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No to international Probe

Munza Mushtaq A?a??a?? Reporting from Colombo

Purchase januvia Colombo, 21 September, (Asiantribune.com): As confusion prevailed as to who the actual culprits were behind the Panama Muslim massacre despite a statement by the lone survivor who alleged that the killers were none other than LTTE cadres, the anger among the general Muslim community have further intensified following the government’s decision not to permit an independent international investigation.

Government’s defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella’s statement at Tuesday’s weekly news conference that the government was of the view that international assistance was not necessary to investigate the incident, dying down to the belief that the Muslims are given the step motherly attitude no matter what hardships they face.

Hours following the Panama slaying, Sri Lanka’s pre-dominant Muslim party, the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) leader Rauff Hakeem called for an international probe with assistance from the United Nations to find out the actual perpetrators of the massacre.

Minister Keheliya Rambukwella claim that Sri Lanka had the expertise to carry out a full probe and assured the truth would be revealed once a statement was recorded from the lone survivor, who was currently in critical condition and receiving treatment at the Intensive Care Unit of the Ampara hospital, has not been accepted by the Muslims in Sri Lanka who are of the notion if the government can permit a international investigation including the permitting of foreign forensic scientists to carry out the investigation into the killing in Muttur where 17 aid workers attached to Action against Hunger were brutally killed during tensions in the area, why was the government refusing to permit a international investigation into the killing of these Muslims.

The 17 aid victims included 16 Tamils and one Muslim.

Despite continuous allegations by villagers that it was the Special Task Force of the Sri Lankan government behind the slaying, Minister Rambukwella insisted that some were attempting to gain political mileage by claiming it was the security forces who had committed this gruesome act.

Meanwhile, the media centre for national security in a report claimed that the survivor of the Panama massacre had in a brief statement to police claimed that it was the LTTE who had committed the act.

“It was gruesome” said the survivor Kareem Nilam Mohideen (60) of Radalla, being treated at the Intensive Care Unit of the Ampara hospital.

He was very confident and firm when he said that “they were none other than LTTErs”. He also said that the assailants conversed in Tamil and were wearing T- shirts and shorts when they massacred the Muslims using T56 weapons, the hospital authorities said.

“The group of around twenty tiger terrorists suddenly started attacking us” the sole survivor and the only eyewitness of the inhumane incident disclosed to the police.

Meanwhile, the special task force issuing a release has also denied any hand in the incident while further extending their sincere condolences to the bereaved families.

Although Rauf Hakeem continued to adopt an ‘I don’t know’ stand as to who the actual perpetrators were, senior government Minister A.H.M. Fowzie said that the incident bared all hallmarks of the LTTE and it had to be the work of the LTTE as they were the only group capable of committing such gruesome act. Western province governor Alavi Moulana condemned the inhuman act and demanded that authorities bring the culprits to book. However surprisingly the government’s main Muslim ally, National Unity Alliance which is led by Minister Ms. Ferial Ashraff is yet to issue a statement condemning the incident.

– Asian Tribune –

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Hon. President in the USA: “NGOA?a??a??s Charity Money squandered at Arugam Bay, one of the finest surfing beaches in Sri Lanka.” They used just $250 on the affected people

By Walter Jayawardhana reporting from New York
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Estrace cost canada President Mahinda Rajapaksa with US Congressman Foscella

Vito Fossella, the US Republican Congressman told Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa in New York that whether itA?a??a??s Al Queda or LTTE the two countries have got to be united against terrorism as although the names differ the results of terrorism under wherever and whatever name it is practiced are the same.

Calling Sri Lanka a key ally of the United States in the war against terror the congressman said he wanted to see such corporation is extended even into the future.

Fossella who represents New YorkA?a??a??s Staten Island where the majority of Americans of Sri Lankan origin live in New York called upon the Sri Lankan President at the Millenium UN Plaza Hotel where the President was staying in. The President was with Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera Secretary General of the Peace Secretariat Dr. Palitha Kohona, Media Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, Foreign Secretary H.M. G. S. Palihakkara and other officials at the time of meeting. Mr. Sumith de Silva coordinated the meeting between the Congressman and the President.
Considered to be a strong friend of Sri Lanka in the US Congress Fosella played a leading part in helping Sri Lanka when Tsunami struck the Indian Ocean island republic two years ago.

Fossella said that the LTTE was killing an average of five soldiers a day while they were declaring that that a ceasefire was adhered to before Sri Lanka was forced to take a defensive action against this terrorism.

He said the US government does not negotiate with terrorists since they understood only one language but he fully understood Sri LankaA?a??a??s approach to finding a negotiated settlement to the conflict.

President Rajapaksa and Congressman Fossella discussed at length the commonalities of terrorism practiced against both Sri Lanka and the United States.

)fficials at the meeting from left to right UN amabassador Prasad kariyawasam, Foreign Secretary Palihakkara, Washington Ambassador Bernard Goonetilleke, Dr. Palitha Kohona, Photo by Walter Jayawardhana

Fosella said he very much appreciated the fact that Sri Lanka was a working democracy, in fact one of AsiaA?a??a??s oldest democracies where change of power after elections takes place peacefully. He said the Sri Lankans have been changing government every now and then.

President Rajapaksa said Sri Lanka, although devastated by the Tsunami has re-built 97,000 new houses within the short period of time.

Answering a question by a US reporter from New York the President said some NGOA?a??a??s who went to Sri Lanka and paying huge hotel bills with millions collected for Tsunami relief has spent only 250 US dollars for relief work itself. Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said many preferred staying at Arugam Bay, one of the finest surfing beaches. Actually some of them were squandering charity money on pleasure, he said.

President Rajapaksa thanked the US Congressman for the generous support extended to Sri Lanka during the Tsunami disaster.

President Rajapaksa invited Congressman Fosella to visit Sri Lanka and see for himself the progress made on the Tsunami reconstruction.

Article taken from : http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items06/200906-1.html

All Quiet on the Eastern Front

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It is far too quiet actually, something must be wrong…
As we passed through PottuVille early this afternoon on our way back from Batticaloa, we noticed that there was not a single shop or bank open.
OK, so what? Do we celebrate yet another “Hartal” or what?
(This is the local word for civil strike, a kind of protest-bycott often resulting a strange kind of self-punishment situation because there is no income, no food to buy; it roughly may translate into: “Having no fun or business at all”.)

As there are plenty and frequent of “Hartals” north of the Bay we thought little of it.
But what a surprise. Schock & horror! For the first time, ever, we noticed even Arugam Bay looking like a Ghost Town. Even on Tsu day AbaY’s High Street was a little more busy….
This afternoon, all of a sudden, there are very few people on the road, most places are closed or are semi Closed.

What on earth has happened to sleepy Arugam Bay this morning?
Sadly, we have bad news.
Violence has reached our remote area.
This morning we are informed that some bodies were found in an area South of Arugam Bay, towards Panama and Yala.
Residents are concerned of a backlash, security forces are braced to deal with it and the few visitors in town are shocked to hear of such a crime; usually unheard of in our region.

Of course there still is not one single hint of danger to any foreigner. They are all very much safe and very well.
But this sad episode may have a negative influence on our already rather depressed tourist resort. Much to our concern and in addition to our grief.

As usual, in a tense and delicate situation as this, plenty or rumors have already surfaced, one explanation appears to be more weird than the previous. We can’t and don’t believe anybody right now.
If and when we have further details, we post an update.

Accomodation have not gone !!!

We are currently re-organising our content. To keep clear visibility on the news front, we have decided to stop placing accomodation related posts on the front page.
Thank you for having pointed this out to us.
Instead they now have their own page, very easily accessible by clicking the accomodation link under navigation on the right side. New Hotel listings will be added every day! Keep on checking and contributing please!
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#03 Galaxy Lounge

#03 Galaxy Lounge

#03 Galaxy Lounge

#03 Galaxy Lounge is the third hospitality place on your left as you enter Arugam Bay.
It is one of the best and perhaps certainly the most interesting one of recent developments the Bay has seen in many years.
Well, actually it is the result of two developments in the same location..
Pretty London raised Sri Gunasena and Aussie hunk Surf-Waine just completed the first Galaxy Hotel in 2004….
Everybody agrees, that their second attempt, completed 2006 resulted in an even better and more beautiful ‘Lounge’ than ever before.
The couple had a very narrow escape at the time, but fate has blessed them with a nice baby son during 2005.
The family can be proud to be recognized as a fine meeting place for musicians and artists, such as painters. This seems obvious as you approach the seafront restaurant.
Cabanas, some build on high stilts, are all made of natural, local materials and are often decorated with innovative, beautiful works of art.
And there are paintings of a kind and quality not usually found in this remote region.
It almost seems like there is a Spanish influence somewhere; the odd Latin dance lessons are a fine compliment to this great ambiance.

There also is a good menu with fresh Humus, a good drinks selection and an open air restaurant with a clear view of the open ocean right in front.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Purchase keppra Dilantin shipping Galaxy Lounge – Arugam Bay

Our beachfront cabanas in Arugam Bay boast a natural style, a perfect blend of luxury and nature. Our warm service, comfortable surrounds, and reasonable prices will impress the mind, body and soul. We cater for groups as well as independent travellers. We have five spacious beachfront Cabanaa??s with private outdoor bathrooms.
The cabanaa??s can sleep one to four people and are designed to maximise views and fresh sea air. The eco-designed cabanaa??s factor in the elements such as shade and predominant winds therefore do not require air conditioning. Our cabanas provide a secure environment with oversized beds for maximum comfort, and outdoor onsite amenities for moon light bathing. The Galaxy Lounge kitchen caters for western tastes and traditional Sri Lankan cuisine.
All food is freshly prepared each day and will tantalise the tastebuds and vitalise the body. If you like fresh tropical fruits, vegetables and seafood, Arugam Bay is the place for you. Our juice bar and freshly ground coffee is the only way to start the day, and if ingredients are available any dish is possible.
The surf point at Arugam Bay is undoubtably one of the best point breaks in the world. In season, Arugam Bay provides a consistent perfect 2-5ft waves sometimes breaking at 6-8ft on a good swell chart. The wind is predominately offshore all day, due to the south west monsoon and breaks hollow on the rocky reef and sand point from May through to September.

The official web site can be found here.

#01 Stardust Hotel

#01 Stardust Beach Hotel

#01 Stardust Beach Hotel

#01 Stardust Paxil avoidant personality disorder Buy lisinopril side is the very first Hotel you come to after crossing the Bridge and as you enter Arugambay. Hence we indexed Stardust No. #01.
But in any case “Stardust” has always been the “No. 01” address at the Bay, offering the highest class of hospitality available in the entire area.
When the late Per together with Merete settled in Arugam Bay this Danish couple established without any doubt very high, fresh standards of hospitality at Arugam Bay.
For many years the well run Stardust was just like an oasis in this very remote enclave.

With only a few highly original, but low budget establishments such as #05 Beach Hut, #45 Sooriya’s and #58 Rupas around in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s #01 Stardust’s high class, international cuisine together with a dozen or so perfect, ultra clean rooms firmly established Arugam Bay on to a global map.
Suddenly there was a place in town not just for surfers, but for demanding world travelers!
A man with a vision, a true pioneer, Per Goodman continued to develop his great resort until the end; of 2004. Stardust gained and maintained the reputation of being the finest Restaurant in the East, offering good local and always perfect International dishes in a beautiful location and setting near the large lagoon.

The Hotel’s own web site, designed by the late Mr. Philip has for many years been described as a ‘good source of information’ about Arugam Bay and the surrounding area.
Again, even the site was ahead of its time and rightfully still holds the No. 01 position on Google.
Check it out with the link below!

www.arugambay.com

#01 Stardust Drive

#01 Stardust Drive

Hartal in KaPuttoVille

Hartal in KaPuttoVille

Hartal = Self Punishment? Or does it mean Civil Unrest/Strike?

We are unsure of the meaning of this Tamil word Whatever! A “busy” Wednesday afternoon in PottuVille

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Surfewrs go Paddling for Charity

A CHARITY paddle from Saunton to Croyde is being organised by a Braunton surfer this weekend to help tsunami victims on the east coast of Sri Lanka.

Tim Tanton organised last yearA?a??E?s successful Paddle 4 Relief, in which more than 80 surfers raised A?A?2,000 for a project to build and equip a classroom in Arugam Bay.

“This time, we want to raise more than A?A?2,500 to build a pre-school in Komari, 20 kilometres north of Arugam bay,” Tim told the Gazette.

“We are hoping the event will be just as successful and are aiming to hit 100 paddlers this year,” he added.

On Sunday at around 2pm, surfers will be paddling out from Saunton to Croyde and back. At each beach they will be forming a memorial circle to remember those affected by the tragedy on Boxing Day in 2004.

A safety boat from Saunton Surf Life Saving Club will in attendance and under-16A?a??E?s are asked to have an adult in attendance.

After the paddle, there will be a barbecue and raffle in the evening with music by a local four-piece band.

“We are advising everyone to get there early, as some of those that registered last year left it too late in the day and were unable to get into the beach car park,” added Tim.

For more details, or to register for the event, telephone Tim on 07917 032523 or Surfed Out on (01271) 812512 or 891286.
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Abay & Komari Property Opportunities

Arugam Bay, also known simply as A?a??E?A BayA?a??a?? on the south-eastern coast of Sri Lanka, remains relatively untouched by major tourism development, giving it an extremely chilled out and horizontalis kind of vibe. The main attractions to roll up for are the Yala East National Park, which surrounds the bay, and the splendid surf and water sports opportunities in the locale. Surf bums love it, divers come here in droves and if you merely want to spot dolphins or elephants, this is the way to go. Oh and surfs up whenever you care to learn how. RoccoA?a??a??s Hotel and a host of bars and restaurants are of course completely at your disposal and just down the road. Komari Estate is beginning to make some noise as a blank space in search of commercial guidance.
Komari Estate is situated approximately 19 kilometres north of Arugum Bay and consists of a regularly shaped 77 (190 acres) hectares of A?a??E?deedableA?a??a?? coastal savannah and mature palm trees. The property includes 700 metres of absolute frontage to the pristine Komari bay and a freshwater lagoon to the north.

This is a prime development block totalling 1300 metres, sea facing in length, reaching inland to a depth of 650 metres, with scope for a large hotel/golf resort within short-haul flight from Dubai, or available to be broken up into lesser land parcels for residential, lifestyle block or boutique hotel type development. Alternately, the land may be banked at a reasonable cost. Land prices in this vicinity are approximately one tenth of those on the west coast, which frequently command as much as USD 100,000 per acre. On this side of the island you are looking at USD 15,000 for the same unit of measure. In fact the land price has actually tripled since it was purchased.

The property resides on an unencumbered freehold title known as a colonial deed, which is extremely rare for coastal land in the area. It was originally part of a larger plantation estate, with a deed history on the offered parcel available and verified. All planning and regulatory approvals are in place. This exceptionally rare stretch of tropical beachside terra firma is available for immediate sale.

Infrastructure development in the area continues at Sri LankaA?a??a??s own pace and has even been supplemented with USD 33 million in United States aid to build a new bridge. There is an air strip already located one and a half hours drive away, which offers cheap flights to more central connections at around USD 35, and you can even charter a plane for the day at the princely sum of USD 2,000.

Arugam Bay has actually been earmarked by the Sri Lankan government as a centre for tourism development, especially focusing on the eco-tourism trail based on its proximity to the Yala East national Park. Yala presents a festival of free range wildlife, roaming a natural habitat. Safari tours already allow visitors to get up close and personal with Leopards, assuming that the central nervous system holds up of course, along with the Elephants which are much harder to miss i.e. larger and generally not stalking a main course. The bird sanctuary is also a riotous display of muticoloured chattering avians.

Despite the renewed hostilities between Government forces and the Tamil Tigers of Elam, a recently returned colleague maintains that all is peace, light and tranquility in the vicinity, as the area has remained a well kept secret for long enough. Surfers and divers generally come and go by season and inclination, so down at RoccoA?a??a??s Hotel thereA?a??a??s generally always somebody in residence.

It should also be said that the area has retained its enormous potential in spite of the Tsunami and remains reminiscent of Bali thirty years ago. For those that were acquainted with Bali at the time, this would undoubtedly define the highly A?a??E?relaxedA?a??a?? aura hovering around Arugam Bay and its resort A?a??E?in waitingA?a??a?? further on up the road at Komari. A time warp, perhaps so, but there is more than a little weight behind the investment argument.

We of course are a publishing house, not an estate agency, but we are here to analyse and distill the good from the bad on behalf of our readers. So if you would care to debate the subject further, we are usually around unless the intensity of the midday sun has driven us in search of more clement weather. Talking of which, south west Sri Lanka is one of the places we would cheerfully consider, with the mercury sitting at 25 comfortable degrees Celsius throughout a customarily stifling Arabian Summer.

Disclaimer:
Articles in in this section are primarily provided from Property World MEA?a??E?s team of dedicated authors. Replication or redistribution in whole or in part is expressly prohibited without the prior written agreement of Property World ME.
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Touristen halten Sri Lanka die Treue

Trotz der angespannten Lage im Tamilen-Konflikt liegt die A?a??A?Perle des Indischen OzeansA?a??A? weiterhin im Trend

Handelt es sich bei Sri Lanka um die A?a??A?Perle des Indischen OzeansA?a??A? oder eher um eine A?a??A?TrA?A?ne im Indischen OzeanA?a??A?? Auf diese Frage scheinen die BundesbA?A?rger eine eindeutige Antwort zu haben, denn trotz der jA?A?ngsten, politischen Negativ-Schlagzeilen halten sie der tropischen Insel weiterhin die Treue. Die GewaltausbrA?A?che der vergangenen Monate, die in erheblichem AusmaA?A? den 2002 zwischen der Regierung und der tamilischen Rebellen-Organisation A?a??A?Liberation Tigers of Tamil EelamA?a??A? (LTTE) geschlossenen Waffenstillstand verletzt haben, scheinen zu keinerlei Einbruch der Besucherzahlen gefA?A?hrt zu haben. Das dA?A?rfte nicht zuletzt darauf zurA?A?ck zu fA?A?hren sein, dass die touristisch relevanten Urlaubsziele fast alle auA?A?erhalb der Tamilen-Gebiete liegen und westliche Touristen bisher noch nie Ziel von AnschlA?A?gen gewesen sind.

Nach der offiziellen Statistik kamen bis Ende Mai 253.136 AuslA?A?nder auf die Insel, was im Vergleich zum Vorjahres-Zeitraum einem Zuwachs von 21,5 Prozent entspricht. Darunter lassen sich mit A?A?ber 30.000 Besuchern auch fast 50 Prozent mehr deutschsprachige Urlauber finden. Denn keiner der groA?A?en, bundesdeutschen Veranstalter hat seine Reisen nach Sri Lanka eingeschrA?A?nkt. Ganz im Gegenteil: A?a??A?Die Insel zA?A?hlt sogar zu unseren Verkaufs-Rennern im aktuellen SommerprogrammA?a??A?, betont zum Beispiel Petra Hartmann vom MA?A?nchner Veranstalter A?a??A?FTI – Frosch TouristikA?a??A?. Besonders gut gebucht seien Ayurveda-Angebote und Rundreisen. Der positive Trend wird vom GroA?A?-Veranstalter TUI bestA?A?tigt. A?a??A?Ich bin selbst erstauntA?a??A?, berichtet Pressesprecherin Sylvia Einsle, A?a??A?dass unsere BuchungseingA?A?nge fA?A?r Sri Lanka trotz der schrecklichen Nachrichten A?A?ber dem Niveau des vergangenen Jahres liegen und sogar A?A?ber dem guten Jahr 2004.A?a??A? SchlieA?A?lich prA?A?sentiere sich so mancher Strand heute ja sogar noch schA?A?ner als vor dem Tsunami, wA?A?hrend die Hotels ihren Standard generell verbessert hA?A?tten.

Dass die Destination auch international weiterhin gefragt ist, bestA?A?tigt Hiran Coorey von A?a??A?JetwingA?a??A?, das zu den fA?A?hrenden Reise-Agenturen im Land gehA?A?rt. A?a??A?Wir sind mit der guten Buchungslage zufrieden und freuen uns darA?A?ber, dass uns die Touristen nicht im Stich lassen!A?a??A?. Immerhin hA?A?tten sich die LTTE-Rebellen trotz des schweren Konflikts ja auch schon in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten stets A?a??A?touristenfreundlichA?a??A? verhalten. So rA?A?t das AuswA?A?rtige Amt in Berlin derzeit auch nur von Reisen in die nA?A?rdlichen, A?A?stlichen und sA?A?dA?A?stlichen Landesteile ab (nA?A?here Infos im Internet unter www.auswaertiges-amt.de). Generell gemieden werden sollten die Tamilen-StA?A?dte Jaffna, Trincomalee und Batticaloa, die aber ohnehin nur A?A?ber eine geringe, touristische Infrastruktur verfA?A?gen. Voll im Betrieb indes befinden sich die Randgebiete der Krisen-Provinzen – wie der beliebte Yala-Nationalpark oder das legendA?A?re Bade- und Surfer-Paradies Arugam-Bay an der OstkA?A?ste, dem mit statistischen 330 Sonnentagen pro Jahr noch eine groA?A?e, touristische Zukunft prognostiziert wird. (vk)

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Foto A – Arugam-Bay:

Das legendA?A?re Bade- und Surf-Paradies Arugam-Bay liegt am Rand des Tamilen-Gebiets – und ist derzeit trotzdem das wichtigste Urlaubsziel an der OstkA?A?ste Sri Lankas. Hier gelten die europA?A?ischen Sommer-Monate als Hochsaison, obwohl in diesen Winkel der tropischen Insel nach der Statistik sogar an 330 Tagen im Jahr die Sonne scheint. Order desyrel package

Berliner Tagesspiegel

A?a??A?Wie in KriegszeitenA?a??A?
In Sri Lanka wird fast tA?A?glich geschossen, berichtet der Regionalkoordinator der Welthungerhilfe A?a??a?? das erschwert die Arbeit vor Ort

Von Ingrid MA?A?ller
Berlin – Mit Sorge verfolgen Mitarbeiter von Hilfsorganisationen die jA?A?ngsten Entwicklungen im brA?A?chigen Friedensprozess auf Sri Lanka. Die srilankische Luftwaffe bombardierte am Samstag den vierten Tag in Folge Stellungen der tamilischen Rebellen im Osten des Inselstaats. Bei den Angriffen wurden seit Mittwoch mindestens 13 Rebellen getA?A?tet. Am Freitag hatte Finnland erklA?A?rt, es werde aus SicherheitsgrA?A?nden seine zehn Mitarbeiter aus der Beobachtermission abziehen, die den 2002 geschlossenen Waffenstillstand A?A?berwacht.

A?a??A?Eigentlich ist damit das ganze Waffenstillstandsabkommen ungA?A?ltig, und es mA?A?sste ein neues geschlossen werdenA?a??A?, sagte Heinz Seidler, Regionalkoordinator der Deutschen Welthungerhilfe in Colombo, dem Tagesspiegel am Sonntag zu der finnischen Entscheidung. DA?A?nemark will dem Beispiel Helsinkis folgen. Die beiden Staaten geben damit einer Forderung der Rebellenorganisation Tamilische Befreiungstiger (LTTE) nach. Die EuropA?A?ische Union hatte die Tamilentiger im Mai als Terrororganisation eingestuft, daraufhin weigerten sich die Rebellen, kA?A?nftig mit Vertretern aus EU-Staaten zusammenzuarbeiten, und forderten deren Abzug bis zum 1. September.

Der 60-kA?A?pfigen Beobachtermission gehA?A?rten neben Finnland und DA?A?nemark bisher Schweden, Island und Norwegen an. Norwegen hatte in den Verhandlungen zwischen der LTTE und der vorwiegend singhalesischen Regierung in Colombo die FA?A?hrungsrolle. Die Tamilen kontrollieren weite Teile im Norden und Osten der Insel und fordern fA?A?r diese die Autonomie. Nach tamilischen Angaben wird der norwegische Sonderbeauftragte Jon- Hanssen Bauer zu weiteren GesprA?A?chen erwartet.

Die Gewalt war auf Sri Lanka in den vergangenen Monaten wieder eskaliert. Erst im Juni wurde der dritthA?A?chste Befehlshaber der srilankischen Armee bei einem Selbstmordattentat in der Hauptstadt Colombo getA?A?tet. Anfang Juli gab es einen schweren Anschlag in der NA?A?he von Trincomalee mit sieben Toten und 15 Verletzten. A?a??A?Die Situation A?A?hnelt wieder den KriegszeitenA?a??A?, sagte Seidler. Nahezu tA?A?glich gebe es SchieA?A?ereien vor allem zwischen MilitA?A?rs, LTTE und den paramilitA?A?rischen Splittergruppen der LTTE.

Wegen der politischen Spannungen mussten bereits A?a??A?drei-, viermalA?a??A? die Mitarbeiter der Welthungerhilfe aus Vavuniya und Kilinochchi im Norden sowie Trincomalee im Osten nach Colombo abgezogen werden. Nicht zuletzt wegen der Zusammenarbeit mit der einheimischen Organisation Sewalanka sei die Arbeit in den Projekten fA?A?r die Tsunami-Opfer immer weitergegangen, sagt Seidler. A?a??A?Wir kommen ganz gut voran.A?a??A? Derzeit gebe es allerdings A?a??A?rasch mal eine ganze Woche VerzA?A?gerungA?a??A?, weil die mit Baumaterial beladenen Lastwagen an der Grenze zu den Tamilengebieten von der Regierung sehr streng kontrolliert wA?A?rden. Diese befA?A?rchten offenbar, dass mit Stahl oder Zement Bunkeranlagen gebaut werden kA?A?nnten. A?a??A?Wir sind froh, dass die Fahrzeuge A?A?berhaupt fahren dA?A?rfenA?a??A?, sagte Seidler.

Insgesamt beurteilt er die Lage allerdings wenig optimistisch. Die A?a?zchtung der LTTE durch die EU habe die Arbeit fA?A?r die Hilfsorganisationen schwieriger gemacht. Mehrere Organisationen hatten der EU in den vergangenen Wochen vorgeworfen, sie ergreife damit im Friedensprozess einseitig die Partei der Regierung. Bei Angriffen beider Seiten seien Zivilisten betroffen. Die Regierung in Colombo laste nun alle ZwischenfA?A?lle der LTTE an, obgleich offenkundig auch die paramilitA?A?rische Absplitterung der LTTE unter Oberst Karuna die HA?A?nde im Spiel habe, meint Welthungerhilfe-Koordinator Seidler. Er bezweifelt, dass sie nur auf eigene Rechnung arbeitet. A?a??A?Man hat das GefA?A?hl, da lA?A?uft etwas sehr Schmutziges.A?a??A? Ihn beunruhigt, dass seine Organisation, anderes als zur LTTE, zu der paramilitA?A?rischen Gruppe keinen Kontakt hat. Die Mitarbeiter hA?A?tten inzwischen sehr genaue Sicherheitsanweisungen, dazu gehA?A?re zum Beispiel, sich von militA?A?rischen Fahrzeugen fernzuhalten.

Erst am Freitagnachmittag war die Situation rund um den Unruheherd Trincomalee wieder eskaliert. Die LTTE hat in der Region ein Wasserreservoir gesperrt, mit dem 15 000 Reisbauern auf Regierungsgebiet ihre Felder bewA?A?ssern. Die Armee flog nach Regierungsangaben mehrere Angriffe. Die Tamilentiger forderten in GesprA?A?chen mit der Beobachtermission, vor der Freigabe des Wassers mA?A?sse unter anderem ein Embargo gegen Lieferungen von Lebensmitteln und Baumaterialien ins LTTE-Gebiet aufgehoben werden. A?a??A?Im Moment sieht das nicht gut ausA?a??A?, sagte Seidler Nasonex price malaysia Buy innopran xr

Toronto Star

Tsunami: Six months after

By: Martin Regg Cohn
Courtesy: The Toronto Star – June 26, 2005
Six months after the Boxing Day tsunami, the biggest, swiftest and most successful humanitarian operation of modern times has saved countless lives.

But it hasn’t yet rebuilt them.

The world reacted with unprecedented generosity by bankrolling a $10 billion rehabilitation effort, reaching out to remote villages across Asia that few had ever heard of.

There were no epidemics. No one died of starvation.

But the hard part has just begun.

All these months after the waters of the Indian Ocean receded from the shores of Indonesia’s Aceh province, the island of Sri Lanka, Phuket beach in Thailand and Tamil Nadu, India A?a??a?? leaving more than 200,000 dead or missing in their wake A?a??a?? life is still far from returning to normal.

Indeed, it could take a full year before tens of thousands of tsunami refugees and orphans still living in temporary shelters can be moved into homes of their own and attend permanent schools.

To be sure, the relief picture could have been far worse.

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Apart from disease and hunger, festering insurgencies in Aceh and Sri Lanka could have flared up again, compounding the misery of tsunami victims.

National pride might have kept foreign relief agencies at bay and corruption could have siphoned off massive amounts of donated money by now.

That none of these things have happened is a minor miracle for the more than 1 million people whose lives were wrenched by the Dec. 26 tsunami.

Yet it must be said A?a??a?? and many victims and relief workers are saying it A?a??a?? that the rehabilitation effort should have been more effective by now.

With all the money, materials and media that have been devoted to tsunami reconstruction, there is markedly less tolerance for graft, bureaucratic inertia, turf wars and squabbling.

Hence the outrage and embarrassment in Sri Lanka this month when word leaked out that Oxfam had been forced to pay $1.2 million in duties after customs officials held up desperately needed transport trucks the development agency had imported from India.

Oxfam officials pleaded their case, saying they needed the four-wheel-drive trucks to deliver donated supplies, but customs officials refused to budge.

“They gave us a bill and we had to pay it,” says David Crawford, who runs the charitable group’s operations in Sri Lanka.

Two dozen Indian-made vehicles were stuck at customs for a month, with storage fees piling up at the rate of $6,000 a day.

After the media exposed the story, Crawford got a call last week from the ministry of finance sheepishly offering to reimburse the money.

The good news is that despite the extraordinary bureaucratic intransigence, Crawford says Oxfam is making headway in a country that needs an estimated 100,000 new homes for about 500,000 dislocated people.

“From Oxfam’s point of view, the one-year targets we had have already been met, and we are ahead on our five-year plan. There is no disease, no malnutrition, no hunger.”

With about $55 million budgeted for this year, the agency has long since shifted from emergency relief to sustainable programs providing clean water, sanitation, shelters and improved livelihoods for women.

The aim is “reconstruction-plus” A?a??a?? rebuilding better than before by, for example, organizing women into bigger fish processing co-operatives to give them greater clout in the market.

But rebuilding in northeastern Sri Lanka, like Aceh in northwestern Indonesia, takes place against the backdrop of continuing tensions between insurgents and government forces.

On Friday, Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tiger rebels reached agreement with the government on a joint distribution mechanism that should smooth the way after months of disagreements and delays in disbursing $3.7 billion in foreign aid.

“We are losing days because it’s sometimes difficult getting through,” says Crawford. “The security situation has been getting worse …. There can be no development without peace.”

That’s what Craig Kielburger, co-founder of Toronto-based Free the Children, discovered when he visited Pottuville in eastern Sri Lanka last May A?a??a?? he was escorted by 12 armed guards.

Kielburger says his development group was able to overcome obstacles in setting up a vocational school that he believes will be the first to reopen in the wake of the tsunami.

But success stories like this one are coloured by the way some non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are tripping over one another trying to raise their profiles to boost donations.

“It’s amazing what the competition is about,” says Kielburger, warning that it “reinforces cynicism.”

The first signs of reconstruction that rose up from the ground, he says, were the signposts erected by rival NGOs staking out their claims.

“The sign industry must be booming. NGOs have each staked their little part, branding their name and logo.”

But while NGOs are occasionally hyperactive, Kielburger complains that government officials drag their feet and fail to co-ordinate activities.

“The government made extraordinary claims of 50,000 new homes by June, but they haven’t even designated the land,” he says. So far, only about 1,000 homes are ready.

Meanwhile, a ban on rebuilding on beaches within 100 to 200 metres of the shore means people have been “kicked out with nowhere to go.”

Kielburger’s concerns are echoed by Raga Alphonsus, a Canadian aid worker who has spent time in Sri Lanka’s Ampara district, where Ottawa deployed troops from the Disaster Assistance Relief Team (DART) last January.

Looking back, DART’s short-term contributions look like a costly, but not terribly cost-effective footnote to history, while much long-term work remains to be done.

“The military are not trained for that A?a??a?? they are there to get the job done and move on, and they had a set focus,” Alphonsus says.

DART behaved like other NGOs in quickly planting the flag, rather than putting down sustainable roots in communities that must have ownership of long-term projects.

“These agencies are like a business: they need to be seen by donors to be visible and doing something sexy,” Alphonsus says.

Sri Lankan tsunami projects also have created problems in cases where “tsunami victims are on one side of the road and non-tsunami victims are on the other side of the road.”

And there is an obvious double standard in evicting poor fishing families from beaches, where they need to be close their boats, because of the new ban on building near the shoreline A?a??a?? while luxury hotels are allowed to build in close proximity to the water.

Similar land problems have arisen in Indonesia, the country hardest-hit by the tsunami, but NGOs there appear to be co-operating more effectively. Turf wars are less of an issue because, with so much devastation, there is no shortage of rebuilding tasks.

“This is such an enormous disaster that there’s enough work out there to be done A?a??a?? there’s no competition problem,” says Geno Teofilo, an aid worker with World Vision in Aceh.

More than 500,000 Indonesians lost their homes, with at least half that number still living in tents today.

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An estimated 42,000 children are being taught in tent schools. Another 150,000 people are living in new shelters and 750,000 are receiving food aid.

But bridges are being rebuilt and roads repaved, Teofilo reports. Acehnese are being hired to clear land of debris for $6 a day and look forward to the work, he says.

“People don’t want to sit in temporary shelters and have someone bring them food. They want to get out and build homes.”

But to build homes, people need land A?a??a?? and clear title to it. One of the biggest obstacles to the recovery is proving ownership in cases where documentation was lost. Or finding alternatives if the land was swept away by the tsunami.

“In some places, 500 metres of shoreline were washed away, so where are they going to live now?” Teofilo asks. “The land issues are pretty big here.”

One solution is temporary ownership certificates drawn up by aid workers based on testimonials by a village headman or witness.

But the advocacy is a slow process A?a??a?? and it’s a reminder that no matter how much money or material are moved into place, rebuilding will take time.

source:
http://www.tamilcanadian.com/page.php?cat=52&id=3369

Tiger DonA?a??E?t Surf

By KEVIN SITES
June 26, 2006

The sun is setting over the Indian Ocean and, for a moment, Arugam Bay is paradise. The coastline, a jagged, gray-toothed smile of crumbling walls and stone foundations destroyed by the 2004 tsunami, is bathed in the giddy, rose-colored light of dusk.

The upstairs bar at the Siam View Inn is beginning to fill up with surfers who just finished their afternoon session at the south end of the bay. It is, they know, a wonderful secret spot – a reward for intrepid and fearless surf travelers, a right-hand point break which can carry you into next week, if youA?a??E?re lucky enough to out-paddle the other 50 hard-core surfers gunning for the same peak.

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But tonight theyA?a??E?re out of the water early. Mostly Aussies, along with a handful of Japanese, theyA?a??E?re keen to see day two of the World Cup soccer matches, Australia versus Japan, on the barA?a??E?s satellite television set.

As the first round of beers is poured, the national anthems are played before the start of the match. The Aussies sing along to the sounds of Waltzing Matilda. Everyone seems to savor the good fortune to be in this place, at this moment.

It is a well-earned moment of serenity in what has been a tumultuous two years for the people of Arugam Bay and the surrounding areas.

The Siam View Inn had 22 rooms before the tsunami hit. Now it has four. The owner, a German named Manfred, is a quiet but determined guy who knows how to get things done. He is rebuilding slowly, with the hope that if he does, they – the tourists – will come.

The reputation of having been devastated by the tsunami was obviously bad for business, and though there has been progress, the region is far from reconstructed. Officially, over 30,000 Sri Lankans were killed by the 2004 tsunami, many of them in this area on Sri LankaA?a??E?s southeast coast. Thousands more here are still living a rudimentary existence in thatch houses without water or electricity.

But businesses like the Siam View, struggling to rebuild in the aftermath of the tsunami, began to see a light at the end of the tunnel: the possibility of becoming, if not a mainstream tourist spot, at least a bragging-rights stop for the young, hip, “Lonely Planet”-type traveler.

But then, in April, the Tamil Tiger rebels used a female suicide bomber, a “Black Tigress,” in an assassination attempt in Colombo against Sri LankaA?a??E?s army chief, Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka. The attempt only injured Fonseka, but likely killed any hopes for rekindling a viable tourist trade in Arugam Bay.

“Sixty people canceled on me after that,” says K.M. Rifei, one of the managers at the Siam View Inn. “They were from all over the world, too – Germany, England, Australia.”

Rifei is troubled by the developments, but heA?a??E?s seen enough tragedy in his life that his emotional range seems wisely shifted to neutral. Rifei says he lost 17 members of his family in the tsunami, including his son, who was just one-and-a-half years old.

“When the tsunami hit,” he says, as we sit on the deck of restaurant overlooking the beach, “my family was all in the water, including my son.”

Now the challenge, the same for everyone here, is surviving the tragedy after the tragedy. If the worldA?a??E?s most deadly natural disaster wasnA?a??E?t enough, Sri LankaA?a??E?s slow slide out of a 2002 cease-fire agreement between the government and the Tamil Tigers and back into civil war now seems not only inevitable, but already in progress.

The economic costs are already high. Two pro surfing events scheduled to take place in Arugam Bay this summer have been canceled because of the violence.

“We werenA?a??E?t expecting much from them, though,” says 24-year-old Asmin, whose father and uncle own the Tropicana, a small surfboard rental shop, and handful of beachside rental cabanas. “TheyA?a??E?d probably all stay at five star hotels somewhere else.”

Asmin and his family are Muslims, like the majority of the people in this area, and so donA?a??E?t directly share in the Sinhalese versus Tamil feud that has divided Sri Lanka for decades.

Jamaldeen, AsminA?a??E?s father, says the people here have a good relationship with government security forces, especially the elite police commandos known as the Special Task Force (STF), who are in charge of this area.

“The Tigers arenA?a??E?t active here but the government perceives this as an area in which they operate,” says Jamaldeen, “so they donA?a??E?t invest a lot to help counter that reputation.”

It is, I think, a dilemma like the legendary scene in Francis Ford CoppolaA?a??E?s “Apocalypse Now” in which American Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore (an avid surfer), played by Robert Duvall, covets a stretch of beach held by the enemy (Charlie) simply for its surf.

When his men protest that the beach is heavily fortified, Kilgore responds, “Charlie donA?a??E?t surf!” and orders an attack on the beach.

Like Charlie, Tiger may not surf either, but the perception of potential violence here, as in other areas of the country, hasnA?a??E?t made Arugam Bay seem like a safe spot for many mainstream travelers to hit the water.

Jamaldeen says that the ongoing dearth of tourists could eventually do what the tsunami did not: kill their business.

And while businesses struggle to survive, many tsunami survivors in the region are also still doing the same, even a year and a half later.

In one refugee camp a few miles from the beach, hundreds of families are just scraping by, they say, without any assistance.

Kaleander Musama says she, her husband and six children got a large water tank from the government a few days after the tsunami, but that was the last thing they ever got – since then there has been no one to refill it.

As I photograph the family, an angry old woman from the camp confronts me.

“You people are like the marauding elephants that come and ransack our homes and leave us with nothing,” says the woman, Yasim Bawa. “Three hundred photographers have come here and taken our picture and nothing has changed.”

I ask her why things havenA?a??E?t changed, why the government hasnA?a??E?t helped them more.

“You know what I got from the government after the tsunami?” she asks, half smiling now – “a coupon for 100 rupees (about $1).”

Things are a little better at another refugee camp further up the road where the Sri Lankan LionA?a??E?s Club has helped build dozens of new houses with concrete walls and corrugated tin roofs.

Still, the trauma of the event still lives with all of the families here.

Forty-two-year-old Mohammed Bahdurdeen, a tall, proud-faced man, makes a living as a fisherman when he can hire onto a local boat. But those days are often few and far between.

Mohammed places his hands on the shoulders of his six-year-old son Ajiwath, a boy seemingly full of energy – if not words.

“Since the tsunami he doesnA?a??E?t speak anymore,” says Mohammed. “I think the trauma was too much for him.”

Others here can speak, but have tired of it when nothing seems to change.

Back at the Siam View Inn, the world cup match is over with the Australians beating the Japanese 3-1.

As the crowd, a few at a time, pays their tabs and heads out, there are smiles on the faces of the employees behind the bar. It was a good night – the kind of night they havenA?a??E?t seen in quite some time – and with the increasing violence, may not see for some time again.

It is, however, a place stubbornly committed to optimism in the face of challenging times.

Above the bar on a whiteboard is a message in blue marker written on the day of the tsunami. It has not been wiped clean since.

It reads, “This event is not the end, just a new beginning. A great chance for all of us. Posted 20 hours, December 26, 04.”

Find more reporting from “Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone” at Generic bupropion hcl xl reviews hotzone.yahoo.com.

(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.shns.com)

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A?A? 2006 – Knoxville News Sentinel

On the Edge of the Wave – A Study

Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
1
At the Edge of the Big Wave:
Community recovery in a tsunami-affected area of Sri Lanka
Jeff Lewis and Belinda Lewis
2006
A?a??E?I can tell you thisA?a??A?I would never, ever, ever donate to a charity or aid organization in
the futureA?a??a??. (Community member, Arugam Bay, Sri Lanka)
A?a??E?The trouble with doing aid work in Sri Lanka is that the people here are incompetent:
from government officials right down to the workers on the site. They just donA?a??a??t have
the skills, theyA?a??a??re hopelessA?a??a??. (Aid Manager, Habitat Christian Aid Organization)
A?a??E?I think the emergency aid program has gone quite well. Given the complex and violent
nature of this society, we have achieved a great deal.A?a??a?? (Senior official, USAID)
Introduction
Lying off the south eastern coast of the Indian sub-continent, Sri Lanka has been shaped by a
complex history of invasion, maritime trade and various forms of colonial incursion and
administration. The warrior emperor Ashoka, for example, brought Buddhism from southern
India into Sri Lanka during the second century BC (Senaveratna, 1997). Since that time,
however, the culture of the island has been influenced and transformed by Arabic traders,
Portuguese, Dutch and ultimately British colonizers. With less than fifty kilometres of
shallow water land bridge separating northern Sri Lanka from India, it is not surprising that
Hindu Tamils also migrated to the island, occupying and controlling significant parts of the
north and Jaffna Peninsula. British colonization, modernization and the more recent
Page 2
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
2
integration of Sri Lanka into global trade and cultural exchange have generated further social
complexities and transformations. For example, independence in 1948 brought with it a surge
of Sinhalese nationalism, itself a precipitant for Tamil nationalism which contributed
eventually to civil war from 1983 to 2002 (Wilson, 2001, Ghosh, 2003).
Hasbullah and Morrison (2004) have characterized these transitions in terms of Sri LankaA?a??E?s
struggle to establish civil institutions which might effectively embrace the islandA?a??E?s ethnic,
cultural and political diversity. The ongoing deficiencies in civil governance continue to limit
peace-building and reconciliation, as well as frustrate broader attempts to improve Sri LankaA?a??E?s
economic, social and community well-being. Thus, while tourism authorities seek to promote
the island as A?a??E?serendipityA?a??a??, a tropical paradise, the actual security, living conditions and health
of many Sri Lankans continues to be constrained within politically volatile, A?a??E?third worldA?a??a??
conditions. In fact, industries like tourism, which bring essential foreign exchange funds into
the Sri Lankan economy, demonstrate the precariousness of the post-conflict society; any
outbreaks of violence or social unrest immediately affects international arrivals and hence
overall economic activity.
These community tensions and security vulnerabilities have been illuminated and in many
respects even exacerbated by the tsunami event of December 26, 2004. The waves struck the
east and south-west of the island with savage and devastating effect, killing over 40,000
people and displacing around 2.5 million survivors. The everyday privation and indigence
experienced by many of the people in the affected areas suddenly became exceptional as
images of the tsunami were beamed across the globe. Confronted by this terrifying spectacle,
first world governments and their citizens mobilized their compassion through a major global
emergency relief effort; substantial funds, aid workers and volunteers poured into the regions,
providing unparalleled support which, in principle, was not bounded by political, ethnic or
religious difference.
This extraordinary mood of co-operation and support was mirrored within Sri Lanka itself
where Tamil and Sinhalese antagonisms were set aside, at least temporarily, as bereaved and
traumatised communities sought to recover their dead, heal the injured and take stock of the
Page 3
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
3
physical damage to their homes, infrastructure and environments. The threat of disease, food
shortages and contaminated water were common to all groups. And despite provocations from
people like President Chandrika Kumaratunga, who claimed that the peace process had been
accelerated by the tsunami since it had decimated the Tamil fighters, the suffering itself
seemed to unite most political interests in Sri Lanka, providing a genuine opportunity for
reconciliation and peace-building. It seemed possible in the first weeks following the disaster
that the long history of antagonism between the Sinhalese and Tamils could draw the margins
into a pragmatic process of national and democratic consolidation.
As if to immaculate this process within the War on Terror and the promulgation of western
democratic values, US President George Bush, assuming the role of tsunami global statesman,
visited a number of the devastated areas of the region. With the Iraq occupation going very
badly for the US-led Coalition, it is not surprising that Bush embraced the opportunity to
present himself and the United States in a compassionate and supportive leadership role. Nor
is it surprising that the Sri Lanka photo-op was situated in the overwhelmingly Sinhalese
region of the south-west around Galle. BushA?a??E?s visit and the associated USAID package worth
over $35m (US Agency for International Development 2005) were clearly designed to
influence the Sinhalese dominated government to take more seriously their A?a??E?democraticA?a??a??
responsibilities for peace-building and reconciliation between the two major ethnic groups.
The World Bank, pursuing parallel political goals, insisted similarly that that their own aid
and development package was contingent upon the effective social management of ethnic
tension. In pursuit of these funds President Kumaratunga was prepared to sacrifice her
governmentA?a??E?s coalition partner the JVP (Marxist PeopleA?a??E?s Liberation Front), which had
objected to the sharing of aid money with the Tamil tigers. KumaratungaA?a??E?s implementation of
the Tsunami Relief Council and the National Centre for the distribution of relief funds, while
leaving her as the head of a minority government, has also led to widespread protests from
Buddhist monks and Sinhalese students in the capital and across the south-west of the
country. The goal of the National Centre, however, was for A?a??E?the proper distribution of the
Page 4
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
4
international aid among the Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim communities and for the process to
build a new Sri LankaA?a??E? (Colombo Page, 2005).
For all their undoubted potential, these ideals are clearly struggling to erase the sources of
tension and insecurity that the majority of Sri Lankans experience as a daily reality. Amid the
resonance of civil war, poverty and violence mingle in an insidious collusion of social anxiety
and unrest. The A?a??E?recoveryA?a??E? in fact has been extremely uneven. While significant re-building is
evident around the more publicly extant areas of the southwest, in the more ethnically mixed
areas of the east, progress has been at best intermittent and at worst stagnant. Ethnic division
continues to constrain the economic development and social health of the nation; as the
recovery evolves from emergency relief to the provision of longer term development
assistance, these underlying problems are becoming increasingly evident. Now, as many aid
organizations have left the devastated areas and many more are drawing their operations to a
close, the opportunity to build a A?a??E?new Sri LankaA?a??E? seems seriously to be under siege.
The principal aim of the current chapter is to examine the recovery process in one
particular area on the east coast of Sri Lanka. We explore the experiences of people living on
the edge of the recovery process A?a??a?? communities marginalised due to their remote location,
ongoing political violence, ethnic/religious tensions and contradictory engagements with
A?a??E?westernA?a??a?? tourism. As we shall explain below, our research on Arugam Bay (Arugamby) was
conducted six months after the tsunami struck. Arugam Bay is the coastal village adjoining
the larger settlement of Pottuwil, a Muslim dominated community on the east coast of Sri
Lanka. While originally a fishing village, Arugam Bay has over the past thirty years become a
low level international tourist destination, popular among European backpackers and surfers
from the UK, Australia, Israel, Japan and the US. This low level tourism has brought
considerable development to the town and, by east coast standards especially, the area around
Arugam Bay is reasonably well-off with tourism creating demand for food and other
consumables. Even so, the area remains volatile with high levels of crime and intermittent
outbreaks of politically motivated violence. During the three week period in which we
conducted our research, a grenade exploded in the office of the Tamil Tigers (LTTE), three
Page 5
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
5
undercover intelligence soldiers were shot in a neighbouring village, there were reports of
sexual violence against tourists, and a Buddhist temple erected as part of the post-tsunami
recovery project was attacked by a group of Muslims who believed it to be an offensive and
aggressive act of Sinhalese territorialization.
The tsunami, in fact, had struck Arugamby with terrible ferocity, destroying all but a few
buildings and killing nearly half the townA?a??E?s population. As a Muslim dominated community,
which is also home to significant numbers of Tamil Hindus and Sinhalese as well as
permanent and visiting A?a??E?westernersA?a??E?, Arugam Bay is a complex ethnic, social and political mix.
Muslims, Tamils and westerners have all claimed that the area has been largely neglected by
the government-sponsored aid program, although numerous aid workers and organizations
have been active in the area. In many respects, many of the debates around tsunami aid and
recovery for Sri Lanka and other parts of the world are particularly pertinent for this area. The
problems associated with recovery in Arugam Bay are intricately linked to broader national
and global conditions. It is not just that Arugam Bay is part of the international tourism
industry and that the tsunami was a trans-national natural event; the conflicts and tensions
experienced in the community, as well as their proposed solutions, are profoundly implicated
in world conditions. As the local encounters the global, there are very clear effects on the
health and well being of individuals and their communities.
Background
While Sri LankaA?a??E?s GDP has been growing at a rate of 4-5% since the 1990s, the actual GDP
per capita is around US$4,000. While this figure is relatively low by OECD standards, it
compares favourably with India (US$3,300) and Indonesia (US$3,200) though less
favourably with China (US$7,200). It is certainly clear that the civil war in Sri Lanka (1983-
2002) has constrained economic development, especially tourism which in the A?a??E?post-conflictA?a??a??
period has experienced considerable growth in other areas of the country. However,
development and growth has been particularly constrained in the north where the Tamil
Tigers (LTTE) continue to control much of the territory, forming their own governmental
Page 6
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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institutions and processes. While only a small proportion of Sri LankaA?a??E?s total population, the
Tamil Hindus have sought to secede from the Sinhalese-dominated Sri Lankan nation.
The following tables describe the ethnic and religious divisions of Sri Lanka.
Table 1: Ethnic groups in Sri Lanka
Ethnic Group
% of Total
Population
Sinhalese
73.8
Sri Lankan Moors
7.2
Sri Lankan Tamil
3.9
Indian Tamil
4.6
Unspecified and Other
10.5
(Source: 2001 Sri Lankan Census)
These ethnic categories parallel the religious affiliations as they are outlined below.
Table 2: Religious affiliation in Sri Lanka
Religious Affiliation
% of Total
Population
Buddhist
69.1
Hindu
7.1
Muslim
7.6
Christian
6.2
Unspecified
10
(Source: Sri Lanka 2001 Census)
It is important to note that the majority of Sri Lankan and Indian Tamils are Hindus; the
Tamil Tigers, however, are not exclusively a religious secessionist movement but are
motivated by a strong secularist, Lenin-Marxist political ideology. The Sri Lankan A?a??E?MoorsA?a??E? are
Muslim groups who claim a genealogical connection with the Arabic traders who visited Sri
Lanka around the 15th century. While there are numerous debates about the authenticity and
significance of this connection (Vadivale 1997), it is reasonably clear that there was some
level of reproductive interaction between the traders and the Tamil Muslim women who were
part of a much older Muslim settlement that had originated from India. It is possible that the
claim to a Moorish genealogy has been generated by the desire to bring the Muslims closer to
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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the origins of the faith, thereby creating an A?a??E?essentialA?a??E? or A?a??E?resistantA?a??E? identity which distinguishes
Muslims from all other Sri Lankans (see Castells, 1997). However, as Tables 1 and 2 above
demonstrate, not all Sri Lankan Muslims identify as A?a??E?MoorsA?a??E?; many locate their ethnicity
within the Indian or Sri Lankan Tamil groups.
In Arugam Bay-Pottuwil the ethnic divisions are very different from the national
demography. While there is no specific census information on the exact proportions, our own
research is represented in the following table:
Table 3: Ethnic and Religious affiliation in Arugam Bay-Pottuwil
Ethnic-Religious Group
% of Total
Community
Muslim (Tamil-Moor)
74
Hindu (-Tamil)
8
Buddhist (-Sinhalese)
7
Sri Lankan Christian
4
Non-specified (includes A?a??E?westernersA?a??a??)
7
This table excludes temporary visitors, including tourists and aid workers. The predominance
of Muslims is proportionately more significant in Pottuwil than in Arugam Bay which is the
principal tourist precinct and far more exposed to the open ocean. While the style of Islamic
worship varies across the community, there are nevertheless a number of identifiable
characteristics and practices which distinguish the Pottuwil-Arugam Bay area from other
communities in Sri Lanka that tend to be dominated either by Buddhist Sinhalese or Hindu
Tamils. These can be summarized as followsA?a??a??
1. Muslim religious practices
There is a reasonably high level of religious observance. The A?a??E?call to prayerA?a??E? is well-
observed in Pottuwil with a ubiquitous placement of speakers and mosques. Prayer is less
faithfully observed in Arugam Bay where the requirements of work and the presence of
tourists seem to have compromised the strict observance of prayer. Even so, the
loudspeakers announce themselves with considerable insistence and volume in the
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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Arugam side of the bay A?a??a?? at times carrying strident messages which denounce non-
Muslims as corrupt, infidels and agents of the devil.
2. Participation of women
Women are generally absent from public life. While far less strict than some Middle
Eastern states, women are generally not to be found working in shops, hotels, or even
markets. While the chadoor or veil is rare, the hijab is always worn by local Muslim
women, who also cover their arms and legs when in public. In contrast to Sinhalese
villages or cities, Pottuwil streets are almost entirely absent of women and children.
3. Local government
Not surprisingly, the local government is dominated by Muslim men, whose faith and
ethnic allegiances are unapologetically foregrounded in their authority and decision-
making. Most of the aid workers and managers with whom we spoke complained of the
insularity and inefficiency of local government officials and their narrow focus on the
Muslim community over other ethnic-religious groups.
4. Western influences
A number of young Muslim men and youths appear to use Arugam Bay as a form of
A?a??E?party zoneA?a??a??. Like the western visitors and many local Sinhalese and Christians, the
young Muslim men come to Arugam Bay to drink alcohol and engage with western
women, whom they generally regard as promiscuous and irreligious. The A?a??E?visibilityA?a??E? of
western women and their mode of (un)dress are a source both of outrage, condemnation
and allure.
METHODS
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A major criticism of the tsunami recovery process has been the lack of consultation with
community members about their own priorities and the strategies which they identify as most
appropriate to their needs (Thampi 2005). Community perspectives are important in ensuring
that humanitarian assistance addresses peopleA?a??a??s changing needs and the problems that arise as
the recovery process unfolds (Toole et al 2001, UNSW Health and Conflict Project 2004).
The researchers conducted qualitative, in-depth interviews with a range of people engaged in
the recovery process in Arugam-Pottuwil. The principal aim of the research was to explore
peopleA?a??a??s experiences of the recovery process and to record and analyse the issues which
respondents themselves identified as important. This research was a pilot study for a larger
project exploring the tsunami recovery process in Sri Lanka and South-East Asia.
Sample selection and recruitment
In recognition of the potential for trauma and distress, interviews were not conducted with
individuals who were still grieving, severely injured or who presented themselves as
significantly traumatised. It is for this reason that the majority of respondents in this pilot
study were people working in donor organisations and aid agencies (professional and
volunteers) and survivors who had, by their own measure, significantly recovered from the
trauma of the tsunami event.
Participants were recruited to include both community members and key informants. Key
informants were people in positions of responsibility or leadership considered by the
community to be a rich source of knowledge or information. Their perspectives were
complemented by interviews with community members whose voices are less likely to be
articulated in expert or official discourses. Recruitment of respondents was undertaken
through personal contacts and recommendation from key informants. A total of fourteen
respondents participated in the study, with participants from a range of ethnic and religious
groups according to the following table:
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Table 4: Participants in the study
Category
Criteria
(n)=14
Aid workers
Volunteer
Professional
Senior management
3
3
1
Community
members
Muslim
Sinhalese
Tamil
A?a??E?westernA?a??a??
3
1
1
2
Data collection
A semi-structured, open-ended interview format was used to collect data about community
membersA?a??E? lived experience in the aftermath of the tragedy and their perceptions of the
recovery process.
The research was not focused on the tsunami event itself, nor the specific psychological or
emotional trauma experienced by individuals; rather, we focused on the ways in which the
recovery is proceeding at a social and community level. The interviews, therefore, included
questions about aid distribution and effectiveness, reconstruction, restoration of economy, and
issues relating to social tensions, community cohesion and well-being.
Due to resource limitations, all interviews were conducted in English and thus a basic level of
English language was a prerequisite for participation. This limitation will be addressed in the
larger project through the use of local interpreters. Interviews were conducted in participantsA?a??a??
homes, places of work and in a range of public spaces. All participants received a plain
language statement explaining the purpose of the study and conduct of the interviews.
Consent forms were completed by all participants. Six interviews were recorded with the
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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consent of participants and a further eight interviews were recorded only through detailed
fieldnotes at the request of participants.
Data analysis
The interview data was initially explored using principles of grounded theory in order to
allow meaning to emerge from the data (see Strauss and Corbin 1990) and then extended by
making multiple cuts back and forth across the empirical data and existing theoretical
frameworks (Layder 1993). The analysis draws on the theoretical perspectives of cultural
studies with a particular focus on social cohesion and community well-being in the context of
globalization, political violence, culture and the notion of A?a??E?language warsA?a??a?? (Lewis B. & Lewis
J., 2004, Lewis, 2002). Our analysis seeks to situate the various perspectives on the tsunami
recovery process within the broader context of globalization, insecurity and community
transition. We identify key issues and explore them through the lived experience of
community members.
FINDINGS
Our research identified a range of issues which are impacting on the health and wellbeing of
marginalised groups. Discussion of the findings is organised the four key themes: aid
distribution and effectiveness, public infrastructure, ethnic tensions and community division,
and modernisation.
1. Aid distribution and effectiveness
There was a general agreement among the Arugam-Pottuwil communities that the government
had not fulfilled its responsibilities and promises regarding assistance for the recovery. In the
absence of support, people were struggling to rebuild private dwellings and businesses. Ted,
the owner of a mid-range hotel largely destroyed by the tsunami, had partially re-constructed
his restaurant but was only able to re-open a couple of rooms for accommodation. While
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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severely criticizing the emergency aid effort, especially of the Red Cross, Ted believed that
tourism operators would have to rely on their own resources to get back on their feet:
A?a??E?In some respects it is better that we just get on with it, accept that the local and national
governments are at best inept and at worst corrupt.A?a??a??
A long term resident in Arugam Bay and German national, Ted had established the hotel with
his former wife, a Sinhalase Sri Lankan. In the immediate aftermath of the tsunami he had
provided free accommodation for a group of Red Cross emergency relief workers in the
remains of his hotel. However, the arrogant attitude of the workers and the property damage
caused during their stay had led to considerable tension, resulting in an international law suit.
The discourse of control
Respondents expressed considerable frustration about the problems created when outsiders
(aid workers) enter a community, taking control of funding priorities and adopting
A?a??E?ownershipA?a??a?? of the disaster. While some people talked about feeling powerless and
marginalised from the recovery process, there were also stories of extreme resourcefulness
and creativity.
The behaviour of aid workers was viewed with suspicion and resentment by many tsunami
survivors in Arugam Bay. While this was not a sleight on all aid workers and their
organizations, at times a view was expressed that aid workers could be arrogant and
excessively focused on their own A?a??E?missionA?a??E? rather than understanding the needs of the victims.
To some extent, these views reflected on the personal demeanour of the aid workers, many of
whom were short-term volunteers with minimal or no experience in international aid work. At
Arugam Bay, this problem had been exacerbated by the behaviour of the many aid workers
who use the tourist destination as a party zone to relieve the pressures of a demanding job.
Our interviews with aid workers themselves, seemed to confirm the criticisms expressed by
tsunami survivors. Bob, a senior aid worker with the Christian-based aid organization
Habitat, for example, seemed indifferent or at least insensitive to the plight of the people he
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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believed he was helping. For Bob, the mission was to build cheap and easily erected
dwellings:
A?a??E?The biggest problem here is the people. TheyA?a??a??re just so incompetent. We could build
each of these houses in a couple of days if theyA?a??a??d just let us get on with it. But they want
concrete floors and lintels and all these traditional things . The problem is that theyA?a??a??re
Buddhist. They have their way of doing things…and it just makes it impossible.A?a??E?
Arissa, who was of French-Arabic descent and working for a French aid agency, was herself
deeply critical of her own aid organization. According to Arissa, the organizationA?a??E?s goals and
projects were far too narrow and inflexible:
A?a??E?They come in with their views and projects already fixed rather than working with
communities to identify their priorities. They are far too insensitive to the peopleA?a??E?s
actual needs and we are forced to play the aid game, ensure good photos for the donors
back home.A?a??E?
ArissaA?a??E?s particular project was based around the security of women and children, projects
designed to support the psychological well-being of individuals and community groups.
Arissa argued, that while these projects are laudable, they fail to really address the underlying
and urgent needs of people:
A?a??E?These organizations seem to be just competing for credibility. They establish housing
and settlement camps which then become populated by people who have barely ever
seen the ocean, let alone a tsunami. These are impoverished people who come down
from inland areas to access free housing and food. ItA?a??a??s understandable. ItA?a??E?s a strange
irony that the relief organizations are creating new forms of social displacement. They
just donA?a??E?t seem to understand the local context at all.A?a??E?
But for Bob, the problem is culture itself:
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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A?a??E?Culture gets in the way of things. After all, theyA?a??E?re Buddhists arenA?a??E?t they? And IA?a??E?m a
Christian working for a Christian organization. We just canA?a??a??t get involved in the
religion issue. People, our donors, we just want to see the Gospel in action.A?a??E?
While far more sensitive to the local communities than Bob, other Habitat workers
interviewedA?a??a??Jane and RoryA?a??a??were no less enthusiastic about their Christian mission. A
newlywed couple in their twenties, they had volunteered for a two-week stint working in the
ravaged areas of the south, and had finished their stay with a two week holiday in Arugam:
A?a??E?We came here because we wanted to do something for these people. We wanted to shed the
light of Jesus into their lives.A?a??E? Not surprisingly, the effectiveness of this A?a??E?disaster tourismA?a??E? was
questioned by some of the professional aid workers interviewed.
Prescriptive aid and short-termism
Members of Mercy Corps, an international aid and development organization which had
been working in Sri Lanka prior to the tsumani, had mapped out a pre-determined approach
for their program. They would not attempt to re-build houses or infrastructure. Instead, they
would focus on the needs of specific businesses and the economic recovery of the community.
To this extent, Mercy Corps embarked on a program of donating equipment such as freezers
to local businesses. Community members, however, were quick to point out that the
unreliable power supply in Arugam-Pottuwil meant that the storage of frozen food was
simply not viable except for the small proportion of people who could also afford to buy a
back-up generator and fuel at prices vastly inflated since the tsunami. Consequently, as food
was frozen, thawed and re-frozen in the donated machines, serious health problems such as
salminella and other gastro-intestinal infections had emerged.
Moreover, Ra, a Tamil Hindu survivor of the tsunami, pointed out that the distribution
process for assistance was itself highly problematic and inequitable. Nonetheless, community
members were extremely resourceful in devising strategies to negotiate these limitations. In
order to mobilise assistance from Mercy Corps, some families would open a small teahouse,
then close their doors within several weeks of opening. The equipment would then simply be
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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sold off to mobilise the cash flow families needed to rebuild their lives according to their own
priorities.
In fact, prescriptive aid programs and lack of coordination between agencies has
intensified inequalities in the community. Many respondents offered different versions of the
same mantra: A?a??E?After the tsunami some rich men become poor, and some poor men become
richA?a??E?. In an extreme case, one particularly wily individual had convinced two separate aid
agencies that his fishing boat had been destroyed by the tsunami and he had been rendered
destitute. Each agency provided a new US$80,000 boat emblazoned with their insignia and
slogans about working with the community. Both boats were sold and the individual is now
one of the wealthiest men in the town. In fact, many of the boats that are now used by
fisherman in Arugam are not owner-operated, but belong to professional A?a??E?entrepreneursA?a??a?? from
Pottuwil.
The micro-economic effects of aid
Recent critical analysis of aid strategies (Thampi 2005) has highlighted the problem of
distortion of local economies due to the influx of aid. Large numbers of aid workersA?a??a??
volunteers and professionals who descend on a particular area bring with them a concentrated
source of provision, consumption and demand. It is certainly clear, for example, that prices
have been driven up by this demand, especially for foodstuffs and basic necessities.
Paradoxically, the presence of aid workers in Arugam Bay has contributed to higher prices for
fish and fresh vegetables, further marginalising disadvantaged members of the same
communities they aim to assist.
A further distortion, has been created by the provision of emergency food relief such as
rice. While more prevalent in other parts of Sri Lanka, it is becoming increasingly clear that
farmers are drastically reducing their rice production in response to the provision of grain
handouts. Rather than helping to rebuild the capacity of local communities, this emergency
assistance by well-intentioned, short term aid programs may well be contributing to a form of
aid dependency. According to Arissa:
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A?a??E?The short-term solutions are not good. These people are already marginal. We should
be building the capacity of local people A?a??a?? skills and training A?a??a?? so they can solve their
own problemsA?a??a??.
The economic bubble which the invasion of aid workers has brought to the tsunami-
affected areas is due to burst over the coming months as the emergency work and associated
contracts come to an end. The vacuum that this mass departure will create in the affected
economies may yet overwhelm the positive economic effects of their assistance programs. As
many respondents noted, if the legacy of their presence is not substantial and lasting, there
may be nothing left but a sense of feeling cheated and vulnerable.
2. Public infrastructure
One of the difficulties for all aid agencies, especially in terms of the enormous scale of the
tsunami disaster, is the intense competition between agencies for credibility with both their
donors and communities:
A?a??E?Everywhere I go I see NGOA?a??a??s tripping over each other A?a??A? you hear about the
oversubscription of aid, in nearly every sectorA?a??A?.IA?a??a??m not trying to say that I think that
all the needs are met in a satisfactory way in the eyes of the community or in the eyes
of the beneficiaryA?a??A? I think that whatA?a??a??s a challenge for the NGO community
themselves is that there are no real strong ties that bind them one to another. Yet they
all sort of benefit or lose out from the failings of others. If a fly-by-night NGO comes
in and promises a lot of stuff and then doesnA?a??a??t deliver, or drops off a whole bunch of
stuff that the community doesnA?a??a??t really care about, people blame NGOA?a??a??s at largeA?a??a??.
(Senior manager, USAID)
The complex politics of donation has been broadly criticised in terms of publicly funded aid
programs and national self-interest. For Arugam Bay, this issue is clearly manifest in the
ongoing problems with public infrastructureA?a??a?? water, sanitation, waste management,
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transportation, electricity and health care. While the infrastructure of Arugam-Pottuwil was
already of Third World standards, the tsunami has made conditions even worse. Funds that
are held or managed by the Non-Government Organizations (NGOs) have been generally
allocated to specific recovery or emergency projects, and are not available for larger scale
infrastructure or development work. Eliza, the British wife of a local tsunami survivor, made
it clear that these funds have been largely wasted in Arugam Bay:
A?a??E?In any one day, youA?a??E?ll see about five or six different water trailers coming into the town
and re-filling the roadside water tanks. Each tank has a different logo on the side. ItA?a??a??s
like theyA?a??a??re competing for attention. There are Red Cross, CARE, UNICEF water tanks,
each with their own tractor and water carrier. Why donA?a??E?t they just invest in a proper
reticulated water system? And they have to use tractors because the major road into
town is still completely wrecked!A?a??E?
Eliza and others point also to the sudden oversupply of tuk-tuks, the three wheel taxi vehicles,
during the recovery. According to Ibrahim, a tuk-tuk driver from Pottuwil,
A?a??E?Virtually anyone who wanted a tuk-tuk could get one after the tsunami. You just had to
go to one of the NGOs and tell them youA?a??E?d lost your taxi in the big wave and you got
one. Now there are hundreds of men with tuk-tuks and not enough work to go around
any moreA?a??E?.
Ted, the ex-patriot hotelier had trained as an engineer. He was amazed at the lack of planning
of the recovery:
A?a??E? I think it is the fault of these NGOA?a??a??s. They donA?a??a??t plan it properly. I mean if they
would implement a proper program, like putting in pipes for water and sanitationA?a??A? but
they did it all back to front. They planted all nice trees in the street now. That was
Mercy Corps. But youA?a??a??ll have to dig the trees all up again to put the water pipes in. You
should at least make a canal tunnel so you can put the pipes in the ground later. I mean,
this is how you should do itA?a??A?Instead of roads and water, we get toilet rolls from
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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AmericaA?a??A?28,000 rolls. The kids use them as streamers in the camp because we donA?a??a??t
have any toilets. They donA?a??a??t use toilet paper here anyway. They wash with water. ItA?a??a??s
downright stupidA?a??A?We had a brilliant chance, with the area devastated, to do it properly.
I mean you donA?a??a??t have to demolish anything. You have a brilliant chance to do
everything much better than it was before, but they didnA?a??a??t take that chanceA?a??a??.
While the provision of roadside tanks of clean drinking water was a major priority during
the emergency phase of the recovery, the armadae of large black water tanks in Arugam Bay
is a potent symbol of the duplication and lack of coordination between aid agencies. Many
respondents pointed to the fact that, despite the abundant supply, there appears to be an almost
programmatic neglect of water quality in the tanks, and it is common to see children using the
unpalatable drinking water for washing and playing. When asked about the need for
infrastructure, a senior manager of the USAID recovery program in Sri Lanka agreed that this
would undoubtedly be the principal priority for most communities. USAID has a total
package of US$35m for infrastructure across the country:
A?a??E?But we canA?a??E?t just allocate moneyA?a??A? we present a list of priorities but itA?a??a??s not certain
what Congress may ultimately approve. Or what the administration may make available
for this effortA?a??A? It really gets very complicatedA?a??a??
The value of infrastructure, of course, is that it is available to all members of the
community. Community health and wellbeing is enhanced through the supply of clean water,
sanitation and better hygiene for all. Nonetheless, two thirds of the USAID total infrastructure
budget has been allocated to re-build the bridge which connects Arugam Bay to Pottuwil and
the main transport route to the capital, A?a??olombo. The bridge was destroyed by the tsunami
and re-built by the Indian Army.
A?a??E?You know thereA?a??a??s political will and political interests in there. Aragum Bay is an area
of interest to this office to support the development of that area – the tourism, the
economy, the social concerns thereA?a??A? There was political interest to do a very high
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Pearson Education, Melbourne.
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profile project here and the bridge there certainly stood out. And after the Indian Army
worked to rebuild the bridge, our engineers did an assessment, and determined that the
columns are not safe enoughA?a??A? Yes, profile is definitely an important issue…A?a??a?? (Senior
manager, USAID)
3. Ethnic tension and community division
Although, in the immediate aftermath of the tsunami, the community was galvanised as
people responded to the emergency, the influx of external resources and influences has
exacerbated existing ethnic tensions and community division. Bill, a tsunami survivor with
connections to the London business community, had raised a considerable amount of money
and provided it directly to public agencies to assist schools and a local hospital. Sally, an
Australian surfer who had been caught in the tsunami, was uncertain about how to use the
money she had raised. During the month of her return visit, she distributed clothing from a
surfwear manufacturer to some of the local children and, along with some friends, conducted
community swimming lessons to help children overcome their fear of the water. These
projects aimed to provide hope that was accessible to all and thereby draw the community
together.
Laudable as these aims are, they could not entirely eschew the problem of inequitable
access and inter-communal rivalry. Ensuring equitable distribution of assistance is a key
problem for humanitarian assistance programs (Thampi 2005), and while the aid programs
have clearly been of benefit to some individuals, many have received nothing. According to a
local Tamil Hindu man, distribution follows ethnic and religious lines:
A?a??E?The aid organizations go to the local government and ask what is the problem and who
needs help? The local government here is Muslim so the aid goes to the Muslims. Some
of them were never even touched by the tsunami. Some farmers have got new
equipment, some of the fisherman have new boats. The bank manager A?a??a?? heA?a??a??s Muslim –
has a new boat. He never even had one before.A?a??E?
Page 20
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
20
Others claim that, despite the best intentions, aid is often distributed to people with the skills
and resources to access support. People less likely to receive support are those without
English language skills, basic education, access to transport (to get to distribution centres), or
pre-existing resources eg. fishing equipment which can be identified and replaced.
James, one of the professional aid managers in Mercy Corps, corroborated this story, claiming
that the ethnic tensions were intensifying as a result of the aid programs: A?a??E?It is difficult to
know who to believe in a place like this. Each group has its agendaA?a??a??. A Buddhist monument
built in the town centre with tsunami aid funds aimed to strengthen the morale of the minority
Sinhalese community but had created considerable disquiet, even outright hostility, amongst
the Arugam Bay Muslims. Kaiyoon, a well educated and relatively urbane Muslim hotel
manager, was incensed by the monument.
A?a??E?The Sinhalese want everything. They have a temple over in Pottuwil. They donA?a??E?t need
another one. They just want to tell us all they are in control and we Muslims better not
forget itA?a??E?.
The skirmishes surrounding the building of the temple were quelled by government troops
and by a general recognition in the local communities that the tourism upon which they all
depended would be further threatened by violence or instability in the township. But there
remains an uneasy calm around the temple; as a survival monument, it seems to represent
fracture and separation rather than harmony and hope.
4. Modernization
Modernization and global integration mainfest themselves in complicated and often diffuse
ways in Sri Lanka. Through governance, law and economy, the communities of Sri Lanka are
being drawn into new forms of cultural and social interaction. Historical and more recent
antagonisms, or A?a??E?language warsA?a??E? (Lewis, 2002, 2005), are evolved through more co-operative
Page 21
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
21
societal imperatives. In Arugam Bay, at the interface of these agonistic and collaborative
gestures, governance and rule of law become subsumed within a more intense modernizing
trajectory. With a national government that is beset by prejudice and ineffectual management
of ethnic tensions and a local government that is obsessed by its own ethnic and religious
interests, the complexion of law seems incapable of overcoming its own intrinsic and
solipsistic complexity. Combining a British common law system with various modes of
ethnically derived customary law, the regulation of bodies and actions in Sri Lanka is
managed by a largely ineffectual police force and local community leaders. The government
military is ubiquitous in the capital, central and southern districts, while the LTTE military
constitutes a strong enforcement agency in the north and east.
In Arugam Bay, government and LTTE forces mingle through a generally silent though
distinctly strained distance. The presence of tourists in the district adds a further complexity
to the processes of law and social management with hoteliers and bar owners managing their
own security systems and personnel. During the period of this research, there were several
inter-ethnic incidents, including the shooting of three intelligence officers in a neighbouring
village, a grenade attack, and violence between visiting Israelis and local youths. Equally
disturbing was the sexual assault and attempted rape of two young western women, from
Britain and Australia. According to several reports, these events are not uncommon. Eliza an
ex-patriot woman who has married a local Tamil Hindu, claimed that these crimes are often
the result of a clash of cultures:
A?a??E?Western women think they can act like they do at home. Wear bikinis on the beach, get
pissed and wander around on the beach by themselves. They think the local guys are
like the guys at home and that everyone obeys the law. Well, itA?a??E?s not like that here. A lot
of the guys think that western girls are sluts and so you can treat them like that.A?a??E?
In the post-tsunami world, with a flood of young western women working for aid agencies,
the problem appears to have been exacerbated according to Eliza:
Page 22
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
22
A?a??E?The laws here are governed by the particular communities. ItA?a??E?s very patriarchal. The aid
workers, the women, come along expecting to let their hair down in Arugam and they
do. But sometimes it has dire consequences. There was a group of them went skinny-
dipping after a full moon party run by one of the hotels. Three of them were bashed and
raped. It happens a lot. More than anyone is prepared to admit.A?a??E?
The man accused of the attempted rapes was incarcerated for two weeks without trial and
then released once the victims had left town. Some of the more responsible ex-patriot women
placed signs up around Arugam Bay and the beach warning young women to take
precautions. Ted, the German ex-patriot hotelier, was philosophical about these crimes:
A?a??E?The police wonA?a??E?t do anything unless there is a major theft or someone has been
seriously hurt. The aid workers need to learn about these places before they come. It
may look modern on the outside, but itA?a??a??s an extremely sexist and chauvinistic
environment. This kind of behaviour [referring to the attempted rapes] is totally
unacceptable. But, I mean, the young men are confused. Sexually frustrated males, they
see a nice girl coming inA?a??A? and for them its like a pin up come true… And some girls
come out here on a kind of sex tour. They never admit theyA?a??a??re a sex tourist because they
donA?a??a??t have to pay. But it has the same intent as for men. I think people need to
understand a lot more about the local context.A?a??E?
The different ethnic and religious communities in Arugam Bay are struggling to resolve these
issues of law and order in the context of a recovery which depends on their engagement with a
modern and cosmopolitan tourist industry:
A?a??E?The regular police down here are just not respected. Corrupt, violent. But I mean, if
you are a low paid policeman in a dodgy area, what are you going to do? A?a??A? They live
here, they know whatA?a??a??s going to happen to the local economy if these stories get out.
SoA?a??A?there will be a closing of the ranks. ItA?a??a??s purely an economic issueA?a??a??. (James, aid
worker)
Page 23
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
23
Ra, a local Tamil Hindu, believes that the answer to these problems is to have a genuine
authority and law enforcement agency in the town:
A?a??E?The Tamil Tigers could fill this role very well. I donA?a??E?t agree with their tactics during the
war, but they are well known for their discipline in the north. They are not corrupt. They
are not looking to make money or drink arak on the job. They have a strong community
up there. They would bring some security to this place – and peace. This is what appeals
to tourists. They want to come here without being harassed or attacked. They want to
feel safe. Arugam Bay will not recover from this disaster until we have a decent police
force.A?a??E?
Conclusion
On the east coast of Sri Lanka, the health of people living in tsunami-affected areas continues
to be compromised by the convergent crises of political violence and natural disaster. After a
long and bloody civil war in which tens of thousands of people were killed, the processes of
peace-building and reconciliation are inevitably strained. Community health and well-being
remain besieged by poverty, an underdeveloped public infrastructure and ongoing ethnic-
religious tensions which have been exacerbated by poorly coordinated and inequitable aid
programs. The tsunami has placed further strain on the processes of development, especially
on tourism which had been showing signs of restored growth in the two years prior to the
disaster.
In the wake of the tsunami, government ineptitude and self-interest, continues to frustrate the
recovery efforts. In particular, the campaign by the Sri Lankan Tourism Board to reinvigorate
development along the two hundred metre coastal strip is causing enormous confusion and
unrest in the recovery areas (Gerber 2004). Couched in the rhetoric of economic development
and an opportunity to A?a??E?clean upA?a??a?? the coastal zone, the new strategy involves partnerships with
multi-national hotel chains to A?a??E?moderniseA?a??a?? tourism in tsunami-affected areas. The most poor
Page 24
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
24
and disadvantaged families have, for decades, built light framed dwellings on these low-lying
coastal zones A?a??a?? and these were largely obliterated by the tsunami. This policy has seen
thousands of impoverished families further marginalised as they find themselves displaced,
landless and now in a state of profound anxiety about their futures.
This research demonstrates that the tsunami recovery process is linked critically to
community sustainability and peace-building in communities on the east coast of Sri Lanka.
There are several clear lessons to be learned:
1. Strategies are required to foster coordination between aid organisations to reduce
duplication and misappropriation of aid.
2. Short term relief projects may foster aid dependency rather than capacity building.
Short term assistance should be weighed up against the long term issues of
community sustainability which include the provision of basic infrastructure for
health, management of social tensions, local governance and security.
3. The importance of understanding the local context must be emphasised, particularly
in relation to pre-existing inequalities and ethnic-political tensions.
4. Participatory approaches are required to create opportunities for the various groups
within local communities to determine their own needs and make choices about
how these needs may be met in the short and long term.
5. Strategies should be identified for enhancing community sustainability, including
building peopleA?a??a??s capacity to mobilise the resources and expertise needed to
implement these strategies.
6. The Sri Lankan government needs to adopt a more proactive approach to peace-
building and reconciliation in this region.
Arugam Bay-Pottuwil is a complex locality which is home to multiple communities A?a??a?? each
marginalised from the mainstream but in different ways. The negative effects on health
resulting from poverty, lack of basic infrastructure, remote location, cultural and religious
Page 25
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
25
difference and uneven political participation have been further intensified by the tsunami.
Nonetheless, while the tsunami recovery process has clearly exacerbated existing social
tensions and community divisions, it may also have provided new opportunities. Some
members of the community describe the tsunami as a A?a??E?blessing in disguiseA?a??E?, providing the
opportunity to rethink the regionA?a??a??s development priorities and reflect on the sources of
proliferating social problems. The tourism-led recovery may provide an important source of
income for the people of Arugam Bay-Pottuwil. However, if there is to be a genuine process
of restoration, a determined commitment is needed to support each of the various
ethnic/religious communities in working collaboratively to take greater control over the
regionA?a??a??s governance, security, development and economic prosperity.
In conclusion, this study provides insights into the tensions associated with recovery,
development and modernisation for people living in tsunami affected communities. Our
analysis sheds further light on some of the challenges and opportunities for sustaining and
strengthening community in the aftermath of the tragedy. If the international community is to
make a genuine contribution to the restoration process, they need to be alert to these issues.
References
Castells, M. (1997) The Power of Identity, Blackwell, London.
Colombo Page (2005) A?a??E?DonA?a??E?t betray the country: Sri Lanka President urges the JVPA?a??E?, Colombo
Page, www.colombo.com/archives//June1642909JV.html Biaxin xl price Accessed June 16.
Department of Census and Statistics (2001), Census of Population and Housing Sri Lanka,
Colombo.
Gelber, E. (2005) A?a??E?Bouncing back and building upA?a??a?? News and Features from Tsunami-
Affected Regions,
www.lonelyplanet.com/journeys/tsunami/srilanka_bouncing_back.cfm . Accessed July
25
th
2005.
Page 26
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
26
Ghosh, P. (2003) Ethnicity Versus Nationalism: the Devolution Discourse in Sri Lanka, Sage,
New Delhi.
Hasbullah, S. and Morrison, B. (eds) (2004) Sri Lankan society in the Age of Globalization:
Struggling to Create a New Social Order. Sage, New Delhi.
Layder, D.1993, New Strategies in Social Research, Polity Press, Cambridge
Lewis B. & Lewis J. (2004), A?a??E?After the Glow: Challenges and opportunities for community
sustainability in the context of the Bali bombingsA?a??a??, First International Sources of
Insecurity Conference Published Proceedings, Melbourne.
Lewis, J. (2002) Cultural Studies, Sage, London.
Lewis, J. (2005) Language Wars, Pluto Press, London.
Senaveratna, J. (1997) The Story of the Sinhalese: From the most Ancient Times to the End of
the Mahavansa. AES, New Delhi.
Strauss, A. & Corbin, J. 1990, Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory
Procedures and Techniques, Sage, Newbury Park, CA.
Thampi, G. (2005) A?a??E?Ensuring effective project monitoring and evaluation in tsunami relief
operations: exploring the role of community feedback mechanismsA?a??a??, Expert Meeting on
Preventing Corruption in the Tsunami Relief Efforts,, April 2005: Issue Paper 5,
Jakarta, Asian Development Bank and OECD Anti-corruption initiative for Asia and the
Pacific.
Toole, M., Waldman, R., Zwi A. (2001) Complex humanitarian emergencies. In: Merson MH,
Black RE, Mills AJ, editors. Textbook of International Public Health: Diseases,
programs, systems and policies. Gaithersburg (Maryland): Aspen Publishers. pp. 439A?a??a??
513.
UNSW Health and Conflict Project (2004), Health and Peace-building: Securing the Future,
Background Paper 1. Sydney: School of Public Heath and Community Medicine,
University of New South Wales, healthandconflict.sphcm.med.unsw.edu.au
Page 27
Lewis J. and Lewis B. 2006, A?a??E?On the Edge of the Wave: Community recovery in a
tsunami-affected area of Sri LankaA?a??a??
in K.Cook and K.Gilbert, Eds, A?a??E?Life on the margins: implications for health researchA?a??a??,
Pearson Education, Melbourne.
27
US Agency for International Development (2005), Indian Ocean – Earthquakes and
Tsunamis, Fact Sheet #38, May 6, 2005 www.usaid.gov Order bactrim ds Accessed July 25
th
2005.
Vadivale, S. (1997) A?a??E?They came in Marak KalamsA?a??a??, Daily News, 9
th
September, 1997,
Colombo.
Wilson, J. (2001) Tamil Nationalism: its Origins and Development in the Nineteenth and
Twentieth Centuries, Penguin, New Delhi.
Zwi, A. (2004) How should the health community respond to violent political conflict?
PLoSMed 1(1): e14.

Arugambay: A new Book

Der Krokodilfelsen Sehnsucht nach Sri Lanka
So heisst ein Buch, was unter anderem auch in Arugam Bay, von 20 jahren handelt.
Wer schon mal hier war wird Leute & Plaetze wieder erkennen!
Hier der Eintrag, wie gewuenscht (aus dem Sri Lanka Board.de):

Faszinierende Reise durch ein exotisches Land

Backnang Sri Lanka das steht fA?A?r Urlaub unter Palmen und Ayurveda, aber auch fA?A?r Tsunami und den Jahrzehnte wA?A?hrenden BA?A?rgerkrieg zwischen Singhalesen und Tamilen. Ein Jahr war BKZ-Mitarbeiterin Claudia Ackermann aus Backnang in Asien unterwegs.

In Indien, Nepal, Thailand, Malaysia und Singapur. Und Sri Lanka, wo sie mehrere Monate blieb. Jetzt verA?A?ffentlichte sie den Reiseroman “Der Krokodilfelsen Sehnsucht nach Sri Lanka”, in den sie ihre Erlebnisse und Erfahrungen aus dieser Zeit einflieA?A?en lieA?A?.

VON INGRID KNACK

Der Roman ist nicht nur eine unterhaltsame Geschichte mit tiefen Einblicken in die Traveller-Szene. Vielmehr schildert die Autorin darin auch einfA?A?hlsam, wie Einheimische (und so mancher Tourist) den BA?A?rgerkrieg erlebten sowie kulturelle und landschaftliche Besonderheiten der Tropeninsel, von der der berA?A?hmte Ceylon-Tee kommt. Auch die Auswirkungen des Tourismus auf den asiatischen Inselstaat im Indischen Ozean klingen an.

Es war in KA?A?ln, wo Claudia Ackermann Germanistik und Ethnologie studierte, als ihr eines Tages wieder die Notizen in die HA?A?nde fielen, die sie wA?A?hrend ihres Aufenthalts in verschiedenen asiatischen LA?A?ndern gemacht hatte. Erinnerungen vermischten sich mit Fantasiereisen. Wie hA?A?tte diese oder jene Situation auch eine andere Wendung nehmen kA?A?nnen? Fragen wie diese gingen ihr durch den Kopf. So entstand die Idee, einen Roman zu schreiben. Reale Vorbilder bekamen zum Teil zusA?A?tzlich Charaktereigenschaften einer anderen Person, ihr Schicksal nahm im Roman zuweilen eine andere Wendung als in Wirklichkeit, manches ist pure Fiktion. Die Ich-ErzA?A?hlerin gehA?A?rt nicht zu den sinnsuchenden Globetrottern, die auch fern ihrer Heimat Gefangene ihrer persA?A?nlichen Probleme sind. Ihre Begegnungen mit diesen Travellern bleiben oberflA?A?chlich. Immer sind die zwei Welten zu spA?A?ren, die dabei aufeinander treffen. Besonders plastisch schildert Ackermann dies am Beispiel Goas, dem Mitte der 50er-Jahre entdeckten Traumziel der Flower-Power-Bewegung, das damals noch nicht direkt mit dem Flugzeug zu erreichen war. Die Hauptfigur plant die Reise in den kleinen Bundesstaat an der WestkA?A?ste Indiens, weil ihr Visum fA?A?r Sri Lanka abgelaufen ist. Goa, wo stA?A?dtisch gekleidete Inder an Sonntagen “einen Ausflug zu den nackten WeiA?A?en an Goas StrA?A?nden” machen, wo MA?A?dels mit hennagefA?A?rbten Haaren und langen bunten RA?A?cken und junge MA?A?nner mit verfilzten Haaren und den landestypischen Lungis, eine Art MA?A?nnerrock, einfach so in den Tag hineinleben, ist aber nicht ihr Ding. Die Ich-ErzA?A?hlerin schlA?A?pft wie so oft in die Rolle der Beobachtenden. Sie wirft Schlaglichter auf die legendA?A?ren Partys, bei denen Joints die Runde machen und Drogen aller Art offen gehandelt werden. Und ein Israeli, mit dem sie sich unterhA?A?lt, scheint ihr aus dem Herzen zu sprechen: “Die Drogenszene hier in Goa ist nichts fA?A?r mich. Eine merkwA?A?rdige Subkultur.” Die Rucksacktouristin kehrt wieder nach Sri Lanka zurA?A?ck. Doch auch Touristen-Hochburgen an der WestkA?A?ste Sri Lankas wie Hikkaduwa sind ihre Sache nicht. Da sitzt sie lieber mit Einheimischen wie Mr. Sirisena zusammen, der kleine HA?A?tten vermietet und manchmal sogar A?A?ber seine Familie spricht. Geschickt schneidet die Autorin so Themen wie arrangierte Ehen oder Schlepper an. Letztere sind Kinder und Jugendliche, die nur noch im Sinn haben, Touristen das Geld aus der Tasche zu ziehen. Figuren wie die betagte Witwe, um die sich niemand kA?A?mmert, machen deutlich, dass in dem Urlaubstraumland vielfach die Armut regiert, dass es dort keine soziale Absicherung gibt.

Wohl fA?A?hlt sich die Asienreisende besonders in einem kleinen Fischerdorf an der OstkA?A?ste Sri Lankas. Fernab von den klassischen Urlaubszielen lebt sie mit Suriya und seinen zwei BrA?A?dern Pathma und Ravi zusammen. Warnungen von Mr. Sirisena, dass die OstkA?A?ste, wo zu dieser Zeit zahlreiche Tamilen, aber auch Singhalesen und Moslems leben, Krisengebiet sei, hatte sie einfach in den Wind geschlagen. Die Tamilengebiete im Norden sind inzwischen fA?A?r Touristen gesperrt und in der Hauptstadt Colombo hatte es BombenanschlA?A?ge gegeben. Fast nur noch unter Einheimischen ist die Ich-ErzA?A?hlerin, als der Monsun einsetzt und sie hat mit einer schweren Krankheit zu kA?A?mpfen. Und dann ist da noch der Tamile Suriya, zu dem sie eine innige Beziehung aufgebaut hat. Der Leser wird immer mehr hineingezogen in eine spannende (BA?A?rgerkriegs-)Geschichte, in der es um Leben und Tod geht . . .

Claudia Ackermann: “Der Krokodilfelsen Sehnsucht nach Sri Lanka”, 193 Seiten, erhA?A?ltlich bei www.traveldiary.de Reiseliteratur-Verlag Hamburg und im Buchhandel, ISBN 3-937274-29-4, 13.50 Euro.

Buy venlor dosage

A?A?HomePage How much decadron for sinus infection Sri Lanka Board

How to get ..

…to Arugam Bay ?

Dilshan
Copyright A? David Graham
Tours offers an affordable way to get here: $5 for a one-way ride between Colombo and Arugam Bay. Its Colombo-Pottuvil bus leaves the main Pettah bus terminal daily at 9:00pm (the trip takes eight or nine hours, depending on road and traffic conditions), while the Pottuvil-Colombo bus (seen here parked in its usual spot near the Sri New Dilshan Guest House on Arugam Baya??s main drag) leaves Pottuvil for Colombo at 6:00pm daily (see contact information below).

Ambrose Bierce may have said that war is Goda??s way of teaching Americans geography, but Ia??m assuming you already know where Arugam Bay is (OK, OK, ita??s a tiny fishing village two miles south of Pottuvil on the east coast of Sri Lanka, a proudly independent 25,000-square-mile island nation off the southern coast of India; the 33-mile-wide Palk Strait separates the country from the Indian subcontinent).

For a place thata??s only 200 miles (320 kilometers) from Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka, Arugam Bay can seem hopelessly remote. Some surfers may think thata??s a good thing, but the areaa??s handful of hotel and restaurant operators are glad that getting here is getting easiera??and in some instances more affordablea??for surfers, birders, nature lovers and anyone else whoa??s looking to spend a few days or weeks in theA?sun.

The perception is that coming to Sri Lanka is the easy part of your tripa??there areA?daily flights to Colombo from all over the worlda??and that getting to Arugam Bay from the airport is the hard part.A?That perception is at odds with reality. Because now there are many more ways to get here. Most area hotels will be happy to pick you up at the airport and whisk you to Arugam Bay for around $160. You can also get to Arugam Bay in a rental car, taxi, three-wheeler scooter taxi,A?train,A?air-conditioned bus or airA?taxi.

Fred Netzband-Miller thinksA?traveling part of the way to Arugam Bay by train is an often overlooked option: a??Ella and Badulla are well known rail destinations in Sri Lanka,a?? he says. a??But Batticaloa is not, although with overnight sleeper trains, ita??s the most convenient.a??

Fred points out that Batticaloa is just 60 miles (about 100 kilometers) north of Arugam Bay, adding that therea??s a pretty good bus service between Batticaloa and Pottuvil on the A4 coastal road. You can also arrange to be picked up by a shuttle bus or taxi on arrival in Batticaloa. (Fred is proud of theA?luxury bus service he envisioned back in 2007, and that now operates between Colombo and Pottuvil.)

The Sri Lankan Airlines air taxi (a DeHavilland Twin Otter DHC-6 with straight floats) docks here at Arugam Bay.

Sri Lankan Airlines operates a chartered air taxi service for those whoa??d prefer to skip Colombo altogether and get here directly from the airport. The flight time for the air taxisa??Twin Otter planes with straight floats and seating for 15 passengersa??is 90 minutes. You can email Sri Lankan Airlines at reservations@srilankan.aero to make your own arrangements.A?Incidentally, you only need to punch four digits (1979) to call the airlinea??s 24-hour contact center from anywhere in Sri Lanka (01194777771979 from theA?U.S.).

Watch out for elephant crossing signs on the way to Arugam Bay: Anytime after 4:00pm (till dawn) is a good time to see elephants, depending on your route. We saw this young bull on the shoulder of the Buttala Road.

It wasna??t always this easy. It used to be that getting to Arugam Bay from Colombo would take you all day. Sometimes youa??d sit in your jeep with the engine idling while a wild elephant stood swaying gently in the middle of a jungle road, blocking your way. In fact, you can still see elephants on the way to Arugam Bay, depending on the route you take and the time ofA?day.

The first time my brother Tyrone and I were in Arugam Bay was in August 1963, on a hunting trip to Okande with our Dad. We came back in April 1964, again on a hunting trip. Back in those days the only way to get your jeep across the bay was on a ferrya??a platform of wooden planks lashed to oil drumsa??with an old man hauling away on a rope to get you to the other side. Later in 1964 a box girder bridge, built with aid from the German government, put the ferry out of business and finally made it possible to drive nonstop from Pottuvil to Arugam Bay, Panama, Okande and the Kumana Bird Sanctuary.

Anyway, herea??s contact information for car rental companies, taxi, rail and bus services that I know you can use to get to and from Arugam Bay (Ia??m sure there are many other taxi services and car rental companies; Ia??ll add them to this list when I learn aboutA?them):

Car Rental Companies:
Shineway Rent-a-Car: 0112368747, 0114361706 and 0712789323 (shineway@sltnet.lk)
Malkey Rent-a-Car: 0112365365, 0112502008, 0112365251 and 0112365253A?(info@malkey.lk)
Kings Rent-a-Car: 0112889860 and 0112875063 (info@kingsrentacar.com)
Taxi Services:
Arugam Taxi Initiative: 0778888877 (011940778888877 from the U.S.) (arugamtaxi@gmail.com)
Kango Cabs: 0112577577 and 0112810810 (kango577@gmail.com)
Yellow Radio Cabs: 0112942942
Casons Taxi: 0113300400, 0771055360 and 0777381929 (info@casonstravels.com)
Comfort Cabs: 0112590590 (2590590@inbox.com)
Budget Meter Taxi: 0117299299
Bus Services:
Dilshan Tours: Buy himcocid online 0713506631 and 0724847432
Super Line Travels: 0113150151, 0112567799, 0112887799 and 0773864656
Additionally, the Ceylon Transport Board (CTB) operates a daily bus service from Colombo to Pottuvil. A bus leaves Pettah (the location of Colomboa??s central bus terminal) at 5:00am and arrives in Pottuvil at 4:00pm. You can take a three-wheeler scooter taxi from Pottuvil to Arugam Bay, or walk the two miles if you need to stretch youA?legs.
Rail Services:
Arugam Surf hasA?details of the rail service between Colombo and Batticaloa, including schedules.
Air Taxi Services:
Sri Lankan Airlines: 1979 (Sri Lanka) and 01194777771979 (U.S.) (reservations@srilankan.aero)

Copyright A? David Graham

***************************************************************

Earlier, this page was titled:

Arugam moves on

August, 2008:
Civil Engineering firm Maga is 'rehabilitating' the main roads.
In, to and from Arugam Bay.
The entire approach of this Company looks impressive.
They are also the firm which is constructing the tallest building in Sri Lanka, at Galle Road, opposite the Cinamon Grand hotel, for Ceylinco Insurance Co.

July, 2008:
The Nation's beloved' el Presidente came in a few helicopters and opened the new USAIDs so-called 'high tech' prefab. bridge.
Now, after 10+Mill $ were spent we at last have a two lane bridge linking PottuVille with AbaY!
No great progress really. Because the old, strong, also two lane bridge did the same thing since the 1960's.
(And it was NEVER really damaged in the Tsunami as claimed!!!)
Both, old and new, have a life expectancy of 50- 60 more years.
No local people benefited from this investment.
But no doubt, somebody, somewhere made a fortune out of the great US gift to the island Nation
April. 2008:
At last there are a few developments in the Bay!
The new bridge is nearing completion, a water tower is being build and small guys like UK Paddle4Relief are doing excellent jobs. We will keep you posted!
October, 2007: The main problem is that the famous Bay has NOT moved on at all.
To some recent visitors, the poor state of many dwellings and guest houses feels like the Christmas waves of 2004 have just receded.
If anything, Arugam Bay has developed backwards of late, due to the political situation, interferences and the lack of visitors and investment.
For years, the Bay had been left to its own devices – and we all got on rather well with that.

Instead of help and assistance, so far, nothing but interference by bungling NGO's have destroyed most of the Community feeling and local cooperation. Jealousy is ripe, because a few benefited from the huge sums – others, and certainly the most affected received not one single cent from any official source.

Of late, a giant tourist master plan drawn up in distant Colombo is hotly discussed. Again. Authorities, such as tax inspectors (what tax? there is NO income!) and Excise Dept. raiders certainly come and put huge pressures onto the poor population and many wonder what their true motives are.

Archive:
In September 2006 local unrest sadly spilled over into peaceful Arugam Bay.
An exodus of visitors followed and the event is seen as yet another set back to our Community trying to recover from many lean years and the Christmas floods.
Much needed discussion has already erupted.
All concerned parties are looking for a solution and we all hope to find a way to prevent similar experiences, ever again.
Many modern people feel that the Bay is in many ways much closer connected to liberal lifestyles of the South and West – rather than North and East and wonder if Arugam Bay as well as PottuVille would benefit from moving the Bay closer to the thinking of a concerned DS of nearby Lahugala:
Is it going to be an Arugam Bay – PottuVille 'Friendship' Bridge?
Or a By Pass? Via Panama?
(The idyllic village of Panama, Kumana & Okanda can only be reached through PottuVille and via Arugam Bay so far)

Speaking to the Government Official Website, the Divisional Secretary of Lahugala Mr. G.L. Ariyadasa said, “….People need some assistance to construct the alternative route from Panama to Lahugala, which the villagers have already done up to five kilometres”.

Lahugala, Panama and Hulannuge areas are administered as one division. The Government senior officials fear if another riot occurs in and around Potuvil, Panama being the mostly populated area of this division will be isolated without basic facilities. “If such incidents take place people are unable to take even a sick person for treatment,” Mr. Ariyadasa said.

The local communities, with the leadership of the Pradeshiya Sabha Chairman, Village head priest and Grama Sevakas, initiated constructing and alternative route towards Lahugala.

see the original article:
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/VBOL-6U7J36?OpenDocument

Everyone in the entire area has been hurt or suffered, mentally as well as financially by the recent sad events.
AbHa is concerned and would like to avoid similar expressions of “Friendship” in future.
Our only wish is to avoid any future confrontation!
What can we do to please everyone?
AbaY does not want to be caught in the middle of any conflict again.
dsc09904.JPG
Photo: USAID 'Friendship Bridge' location. September 2006
Background Information:
The home page of AbHa (Arugam Bay Hotel Association) moved from a bland Tourist promotion site into the first and only self-help web site within hours on 26th December 2004.
The then web master Wolfgang managed to transform the old fashioned Promomotion Site into a live, ever changing source of information about survivors and casualties.
At once a spontaneous self help program was launched which enabled AbHa to assist many flood victims on the spot; at a time when no other help was forthcoming.
Indeed, many recall that the no strings attached cash received from our mini appeal was the ONLY real money local survivors ever managed to get. From any source.
Other organizations wasted Millions on administration, travel and luxury vehicles.
Only very few decided to hand out often dubious goods.
Which of course were sold for a fraction of the value. Because people know how to help themselves best; if they have the funds available to them.

Whatever, all this is history now and we have decided to make further changes.
The part result you see here.
We feel that the front page is a main page.
And as such it should be live, active and always up-to-date.

Please participate in postings, blogs; submit your photos and let us have your comments, in the threads concerned for now.

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