the world - the story of Venice has been told in every angle. The autos being forbidden in the main Islands, the lagoon is the lifeline for Venice. About 70.000 residents battle with the millions of visitors arriving by air, ship, auto and train to be part of the romanticized lagoon environs. In the free market economy the service sector is leading the economy of the Veneto, despairingly bringing eco damage or not.

But to be in the realm of a lagoon city that has ruled the waves and lands for many centuries, Batticaloa has little in common with Venice, except the lagoon itself. But interestingly the main islands of both principalities – ‘Puliyanthivu’ and the main historic Venice look similar, in the shape of a turtle. The English word lagoon did originate from the word ‘lagun Veneta’, referring to the marshy watershed of roughly 550 square Kms by the Adriatic Sea. The narrow Batticaloa lagoon on the other hand stretches around 50Kms in length, separated from the Indian Ocean.

Evolving economies

Veneto region once ruled the waves with its advanced shipbuilding industry. The lagoon also complemented its fishing and agricultural landscape. But what was once the crown of the Roman jewel chest, has today, completely switched to a service economy intertwined with mass tourism. Career conscious young people have moved in droves out of the region due to lack of opportunities, leaving only the old; a reality that no one is immune to in any part of the globe.

What will happen to the Batticaloa region’s agricultural and inland fishing, once they get saturated is anyone’s guess. But what is noticeable is the expanding tourism industry, centered mostly on the Passekudah and Arugum Bay regions. On the other hand, a steady stream of outward youth movement, mostly to Colombo and its environs is clearly visible over time, to better them in the economic chain.

Two lagoon cities – unified in one tale

Two cities surrounded by two lagoons - though thousands of kilometers away; intertwined with many similarities. Besides providing a lifeline and protection from the angry seas, historical lineage does bring both together in many respects. Whether the forecasted nebulas in the global warming scenarios could spell disaster by way of rising water levels and weather calamities, wait to be seen – or should they be prepared for the continued existence of these people by the lagoon?

What once a maritime power and military prowess has become a romanticized fairy book, depending on mass tourism. Batticaloa lagoon’s reflective influence upon its dwellers does continue to be evolved in a manner beyond simple physics and geography. Has anyone recently notice the Soprano ‘C’note from the magical symphony of the ‘Singing Fish’ -possibly reflecting on the impending winds of change?
source : http://www.island.lk/index.php?page_cat=article-details&page=article-details&code_title=137731

Monday, January 11, 2016

East Coast Sri Lanka one of the 52 Places to Go in 2016

East Coast
Sri Lanka
Remote stillness — and world-class diving — beckon.
Cut off for the last 30 years because of civil unrest, the east coast of Sri Lanka offers a collection of new hotels like the eco-conscious treehouse-inspiredJungle Bay resort, the barefoot-casual Maalu Maalu and private villas from the local brand Anilana. Wildland Adventures offers back road cycling and leopard-spotting land safaris, and Abercrombie & Kent now extends access to forgotten Hindu temples in newly revived Trinco as well as the region’s main draw, unexplored diving sites: the world-class wreck MV Cordiality and the1922 British Sergeant, a marine oasis leaning on its side. Add on snorkeling with blue whales off Pigeon Island National Park, plus remote surfing, and the boxes are all ticked.