| 01:11 Kuru maharaji visited Mamangapillaiyar Kovil Batticaloa http://www.google.com/url?q=http://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3D_prxJtwW0iQ&source=video&vgc=rss&usg=AFQjCNFcvgaVStZ9uslyZ81-LM8d-YsfAQ |
| 00:57 Kuru maharaji visit Mamangapillaiyar Kovil Batticaloa Sri Lanka http://www.google.com/url?q=http://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DAuOhAammhjA&source=video&vgc=rss&usg=AFQjCNFLtCgJjKmxyuCFjgyuzUSfm1DB-w |
| 00:33 Kuru maharaji visit Mamangapillaiyar Kovil Batticaloa Sri lanka http://www.google.com/url?q=http://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3De3fsWhJOQ9Y&source=video&vgc=rss&usg=AFQjCNEo2F9sH-T9GJkrbfNA9xrbFyNB4g |
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Video - Batticaloa
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Entire Eastern coastal belt was part of the Kandyan Kingdom
Sri Lanka: 18 Muslim armed groups exist in Batticaloa district
Batticaloa Distance from Colombo 303km
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
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
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.