Sunday, September 27, 2009

Back to Batticaloa

Text and pics By R. Wijewardene
in Batticaloa

You hurtle at speed along a road so flat and smooth it resembles polished dark glass.

In the darkness villages, towns and houses flash by in a blur of fluorescent light, and neon. Kilometre posts appear and disappear in seconds — even the darkness is accelerated.

Is this the rush of an unlit autobahn at night or lonely highway cleaving its way through the American Midwest? No. Its the A-11 between Polonnaruwa and Batticaloa, perhaps the finest stretch of rolled tar in the country.

More than the quality of road however what’s striking is the darkness.

To travel to Batticaloa through the emptiness beyond Medawachchiya and through the once fraught towns of Valaichchenai, Kiran and Eravur in the darkness — without fear or check points is to experience, in a journey, the magnitude of the changes that have gripped this country over the past few months.

A night time journey to Batticaloa has been impossible for almost three decades. Daylight reveals the full extent of the changes that have taken place in the town and the surrounding area.

While the demolition of houses and shop fronts in the centre of Batti thanks to a road widening scheme makes the town appear like more of a war zone than it ever did previously, there is a relaxed, unthreatening air on the streets of Batticaloa that speaks volumes about its progress.

The hair trigger tension of what has for decades been the least stable major town in the country outside of the peninsula is gone. The armed presence has diminished.

Checks points are virtually non existent — newly recruited Tamil officers now patrol the streets and people move freely at all times.

Once forlorn bars, restaurants and hotels are crowded extraordinarily not with foreign visitors or NGO workers but with Sinhala businessmen and tourists.

Scenes that have been unimaginable for years; scores of Sinhala day trippers from Polonnaruwa and Dambulla bathing in the placid waters at Passekuda – are now almost routine.

The best things of course remains the same. The lagoons and the sea gleam – a dozen shades of blue under the searing eastern sun. The view from the Kallady bridge remains a vision of a virtual Venice – a city, more than any other in this country defined and surrounded by water. A city surely with a future as bright as the light that bounces off the dazzling surface of its lagoons.

But things in this country are rarely that simple. Beneath Batticaloa’s fresh veneer — its sparkling Food City, and rows of refurbished banks there are visible cracks, fissures that threaten to collapse this vision of a town wrapped securely in the folds of development and progress.

Feuding factions:TMVP vs TMVP

The rift within the TMVP is deep. Pillayan and Karuna’s factions remain in open confrontation. The last weeks have seen Pillayan prevented from opening offices in parts of the east by Karuna loyalists.

Within the limits of Batticaloa town the Pillayan faction of the TMVP have replaced the old roaring Tiger emblem which decorated their offices, bases and bunkers with a new emblem — a sleek motor boat powering into the future.

But outside his strongholds in Batticaloa and Trincomalee towns Pillayan’s ship appears to be sinking.

In the Tamil hinterlands of the interior and coastal villages Kurana reigns supreme — his cadres unlike Pillayan’s never handed over their weapons and posters affirming his closeness to the island’s shawled, mustachioed centre of power.

Pillayan by daring to ask that more power be handed over to the Eastern Provincial Council has incurred the wrath of the mighty centre.

No longer in control of an armed force and undercut by the central government his power base is rapidly being decimated. He is at loggerheads with the appointed governor of the EasternProvince — a battle he cannot expect to win given the enormous powers vested in the governor. The new mayor of Batticaloa too is thought to be sympathetic to Karuna.

Even within his stronghold of Batticaloa therefore his position is becoming untenable — his failure to win concessions from the government have revealed the narrow limits of the Chief Minister’s power. And faced with the Chief Minister’s impotence his inability to win concessions from the central government the people have turned against Pillayan.

However that is not to say they are in favour of Karuna either.

Ultimately from the whisperings in the town’s eating houses and conversations with veteran analysts of Batticaloa’s political situation an outsider can glean that for the most part the people of Batticaloa regard both Karuna and Pillayan as stooges of the government. Their inability to wok together to win more rights for the Tamil people is seen as a final act of betrayal.

Extraordinarily in and around Batticaloa there remains robust support for the TNA despite the party’s absolutely rudderless present state and its links to the vanquished LTTE. “If there were free elections in the province the TNA would win the Tamil vote and win easily” were the words of a seasoned journalist.

The same sentiments were repeated again and again by those prepared to comment on the situation. The government has crushed the LTTE and delivered unprecedented infrastructure development however the battle for the hearts and minds of the people of the east is far from won.

Changing the mindset of a people who have endured decades of restrictions, repression and fear will take time. Roads and bridges cannot undo decades of fear and suspicion; the wounds in this part of the country are still fresh and deep.

A damaged people

Beyond the highways the glass fronted buildings and the sleek roads of Batticaloa remain profoundly damaged. Not in the sense of bullet ridden buildings or craters left from past shellings – there are none of these, but the bruised psychology of the people reveals a shattered landscape.

This is a land of mental scars and where buildings have been rebuilt, damage remains manifest in the province’s people.

An indication of the scale of the human suffering that remains in the district years after its liberation is the fact that there are 60 orphanages in and around Batticaloa town. Each housing dozens of children. Young people who endured the worst atrocities of war saw their families massacred, their houses burned and their lives destroyed.

The homes range from well run and caring facilities to ridiculously extravagant air-conditioned equipped compounds now crumbling for want of funds.

Of these various houses of sorrow only five are registered. Some are extremely well run, others much less so but all continue to function as the government recognises that closing unregistered orphanages would only inundate a system that is even at present barely coping. There are simply thousands of orphans in the district.

Almost all these orphanages were built with generous donor funding and promises of long term assistance to the children in their care. But as the world’s attention has now turned to new crises donor funding is proving harder to come and many of these homes are struggling for funds.

Some have had to go to extraordinary lengths to secure the funding they need.

“Before we were funded by international donors – from Italy and other European countries we were following a programme where the children were looked after by carers who functioned like surrogate mothers. But the funding for that programme ran out and now we have an agreement with ‘Art of Living’ Ravi Shankar’s foundation. The children are raised according to the principles of Shankar’s philosophy, breathing exercises, compulsory laughter and crying – its helps balance their minds and souls”

The man in charge of the centre seems enthusiastic about the new system but whether the east’s orphans should be raised according to the new age teachings of an Indian guru is an open question.

Some orphanages in fact are nothing less that fully fledged Indian style ashrams with rhythmic chanting broadcast constantly over manicured gardens populated by shaven-headed orphans in dhottis who spend their days listening to mantrams and worshipping photographs of their distant Indian guru.

It all seems frighteningly arbitrary – Ravi Shankar orphanages, ashram orphanages, Catholic orphanages, fundamentalist protestant orphanages all without any particular regulation or supervision.

However for the most, the children are well clothed, fed and the current chaos may in fact be the best solution for what is a genuinely intractable problem. Government intervention might have the effect of closing orphanages or might only make things worse.

Ultimately the idea that children who saw their parents killed in front of their eyes, who had their mothers immolate themselves on hearing the news of their fathers’ death will ever lead normal lives is, for the most part, an unrealistic dream.

The horror of the conflict will live on in these children indefinitely; for decades they will be a reminder of a past everyone else is already eager to forget.

Electric refugees

Another living reminder of the east’s dark past are the refugees. Of course it was announced that all the east’s refugees had been resettled and allowed to return home months ago. But as ever things are not quite what they are announced to be.

While the vast majority of refuges have returned – there is a single but crucial exception – hundreds of families evicted from their homes in Sampur remain trapped in the tented limbo of IDP camps outside of Batticaloa.

Their former homes have been declared a high security zone. In reality of course the zone is the site of the proposed Sampur coal power plant and the government having encountered land disputes and protests that accompanied the construction of the power plant at Norochcholai is keen to make sure that the people never return.

These are therefore not refugees from the war but from development – displaced by the country’s need for electricity.

While the government has offered these electric refugees compensation and alternative land they continue to demand the right to return to the land of their ancestors. That the country needs development is unquestionable but why a community already battered by the war and tsunami should pay the heaviest price for this development is an open and uncomfortable question.

The Sampur refugees sweltering in their tin roofed temporary homes reveal both the duplicity and concealment of the government and the failure of the media who distracted by various other issues have failed to follow up on this painful but profoundly important case.

Eastern Tamils; a peoplein decline

Ultimately the reality of Batticaloa today is complex. There is the clear reality of development programmes and investment but also the reality that displacement destruction and death have damaged the region’s people, particularly its Tamil people, almost beyond repair.

North of the town in recently ‘cleared’ villages rent by the tsunami and the war the situation remains bleak. The land is parched from months of drought, the remaining water resources are barely adequate all the talk is of emigration and escape.

The inescapable reality is that the Tamils of the east are a people in decline. Literally so as their numbers continue to dwindle as the Sinhala and Muslim population of the east expands. Sinhala villages line the road from Polonnaruwa almost to Valaichchenai and Muslims dominate the coast from Kattankudi to Kalmunai and beyond.

An accurate census would almost certainly reveal that Muslims are in fact the largest ethnic group in the province. The thambis or ‘little brothers’ are now the dominant ethnic group in the east and Tamils now struggle even to constitute the largest minority group.

Separatism and autonomy are no longer even a remote possibility for a people who after decades of armed struggle are now a minority in a province they once claimed as their own.

Peace and the end of separatism must be a relief for any and all those who are truly fond of this ancient island but that one of the east’s cultures appears to be disappearing gradually pushed by emigration, disenchantment and despair into insignificance can only be a source of sadness,

For now in the evenings the air in the centre of Batticaloa town is still perfumed. Thick with incense as burning camphor is offered to the gods – as it has been for over thousands of years. But how much longer these rituals will persist in the face of the inexorable demographic and economic changes now gripping the east is difficult to predict.

And the best advice for those looking to understand the multifaceted and complex reality of this island’s most complex and fascinating province is visit now. Visit often. Fantastic roads and fabulous new intercity trains will take you there. Second class Colombo-Batticaloa train tickets on the comfortable newly donated Chinese intercity express start from Rs. 500 and you can roll into Batticaloa on the wheels of progress.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

If you look at Batticaloa District on a map, you’ll see that in a sense there are two Districts.

Let Them Drink Rice Wine: Withholding Water as Punishment on the East Coast?

If you look at Batticaloa District on a map, you’ll see that in a sense there are two Districts.

The first is the coastal strip, where you find Batti, Kattankudy, Valachchenai, and other towns and villages. I’m only guessing, but it seems to me that some 90% of the Districts’ population lives in this narrow band of land.

As you will see on your map, a long sinuous lagoon separates most of the coastal strip from the interior, which makes up the bulk of the District. The interior is sparsely populated and there are no real towns to speak of; at best you could call them small villages or hamlets.

I am most familiar with Mamunai West Division, which is located directly opposite the lagoon from Batticaloa town. I’m quite familiar with many of the farming hamlets that dot the area, and the people who live there. Incidentally, the Division extends west, and includes Unnichchai Tank, one of the largest tanks in Sri Lanka. This is crucial to the point of this article.

In 2007, an agreement was signed between the Sri Lankan Government, the Asian Development Bank (as funder) and a Chinese construction conglomerate called China Geo-Engineering Corporation/Salcon Engineering Berhad/Access Engineering Ltd. to create a water transport system from Unnichchai to the coastal strip. Work was promptly begun, and proceeds apace today. The project is called the Batticaloa Water Supply Project.

To date, numerous Chinese-style water tanks have mushroomed up and down the coastal strip, and many roads have been dug up in order to lay massive pipes. This includes the dirt tracks that pass as roads in Mamunai West. The project is busily underway, and is slated to be completed in March 2010.

Water is an extremely serious problem in the Mamunai West. Or rather the extreme lack of it. During the long, dry, hot season, the water table disappears beneath the bedrock and many places literally are bone dry. For example, a friend constructed a water tank in the hamlet of Palakkadu. Palakkadu is so dry they had to pay a village boy to pedal his bike along the dirt track to a still-functioning tube well several kilometers away to fetch enough water to mix the cement. That’s how dry it is. The local Divisional Secretary (DS) has tried to improve the situation by bringing in NGOs to dig deep (and very expensive) tube wells, and has a water truck that makes the rounds.

There have been two serious consequences from this project in the Division, and they largely depend upon which part you live.

If you live near the tank, you have lost almost all of your water supply. Prior to the project, there was a British colonial era conduit that regulated flow from the tank. This conduit maintained the area water table. While the water table was deep, too deep to dig a conventional open well for example, it did allow for deep tube wells to be drilled and old fashioned hand pumps were adequate to bring it to the surface.

However, the conduit has now been closed and as a result, the water table has fallen drastically. The deep tube wells no longer draw anything near sufficient amounts of water. One well I saw takes about 10 minutes of pumping to draw a liter of water. Every couple of liters-full of water brought up, and pumping must stop for a half hour or so to allow more water to accumulate. People are now queuing up hours to get a couple of liters of water, sometimes well into the night. On top of this, much of Mamunai West is jungle, so there are issues with wild animals at night, particularly wild elephants.

If you live closer to Batticaloa, the problem is much the same. The difference is that while the DS water truck didn’t service those areas near the tank (as there was water available) it did on the sun-baked eastern half of the Division. However, due to the fall of the water table, the government pump no longer draws water, rendering the truck useless.

In both cases, the Division is littered with all those expensive tube wells the NGOs drilled, and almost all of them are now worthless. The few that work are now drawing water from a depth that contains sodium. I’ve tasted it. While not as salty as the ocean, it is definitely not fit for drinking. I could taste the salt in my mouth for the rest of the day. (Let me be precise; the water still drawn near Unnichchai is fit to drink; the water in the eastern half is not.)

I am not associated with this project, so I don’t really know the ins and outs of it, nor do I know authoritatively what the final project will look like. I can only report what the people have been told, which is what they tell me. And in a sense, perception is more important than truth.

First, the fall of the water table will be permanent and will probably go lower. The conduit is closed permanently, and all outflow will be piped directly to Batticaloa.

Second, the residents of Mamunai West will not see a drop of the water. There are no plans for water towers, tanks, or taps in the Division.

Third, the project itself has brought no economic benefit to the people of Mamunai West. For example, at the edge of Palakkadu is a big, brand new water control station and pump. However, no one from the Division has been able to get a job with the project, not even as construction labor.

Don’t get me wrong. Water is a big concern for the coastal strip which does, after all, represent 90% of the population. It is a good thing that the water will be efficiently transported to where it is needed. There is no argument about that.

But why can’t the people of Mamunai West also benefit? The pipes are going right past their villages. True, it would be a waste to put a tower/tank/tap in every hamlet, but surely three or four can be put in central locations so that locals can drink good water? Surely, compared to the amount of money being spent on coastal infrastructure, the additional cost for Mamunai West would be tiny? So too would be the amount of water consumed.

So why are the residents of Mamunai West being ignored by the planners of this project? I will tell you. It involves a little history, so bear with me.

First, let me say that I have no documentary proof of this; there is no “smoking gun.” However long history of living here has given me a lot of experience, which, when dosed with common sense, leads to the following:

During the recent civil war, the District was politically/militarily divided in almost the same way Batticaloa Lagoon divides region. Specifically, during the last half-decade of the conflict, the coastal strip was largely controlled by the Government and/or its militia proxies, in particular the TMVP. The interior was still controlled by the LTTE. The TMVP and LTTE were engaged in a cloak and dagger war up and down the costal strip. White van-ing was common, and you could hear gunshots at night.

In 2007, the military rolled through the interior of the District, defeating the LTTE and eventually brought the entire Province under government control.

The people of the interior were labeled “pro-terrorist suspects” in a way similar to what is going on now in the North. The result was the military turned its back while their allied militias launched a witch-hunt in the interior. The rumours trickling out of the interior were so bad that the government even prevented foreigners such as myself from entering the area, ostensibly for our security. Mamunai West, being opposite of Batticaloa, was considered a terrorist hotspot, and the people suffered accordingly.

By the second half of 2008, things had calmed down and foreigners were allowed to enter.

OK, so what?

It’s just that one can’t help noticing that the areas left out of the project are precisely the areas that are supposedly “pro-LTTE” whereas the TMVP relies on what little popular support it has strictly on the costal strip, which will benefit from the extra water.

I hate to sound cynical, but could it be that if the situation were reversed, if the interior was TMVP territory, that the pipes would stop in Vavunatheevu, the Division village closest to Batticaloa? On suspects that it would be so.

What one can conclude is that this project, while indeed helpful to most people, was also created and implemented as a method of reward and punishment, and the shoring up of shaky political allies, not only as a humanitarian project.

I want to stress something, if only to cover my own rear end, as foreigners are barely tolerated by the authorities in the east. This situation is in no way based on ethnicity, or religion. It SEEMS to be based purely on politics, national and local. I am only pointing out that this project has the appearance of being shaped by politics, rather than a desire to help ALL the people of Batti District.

Again, let me reiterate; the project will be very helpful for Batticaloa and its environs. Many people will benefit. The problem is not the project itself, but its motivation and its effects on the people of Mamunai West. Overall there will be tremendous benefit. But really, couldn’t the project planners to a little something to offset the damage they’re doing to Mamunai Wests’ water supply? I mean just a tiny little something?

I would very much like to get a posted response from someone involved in this project that addresses this issue. In fact, it’s my hope that by writing this, that Someone Important will tell Someone Else Important, and so on, and that the situation can be fixed. I hope something positive can come from this article.

Food for thought. Or should I say, water?

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

On 9 April 1942

On 9 April 1942, whilst escorting the British carrier Hermes off Batticaloa, they were attacked by Japanese carrier aircraft. Both ships sunk, Vampire broken in half by a well placed bomb. Nine crew were lost.


There's some good pictures of HMAS (HMS) Vampire here: http://www.maritimequest.com/warship...d68_page_1.htm

Crew from HMS Vampire assisted in rescuing some crew from the Aberdeen trawler Imperial Prince when she founded on the Belshevie Sands in October 1923.

See here for a description: http://www.bavidge.co.uk/black_dog.htm

The picture shows the National Maritime museum.

The Army engineers are nearing completion of a project to restore and reconstruct a 45-kilometer segment of a major highway in the East.

The Army engineers are nearing completion of a project to restore and reconstruct a 45-kilometer segment of a major highway in the East.

The Army started a three-phased project to restore the section between Somawathiya-Seruwavila of the A-15 highway that connects Trincomalee to Batticaloa in the East in April 2008.

Under the phase one the Army Engineers have completed construction and restoration from Seruwavila to Arippu Junction, a distance of about 6.7 km.

Under the second stage, troops have cleared jungle areas on both sides of the road and laid out the draining system extending up to Verugal Aru covering another 7 km. This jungle clearing is still continuing.

The Army expects to finish the third phase and complete the entire project within the next eighteen months.

The entire Army's involvement will cover 45 km while Mahaweli Authority and Road Development Authority are expected to complete the remaining phases.

Source:http://www.colombopage.com/archive_091/Jul1247074517CH.html

Video - Batticaloa

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Entire Eastern coastal belt was part of the Kandyan Kingdom

As for the Eastern Province the entire Eastern coastal belt was part of the Kandyan Kingdom . When the Dutchman Admiral Van Spilbergen arrived in Batticaloa in 1602, he was greeted by a Dissawe of the King of Kandy (Wimaladharmasuriya I) whose kingdom extended to the East coast to include both Batticaloa and Trincomalee. A painting that was presented to the Dutch Burger Union by the Netherlands Armed Forces clearly proves this fact. It was the Kandyan King’s (Rajasinghe II) troops that captured Robert Knox and not an ‘army’ of some mythical Tamil King who ruled so-called traditional Tamil homeland. (Asiapost)

Sri Lanka: 18 Muslim armed groups exist in Batticaloa district

Eighteen Muslim armed groups are functioning in Kaaththankudi alone in Batticaloa district and the total number of persons in these groups is said to be about two hundred, according to a report compiled by a special police team handed over to the defense authorities.



http://www.australiantamil.com/?p=5143

Batticaloa Distance from Colombo 303km


batticaloa-sunset

Batticaloa is a city in the Eastern province of Sri Lanka. It is the seat of the Eastern University of Sri Lanka. It is on the east coast, 69 miles south by south east of Trincomalee, and is situated on an island.

Batticaloa is a quiet little place, with a small but well-preserved Dutch fort surrounded by a large lagoon on three sides. The constantly shifting views of land, lagoon and ocean lend Batticaloa an interesting character. A visit to the Kalkudah and Passekudah beaches is a must in the route from Arugam Bay upto Polonnaruwa.

The award-winning French charity Handicap International has a small factory producing artificial limbs in Batticaloa in Sri Lanka’s eastern province

The charity, which has a small factory producing artificial limbs in Batticaloa in Sri Lanka’s eastern province, has opened an emergency unit at one of the centres for people who fled the fighting, and is working with other suppliers to meet what it described a “huge demand”.

The scale of civilian casualties who have been maimed in the war was disclosed by the award-winning French charity Handicap International, which works with the victims of war throughout the world.

Handicap International’s Sri Lanka director Satish Misra said the number of maimed could be “about 25,000 to 30,000 people”.

He said he had established an emergency centre at Vavuniya last year in anticipation of the demand, and that a team of specialist physiotherapists and occupational therapists were now working with the victims.

Their work has been hampered by a government ban on refugees leaving the camp which means the wounded cannot be taken to his factory in Batticaloa, on the eastern coast, where new artificial limbs are fitted and the patients are trained in their use.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

set up more workshops at Anuradhapura, Batticaloa, Trincomalee, Ampara and Kandy hospitals for the benefit of needy children who require artificial li

AmeriCares International has promised to grant Rs.100 million to upgrade the health sector of Sri Lanka within a period of two years. Country Director, AmeriCares, Lisa Hilmi announced this yesterday during the opening of new Prosthetic and Orthodontic workshop set up at a cost of Rs.35 million at Lady Ridgway Hospital Colombo, a Healthcare and Nutrition Ministry spokesman said.
The organization has planned to invest the money within a period of two years and it will also set up more workshops at Anuradhapura, Batticaloa, Trincomalee, Ampara and Kandy hospitals for the benefit of needy children who require artificial limbs and other body parts.
Handicap is also funding a new building complex now being constructed at the Elpitiya General Hospital at a cost of Rs.450 million.
AmeriCares International also funds to provide medical equipment to nurses’ training schools, IDP camps and health centres. AmeriCares International is an U.S. based NGO engaged in social welfare activities in Sri Lanka and has contributed to upgrade the health sector in Sri Lanka significantly.

Monday, June 22, 2009

The Brandix factory in Punani, located in the conflict-recovering eastern district of Batticaloa,

The Brandix factory in Punani, located in the conflict-recovering eastern district of Batticaloa, is looking at doubling export output this year. The factory, yet to be given a name, has been in commercial operation since December last year. Brandix officials say the ‘Punani Project’ is performing well, although the group is experiencing a drop in export orders because of the global recession.

“We are currently producing 20,000 – 30,000 pieces of boys’ denim pants for a European buyer. We are looking at increasing output to about 50,000 – 75,000 pieces by about August-September this year,” the General Manager of Brandix Intimate Apparel, Theodore Gunasekera, told the Sunday Times FT on the sidelines of a press conference with the UNHCR last week. The country’s biggest apparel exporters called a press conference on Thursday to explain its involvement with UNHCR in assisting resettlement of displaced people.

However, the Brandix Punani Project is a separate, Rs 250 million investment by Brandix Lanka, made at the invitation of the government, to help generate jobs in the war-ravaged East. At the moment the factory employs around 220 people from all three ethnic communities.

A majority of the workers are women from families that were displaced due to the conflict and include about 40 rehabilitated ex-LTTE cadres.

Sri Lanka – MIC Newsline – June 19, 2009 – Dengue Casualties Rise – Six Killed within 24 Hours/ War Has Made 49,000 Widows in Eastern Province

Dengue Fever death toll in the country has risen up to 140 with six people dead within the 24 hours ending at 6.00 PM on Thursday the 18th instant. 10,417 people have been affected by this deadly disease according to the Health Ministry.

Gampaha district tops the list of Dengue casualties with 25 deaths followed by Kandy district with 24 and Colombo with 13 deaths. The disease is continuing to spread amidst various actions taken by the Ministry of Health.

According to the Health officials in Batticaloa, there are 317 people identified as dengue victims in the district with six people dead.

War Has Made 49,000 Widows in Eastern Province

“The three decades of war in Sri Lanka has made 49,000 women as widows in the Eastern Province” said Eastern Provincial Council Health Minister M.L.A.M. Hisbullah at a meeting held recently in Kattankudy.

“There are 25,000 widows in the Batticaloa district at present, out of them 12,000 women lost their husbands in the war during the recent past” the Health Minister said further. He said that the Provincial Council collected all these information.

Continuing his speech the minister said that the standard of living of these widows should be uplifted and be encouraged to improve their economic condition. ‘Self employed women in India have improved a lot and contributed towards the development of India. The same way the widows here too should be made to improve their economic status and develop the country’ he said.

Chief Minister’s Secretary Joins the Government Party

With the ending of the one year contract as Secretary to the Chief Minister Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan (TMVP) of the Eastern Provincial Council, yesterday, the former Secretary Mamangarajah has joined the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP). He is to meet the Deputy President and the Eastern Province SLFP organizer, Minister Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan today to obtain his official membership with the SLFP.

DIG To Meet Traders, Jameathul Ulema and the Muslim Community of Kattankudy

The Batticaloa Deputy Inspector General of Police Edison Gunatileke is to meet the traders, Jameathul Ulema and the Muslim community of Kattankudy on Friday the 19th instant. It is learnt he is to discuss about the growing use of drugs, intoxicants and the increasing habit of smoking cigarettes among the youths under the age of 18 years.

He is also to discuss about youths using mobile phones for immoral acts such as viewing pornography films. It is learnt illegal weapons in the possession of a few people in Kattandy will also to be surrendered to the DIG on this occasion.

Batticaloa Fishermen

Batticaloa Fishermen A sofobomo 2009 Book by Markus Spring A Solo Foto Book
Month 2009 Book by Markus Springmspringgmxde httpspring2lifeblogspotcom �
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