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UK surfers helping Tsunami victims

with charity concert

A?A?
A?A?
A?A?Switchfoot : photo courtesy Switchfoot

Tsunami Second Anniversary Order avalide Order trimoxazole

Surfers remember the Tsunami victims, and put on a Charity Concert with US legends surf rockers A?a??E?SwitchfootA?a??a??

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 21 January, 2007 : – – Surfers, surfing perfect 4ft Croyde on Boxing day, were given a chance to remember the Tsunami victims, as they warmed up by drinking free coffee and eating mince pies. Christian Surfers UK wanted to remember the victims, two years on, by putting on a display of the work carried out by Surf Relief UK, Paddle 4 Relief, and Christian Surfers in the Arugam Bay area of Sri Lanka.

It was a very busy day, with a packed car park, and many surfers took time out to reflect on the devastating events of two years ago. Meanwhile preparations are well underway for the next charity event of the year with a concert in South Wales.

Tickets are selling rapidly for American rock surf band A?a??A?SwitchfootA?a??A? who are coming to the UK for a concert at the Brangwyn Hall in Swansea, South Wales on Feb 7th. Christian Surfers UK in conjunction with A?a??E?IgniteA?a??a?? A?a??E?Event 53A?a??a?? and A?a??E?In2surfA?a??a?? Shop are promoting the event.

The band are all sponsored surfers from the USA and will be on a 5-date UK tour, supported by Superhero. They have already released 6 albums, including some music for the A?a??E?Superman 2A?a??a?? film, and are widely respected as one of the best surf rock groups on the surf scene. Their last album sold 2.6 million copies.

This European tour co-incides with the release of their latest Album titled A?a??E?Oh GravityA?a??a??. The band each year put on a big charity fundraiser surf contest called the A?a??E?Bro-AmA?a??a?? in California and regularly get legends such as Tom Curren competing.A?A?A?A?Tickets are available at A?A?10.00 ( Plus P & P ) from Christian Surfers UK website.

Christian Surfers UK will be raising funds for Surf Relief UK, on the night, who will partner with some disabled and disadvantaged organisations during 2007.A?A? There will be a number of raffle prizes given away on the night to those supporting this event.A?A? All monies from the raffle will be given directly to Surf Relief UK so your support will be greatly appreciated. For more news on the work of Surf Relief UK ( Formerly Tsunami Surf Relief UK ) log on to :

For more information on both these events check out our website, or if required e-mail phil@christiansurfers.co.uk

www.christiansurfers.co.uk
www.tsunamisurfrelief.co.uk


In the Eye of the Tiger

In the Eye of the Tiger

Tuesday, 16 January 2007

(Our own correspondent informs us that Mr. Fraser seems to be a member of a totally new breed ofA?A? NGO workers, so far never observed in the Bay: Here is -at last- a man who seems qualified for the job, and more so: He is getting on with his given tasks! All the earlier E.N.J.O.Y.’s did was to waste donors cash..) This the main reason we decided to include Fraser’s personal account of his well earned break:

The bar under construction
Tin Smelter stuff

As luck would have it, when I got back I only had to survive a month before I got to take a whole month off, due to having to take the compulsory break between contracts that we have to do. In this time I spent about a week in Colombo, then 3 back out east getting survey started, and sorting out a yard and store room for the next project. This time we are going to construct about 8km of road, but mostly with hexagonal concrete pavers that we are making ourselves. We need to turn out something like 900,000 of these pavers, and will have around 300 people working on the casting site when it is fully operational.

So I left again, a bit disappointed that I would be missing the bulk of monsoon season (more on that later), and headed to Phuket to catch up with Spratty again, as he is living in a place called Rawai which is in the south of the island.

Thailand was a great laugh, the Thais are pretty cool people and always up for a beer and a few laughs. IA?a??a??d turned up on the same day as Kristy-Lee and her daughter (SprattyA?a??a??s girlfriend), so it was a bit of a tug of war between me and her for his attentions. I think I won out in the endA?a??A?Spent a fair bit of time on the piss with a couple of English guys that Spratty was mates with, so had a pretty good time but really needed a holiday after it. We went on a visit to the tin smelter that SprattyA?a??a??s old man runs (it was really hot around the furnaces, so I managed to sweat out the previous nightA?a??a??s folliesA?a??A?) then went fishing which was a bit of a disaster but was nice to see the island from a different perspective.

Mambo #5 (or Holiday #1)

Kottukal Road, completed

After being roundly harangued for not updating my blog more often (I didn’t realise I had such a big readership) while on holiday, I promptly left it for ages before updating…so IA?a??a??ve broken it down into bite-sized pieces. Good luckA?a??A?

In my last post I was enjoying the creature comforts of Hilton Colombo – big, comfy bed and a hot shower. I was there for about a week or so just tidying up the project stuff and getting everything together for the final claim. Got there in the end, and learnt some valuable lessons from that project. Went back to Arugam Bay for four days or so before going back to Colombo to go on leave to Australia, where I basically chilled out and caught up with friends in Bunbury. I went to the Royal Show in Perth for the first time, with Spratty and his kids. I also managed to catch up with the guys I used to play rugby with as they were having their end of year function the night before I left. I stayed at John and AngeA?a??a??s new place in suburbia, visited everyone at RoadCare (now SRS) but generally relaxed.

I nearly didnA?a??a??t make it on holiday with anything I owned, as the locals where I lived went a bit mad after 10 bodies were discovered in the jungle not too far south of Arugam Bay. They were all Muslim, and had gone to repair an irrigation reservoir and didnA?a??a??t come back. Most people blamed the Special Task Force (STF), the paramilitary Police, as there had been some sort of tension previously. They decided to protest and riot, and consequently UN security wouldnA?a??a??t let me go there to get some clothes to take away, even after it had all calmed down. But thatA?a??a??s another story. I managed to send my driver with another vehicle, and he basically gathered up everything I owned (except the fridge, but that was probably the only thing he left behind) so at least I could pack some clothes to take with me.


Monday, 11 September 2006

Glad to see the back of August

Buy clozaril labs

It’s been a hell of a month. With the project finishing up, we had to go hell for leather to get it done, as per normal with construction. I’ve learnt a lot off this one, especially about how things “work” in Sri Lanka, so the next one should be a lot easier.We’re being given more money by USAID to build roads, everyone was pretty happy with what was going on and the huge amounts of labour on the sites did look pretty impressive which I think sold it. I met one of the local councillors the other day, and he told me that he was organising a protest outside one of the NGO’s in Arugam Bay that had been given money to build roads using community labour but hadn’t used the labour. They were going to protest that the money should have been given to UNOPS instead, because of what we had done locally. Warm fuzzies…A couple of weeks ago one of the guys that worked for me got shot and killed. Looks like it was the LTTE for some reason or other and not because he worked for us, although him working for us may have been a factor according to word on the street. Wasn’t a fun time, I can tell you. Hopefully I won’t have to deal with that sort of thing again.

Anyway I’ll post something a little more substantial when I’m fully doing nothing, at present I’m enjoying Colombo, staying at the Hilton for a couple of nights for hot showers and a bit of luxury, and then going to stay with Mick and Fergus which I’m sure will degenerate into a drinking binge interspersed with visits to the office. Then back to the east for maybe a week, and back to Colombo to see Pete and Sogol who arrive on the 22nd for 10 days or so. And after that, maybe, just maybe, I might be able to go on a holiday!!!

Friday, 28 July 2006

Duck…

Can’t believe it’s been 2 weeks since I posted. Oh well…I am going through another maddening phase at work, with so much to achieve last week but then being distracted by a million other things and not really achieving much at all.Last Monday I was lucky enough to get delayed at site in Pottuvil in the morning. I say lucky because there was a bit of fighting near to the office, with a stray bullet leaving it’s mark on the wall of the building. Not a very impressive hole, but it made me think about speeding up construction of the safe room/bunker…If I had left Pottuvil when I planned I would have pretty much driven right into the thick of it.

On Wednesday I went to Ampara town for the security meeting, and I managed to stock up on bacon, sausages and lamb chops for a fry up on the weekend. It’s been a while since I got to eat bacon so I was pretty excited. After sourcing a gas bottle on Sunday morning it was full steam ahead. Tim came over and joined me (he works for the company that is managing the funding of the project) and we enjoyed an English breakfast. Buying a fridge is turning out to be a great idea, not only can I store meat for weekend brekky but I can keep my water and vodka cold, essential in this sort of climate. I also had a water filter delivered, so once I get that plumbed in and find out if it will clean up the well water, then I can get a hot water heater. HOT SHOWERS, YAY! So the house is developing nicely now. I also have a new neighbour (well, kind of). Relief International have their office next door, and Chandra has arrived from Pakistan to work for them.

When I was in Ampara I also bought a great framed poster – it was in a barber shop that I have been to 3 times now over the past few months. When I went the first time I saw it and thought that I had to have it, no matter what the cost. I guess I’m still overpaid. Anyway, the first and second times I went there they wouldn’t sell it to me, but this time a different dude was there and he would. He wanted 1,300 Rupees for it (US$13) which is a bargain as I was prepared to pay a lot more just to have it. Here is a picture, and I’m sure you’ll understand why I wanted it so much. The guys in the shop thought I was mad, but I’m not sure if they thought I wanted a “do” like the dudes on the poster.

“New Hair Cutting Styles” – Check out the dude at the bottom centre and right. Yeah!

Some USAID guys also came on Wednesday and wanted to visit the site on Thursday morning, but they were late and I ended up waiting around for them for 45 minutes, so didn’t make it to the office until 12. So pretty much I lost 2 days in total this week when I really needed it most. However they were pretty impressed with what was going on and want to give us more money to build more roads in the area so that is a good result.

Thursday and Friday I managed to stay up far too late (Friday especially, which made my 2 hour car ride on Saturday morning very taxing). There are a few more people floating around Arugam Bay at the moment, but I don’t know how long that will last. There has been a lot of bombing around Trincomalee, over the Tigers cutting off an irrigation channel which feeds tens of thousands of people’s farms. So the government responded by bombing the crap out of them, then at last report the Army were advancing on the sluice gate to open it up again, but the LTTE were standing their ground and fighting back. Not a good sign for the ceasefire, which is pretty much done for now. It looks like things are rapidly heading for open warfare again, which won’t do anyone any good. Watch this space.

In other news, two of the places where I had projects in Kandahar were overrun by the Taliban, then taken back by the International forces, and Sogol informed me today that another place got the crap bombed out of it. Kandahar seems to have skeleton staff at the moment, so I’m not sure what I’d be up to if I was still there. To be honest I’d rather not know, give me the beach any day.

Wednesday, 12 July 2006

Ahh, a weekend

My house in Arugam Bay
The beach in Arugam Bay, looking southThe golf course, towards the dam, from the hotel balcony

Which one is the elephant?

I just had a very good weekend. Not only did I manage to get pretty much 3 days off (it was a long weekend anyway), but I ate bacon, a big steak, had a hot shower, drove for more than 10 minutes (it was hard work though), corrected my golf swing and got drunk twice. Huzzah!

I went to Colombo on Thursday – took about 8 hours to drive 300 km – and went out with Fergus, Mick and his girlfriend Naoise (I think that’s how it’s spelt – sounds like Neesha, damned Irish) and got horribly drunk, making it home at about 3 the next morning. So work was pretty much a write off for that day, I made it to the office at about 1pm then left at 3 to go and open a bank account. As I’m not from Colombo no-one really missed me, so it was all OK.

On Saturday Fergus and I drove to Kandy, which is up in the hills and about 100km from Colombo. But it took almost 4 1/2 hours to get there, due to everyone in Colombo also heading to Kandy for the long weekend. And Sri Lankan drivers are stupid and dangerous, so there was much cursing and wailing and gnashing of teeth until I actually accepted the fact that they have no idea what they are doing and to be ready for any sort of stupidity, no matter how amazing.

On the way we stopped in at a place with cane furniture for the house, and bought a couch/2 chair/coffee table set plus a couple of lounger chairs which are mighty comfy on the porch. And cheap too. Although we looked like a bunch of gypsys driving around with the back of the pickup stacked up with furniture.

We stayed at a golf course complex on the shores of Lake Victoria (behind a dam) which includes many chalets, “guesthouses” and private houses that you can rent. Anywhere else in the world you’d probably pay thousands of dollars for a night in a place like that, but we were paying about $50 per night.

I got a golf lesson and fixed my grip which made things much better, next time I go back I’ll get my swing tweaked then after a few rounds I’ll be off to join the PGA…We played a round on Sunday which was probably better than the last one I played (god only knows when that was). We had to tip the caddys and the ball spotter dude a fair bit though as we took a fair while to get around and the ball finder spent more time off looking for balls (mostly Fergus’, I might add) than spotting on the fairways.

Sunday night we went to “The Pub” – billed as the only place in town to be, which it pretty much is – and watched the World Cup final which was a pretty good game after all the beer we drunk. Rolled out of there around 2.30am for a half hour plus Tuk-tuk ride back to where we were staying which was great fun.

Monday was a bit of a write off with hangovers and some outstanding work pressing, although Fergus managed to get in some time on the driving range. Tuesday we drove back to Arugam Bay via Ampara for a meeting. The first 60-odd km took around 2 hours – the road was over a “mountain” range (not sure if they were mountains or large hills) so was pretty narrow and twisty (including the section with 17 hairpin bends) but it was nice to have a decent drive, even though I was a bit stiff from the golf and having to work the clutch so much didn’t help. The road after that was pretty good, by Sri Lankan standards.

Fergus has been here the rest of the week and is leaving tomorrow. We have been putting together a proposal for another road which will be around $1 million and pretty much outside my front door if we get it which will be good. Hopefully the donors approve the money. Also a fridge arrived from Colombo yesterday so I will do some shopping over the weekend to fill it up with stuff that I couldn’t keep at the house before – milk, cheese and most importantly beer. Next time I go up to Ampara I will buy some other home comforts such as a toaster. I’ve also got our guys in Colombo finding me a water filter to filter out all the sand and stuff that comes from the well – once they get that I can get a water heater and start having hot showers. I’d forgotten what they were like!

Work is pretty much under control now, I might even get to take a week off in August which will be nice. The claim for the month of June, where we spent only around $100k, currently runs to 4 lever-arch files, which is completely rediculous and I’m glad I’ve only got 2 more to do, although I’m sure they will be even bigger again.

Fraser’s original blog is on:
http://intheeyeofthetiger.blogspot.com/

Return to Arugambay

Return to Arugambay

By Dr Kavan RatnatungaThe consequences of Great Tsunami of 26th December still influence events in Lanka. I had visited the east coast of Lanka 5 days after the Tsunami and it was just over 5 months, when I got the opportunity to return to Arugambay to see how the population directly affected by the Tsunami have recovered. They have little time to ponder the larger issues of sovereignty which is currently dominating the media and tearing apart the government and it’s politicians bickering on how to safeguard Lanka and divide the billion$ of Foreign Aid promised for Tsunami relief.

As on the previous trip I joined Lt. Col. Anil Amerasekara. Wing Cmdr. Ranjit Ratnapala was also traveling with us to continue his quest to help the region in the name of his son Chinthaka, who had in June 1997 made the ultimate sacrifice in the defense of Lanka. We were joined in Kandy by Nisanka and Ira Madiwaka who had collected funds in UK to rebuild Tsunami affected houses in the east coast.

On Friday we visited three small computer centers near Ampara organized by the Thawalama organization and housed in Buddhist Temples. A computer technician Manjula came with us to fix problems and maintain the 5 computers in each center. A local teacher is hired to educate 5 batches of about 10 students each in English and Computer literacy. After the 6 months course they sit for an exam. We held such an exam on Sunday in one of the centers before returning to Colombo. The exam is set and marked in collaboration with Avodart sleep disorder IDM who awards certificates to those that pass (about 30%) and scholarships to those that do very well (about 1%). This program had been active now for about 2 years in eight centers in the North-East provinces of Lanka.

The Potuvil to Arugambay bridge, part of which had washed away in the Tsunami had reopened with the aid of the Engineering regiments of the Indian Army Task Force. An Indian Flag was hung on the side in gratitude, I wonder how long this temporary repair which allowed a single vehicle to be on the bridge at one time, will need to serve the community.


The entrance to temporarily reconstructed Arugambay Bridge
It was about 10 O’clock when we drove into Arugambay on our way to stay overnight at the Guest House in Kudakalli 2 km further south. A ghost town after the Tsunami just five months previously, Arugambay was alive at this late hour. Many Tourists had returned to this surfing paradise and were on the streets walking from their hotels to patronize the Cybercafe and many Bars and restaurants which had reopened. A street performance was entertaining a large audience near a newly constructed Buddhist shrine in the town center.


The infamous Tsunami Hotel sign, repainted with URL
Cheap clarinex generic The Tsunami Beach hotel sign had been revised and put back up proudly stating that they had open since 1999. The owners cashing in on on all the media publicity after the Tsunami had even registered in March 2005 an Internet domain tsunamihotel.com. It like the Hotel had still not activated.

Arriving at Daya Fernando’s guest house we surprised the caretakers since they had not got the message of our arrival. However dinner was soon ready and the mosquito nets put up for us to retire to sleep from a long drive. Since I had not slept overnight near the east coast for almost 30 years, I got up an hour before sunrise and walked out with disturbing the others. Daya’s 3 dogs were ready to protect me and show me the way. The surf was up but fairly calm. Starlight and a crescent moon illuminated the many shells that had washed ashore on to the beach. A couple were beach combing a rich bounty. I too picked up some beautiful large shells and coral. I was amazed to see the many striations of black sand on the beach. Considering that region of the beach needs to have been rebuilt after the Tsunami, black sand probably settles only at particular tide characteristics. I was disappointed by the clouds which covered the horizon at sunrise. The others were up and ready for breakfast by the time I walked back to the guest house.

Our next visit was to Panama. A small Sinhala community 10 km south of Arugambay. We went to the residence of Chandrasena who was the secretary to the local Pradesh Saba (community council). He is I was told a (s)pot-less politician. It was he who had compiled the list of 17 houses which had been badly damaged in Panama by the Tsunami and had sent out the appeal with photographs for funding. He told us that all off them had already been rebuilt by Thawalama using funding from Sri Lanka Tsunami Appeal Committee of Western Australia. I also witnessed the handing over of ten carts with pneumatic tires to cultivators affected by the Tsunami from this same committee.

The cultivators of Panama also lost over 350 acres of paddy land, when areas such as Halawa, close to the sea was flooded by Tsunami water. These Paddy fields will remain barren for many years till the salt washes away. Though they have been promised alternate land under the Meeyangoda tank, which is to be restored with funding from the Rotary Club of Kandy, the cultivators now fear that this too is another promise that will never materialize. Most NGO’s who have visited the village of Panama have requested the villagers to fill application forms, but have failed to provide the promised assistance.

In the reality that some promises of help for reasons beyond the control of the well-wishers get delayed or unfulfilled, construction starts when the first group comes with the hard cash. There have been some reported cases when more than one group have known to have paid for the same reconstruction.

That was clearly not going to happen here. The UK funding would need to be used for other housing project in Panama or elsewhere on the East coast. We visited some homes which although had only been slightly damaged by tsunami, the residents who had lost their livelihood to the Tsunami and their ability to complete a partial house construction. The decisions were hard to make with so many valid requests for help.

Nearly all of the help to reconstruct and revitalize the community has come from private organizations which have raised the required funds in Lanka and abroad. The government represented by the Task Force for Rebuilding the Nation (TAFREN) had still not made any positive impact on reconstruction the community. All that the residents have seen are the numerous reports and advertisements in the media of what is being planned, Those affected were wondering where all the claimed foreign aid had got tied up.

Just south of Arugambay, the village of Ulla, within the 200 meter buffer zone was totally destroyed by the tsunami. TAFREN has thus far failed to provide the affected families with alternate property outside the buffer zone, for them to commence rebuilding their houses. The NGO’s who want to help these unfortunate people to rebuild their houses are being discouraged as a result.

TAFREN unlike most NGOs allocates the task signs a MoU and waits. For example the Sinhapura Sinhala Vidyalaya in Ulla near Arugambay was totally destroyed by the tsunami, even though it is beyond the 200 meter buffer zone. The Italian Civil Protection Mission has signed a MoU to complete construction work in six months. It is now six months since the tsunami and they have yet to commence work on reconstruction. The Thawalama Development Foundation that wrote to the President in this connection, requesting her to reallocate this school to them, as they are in a position to find the necessary funds for the purpose, have been informed by TAFREN that this is not possible.

Unlike state aid, private aid has in many cases been made on racial and religious divisions. A Tamil resident from Jaffna I spoke to said that although many who didn’t have any fishing boats have received a one, but he who had lost seven boats in the Tsunami has still to get any replacement.

That evening we visited the “Mudu Maha Vihara”. We were surprised to find that the archaeological dept. sign that pointed the way for pilgrims and tourists had been removed and replaced with a large Mosque sign which at bottom mentioned an unnamed archaeological site. An interesting report that circulated soon after the Tsunami was that a reclining Buddha statue had been seen few hundred meters from the coast when the sea receded near the Vihara. The Monk who was in residence on the fateful day, said that no such statue had been seen. The story had been made up to say that the 34 acres of land allocated in the 1960’s to the Vihara as an archaeological reserve is from the sea, and not the 30 acres of archaeological land illegally encroached by the local Muslim community.


Buddhist Monk explains the history of MuduMahaVihara next to statue identified as that of King KavanTissa.
This great Buddhist temple near the sea dates back to the 2nd century B.C. and has ruins and many sculpture from that era. It is stated in the ancient chronicle the “Rajavaliya” that in the second century BC after Kelaniya was submerged by the sea (Tsunami), Devi daughter of King was cast to sea in a Golden Vessel to appease the gods, and washed ashore near a Vihara to became queen to king KavanTissa under the name Viharamahadevi. Kirinda which is a lot further south and this site each claim to be the “true” landing site. Local folklore relate place names Komari to “Ko Kumari” (where is Princess) and Arugambay to reply “Ara gamme” (In that village)

Early next morning observing that the sky was still too cloudy to see sunrise, I went on a bicycle to photograph Arugambay and the reconstructed Bridge at dawn. The village was as empty as when we had walked that way five months previously. All of the rubble had been cleared. However various Political forces with wildly different agendas were preventing the start of the urgent Reconstruction.

After breakfast, packed and on our way out of Arugambay, we distributed baby T-shirts sent by the Senahasa Trust of UK. Although we had sent a message the day before through a local contact that we would be distributing free T-shirts to Tsunami affected families, no one had come when we arrived a bit early. I guess they had probably been disappointed before. A reasonable crowed of mothers with babies gathered after we arrived when word spread in village. We were glad we realized before trying to distribute them that the sealed T-shirts marked 6-12 was months not years as we had first assumed. Although all of the T-shirts were for babies under 2 years, we found some small built 9-years olds who fitted into them comfortably. To ensure that the T-shirts went to kids and not the local store, we insisted that the babies be present despite some legitimate comments from some mothers who didn’t want to bring their babies in the hot sun just to get a T-shirt.


Has the charm Arugambay Hillton to be demolished for the 5* Original
Talking with the villages at that time I was told that TAFREN with the Ceylon Tourist Board is trying to acquire a 17-mile long strip of the best sea coast on the pretext of a Tsunami 200 meter buffer zone, for development of a upscale resort of with five-star hotels, displacing the residents and small business who have occupied this land for generations. This amazing outrage is in detail by John Lancaster in a Washington post article of 6th June. The people of Arugambay must surely be feeling like they say in Sinhala “Like a man fallen from a tree, getting butted by a bull”


An edited version of this article Slow relief but surfers are back By Kavan Ratnatunga appeared in the SundayTimes of Sri Lanka on 2005 June 26th. The printed copy of Newspaper included Photographs shown above and not included in online edition. Access to the Online edition of the SundayTimes of Sri Lanka requires a paid annual subscription.Source:
http://www.lakdiva.org/tsunami/arugambay/

Eastern Concerns

Forget the de-merger and resolve land disputesWhile the Tamil party representatives say that the de-merger is likely to lead to more destruction, Muslims are of the opinion it is they who will finally have to bear the brunt of all these problems.

By Wilson Gnanadass
The bifurcation of the northern and eastern provinces through a Supreme Court order of October 16 has further compounded the lives of the Tamils and Muslims.

Today, both the Tamils and the Muslims living in these provinces are confused over the court order and wonder why this was affected when loads of problems faced by them have not yet been solved by the government.
Questions are also raised on who has benefited out of this exercise to separate the two provincesA?A?that were merged in 1989, following the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord signed between Sri Lankan President J. R. Jayewardene and Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) have vehemently opposed the de-merger, while the Muslims feel the merger means A?a??E?nothingA?a??a?? to them for their problems, they say, are greater in proportion. Therefore, they say the government should have first looked into other pressing issues rather than wasting time in separating the provinces.
While the Tamil party representatives say that the de-merger is likely to lead to more destruction, Muslims are of the opinion it is they who will finally have to bear the brunt of all these problems. The countryA?a??a??s two major Muslim political parties – the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) led by parliamentarian Rauf Hakeem and National Unity Alliance (NUA) led by Housing Minister Ferial Ashraff, have expressed deep concern over the situation, while also stating that the de-merger was not in any event going to ease the existing tension or salvage the Muslims from the depths they have fallen into.

To an average Muslim in the East, it is not the merger or the de-merger that matters. But what matters is an immediate solution to the long standing land disputes, prevalent among the Muslim villages. Many Muslims have also been killed due to land problems but the government has still not paid attention to this issue.

Land issues
Traditionally, improper demarcation of lands in Muslim districts has caused severe tension among the Muslims in the East.
Recently, 10 Muslims were killed in Ullai in Pottuvil electorate due to land disputes and many hundreds have been killed in the past, due to the same issue.

Repeated representations to the government to find a solution, has fallen on the deaf ears of authorities.
If a referendum was called for by the Elections Commissioner to determine whether the people wanted the merger or not, majority of the Muslims, according to a survey, might have voted against the de-merger.

The Muslims, contrary to statements made by the government, did not want a de-merger until their problems were solved. However, the sudden decision to de-merge the North and East has forced them to silently protest against it.
Under the J. R. Jayewardene regime, Pradeshiya Sabhas have been created in the Muslim areas without any consultation with the Muslim parties. This has been followed by arbitrary distribution of lands by the respective Pradeshiya Sabhas and state aided colonisation, under the pretext of developing the area.

In this exercise, a large extent of lands belonging to the Muslims has been grabbed by the state.
For instance, it is pointed out that there is no clear boundary demarcated between Lahugalla and Pottuvil, Alayadivembu and Akkaraipattu, Erakaman DS division and Akkaraipattu DS division.

Muslims are now of the opinion that the government should have first looked into sorting out this lapse rather than de-merging the North and East, that they say is likely to cause more destruction than ever before.

Travesty of justice
Muslims say, in 1987, with the signing of the Indo-Lanka Accord, when the Provincial Councils came into effect, they were given step-motherly treatment through land demarcation.

They said the government at that time opted to allocate 368. 3 square miles (sq.m) in Lahugalla for a population of 7,085, while in Pottuvil the Provincial Council opted to allocate 103.9 sq.m to a population of 19,831.
In the Sinhala dominated Vevagampattu, 6,585 people have been living in 260 sq.m, while in the Tamil/Muslim dominated Sammanthuraipattu some 40,700 people have been living in just 99 sq.m.

The Muslims, therefore, are of the view that the government should have first given consideration to these issues rather than bifurcating the North and East, which they say did not mean anything to them.

The Muslims have also mounted pressure on SLMC and NUA to take this matter up with the government at the negotiating table. It has been the desire of these two parties too, to place the land issue as one of the conditions for supporting the peace process and also supporting the de-merger, but unfortunately, the Supreme Court had already taken this decision.

****

GovernmentA?a??a??s plan
Whether one likes it or not, the North and East are separated. Arguments and debates over this could continue for months or for years, but the fact remains that North and East are divided.

On the instruction of the Eastern governor Rear Admiral Mohan Wijewickrama, President Mahinda Rajapaksa has appointed S. Thiyagalingam as the Chief Secretary for the Eastern province. He was the Secretary for the Northeast Education and Cultural Ministry under the merged Northeast. Earlier, the Muslim parties recommended that a person from the Muslim community should be appointed as the Chief Secretary for the East, but government sources say a suitable person could not be found for this post.

The government has also decided to temporarily administer both provinces from Trincomalee. The eastern administration is now being carried out at Tuwaramkadu, six miles away from the Trincomalee town, while the northern administration is being carried out in the Trincomalee town itself. The government has also decided to construct a new building in Vavuniya to transfer the northern administration there after one year.

****

SLMC not consulted
Meanwhile, SLMCA?a??a??s General Secretary and parliamentarian, Hasan Ali says that though the SLMC commands the authority of 11 Pradeshiya Sabhas of the 13 in the Eastern province, the government did not have the common courtesy to consult the party, prior to taking any decision with regard to the de-merger.

He said that if the government could not solve the land issues that have been faced by the Muslims during the time when the two provinces were joined, it cannot be expected for them to solve this issue now.

He said the SLMC has been agitating for a separate Muslim district for a long time but has now lost hope of gaining it. A?a??A?We now realise that the government is not sensitive to our fundamental issues,A?a??A? he said. He said, though moderate political parties have governed the country since 1958, they have been subject to extremist pressures and even today, the present government was subject to extreme opinions of the Marxist JVP.

A?a??A?Therefore, we are confident that the government will not be in a position to deliver the goods to the minority,A?a??A? he added.
He says the SLMC is disturbed over the Supreme Court decision for two reasons. Firstly, he says, the government that was aware of the moves made by certain individuals, to go to courts challenging the merger, could have consulted his party.
Secondly, he says, when a plethora of problems faced by the Muslims could not be solved by the government, it was highly unnecessary to waste time on the de-merger.

****

Azwer welcomes the move
Former Parliamentary Affairs Minister and Presidential Adviser on Muslims Affairs, A.H.M.Azwer has welcomed the move taken by the Supreme Court.

He says what the Muslims face today, is the reality and that no one could have ever determined their fate.
He said the de-merger will enable the Muslims to gain political power, self respect and a province of their own.
He says this will teach a lesson or two to the Tamils who wish to perpetuate their fiefdom in the North and East. He adds, under Tamil dominance in the North and the East, the Muslims have been forced to face untold hardship, and this type of action would put Tamil dominance in place. A?a??A?The genuine fears of the Muslims can now be obliterated with the de-merger. We can have our own chief ministers and our own administration,A?a??A? he said.
He also questioned as to how Muslims could trust the Tamils, given the past history of mass scale exodus forced on the Muslims by the LTTE in 1990.

He is of the opinion that the Muslims will have to live independently under a united Sri Lanka. A?a??A?The Muslims are not willing to be slaves under another particular community,A?a??A? he said.

He said Muslims may be Tamil speaking people but they cannot share the claim by the Tamils for a separate state. A?a??A?Our problems are different and our claims are different. Therefore, we must be left alone,A?a??A? he said.

****

V. Anandasangari describes govt. plan as destructive Order avanade

The UNESCO Peace Award winner V. Anandasangari maintains that the de-merger will be more destructive than constructive.
He says a de-merger introduced at a time when the people were running for their lives had no meaning.
He says most of the government machinery in the Northeast was defunct and that the government could have invested its time on streamlining the defunct machinery rather than introducing something which was not in the long run, going to pay dividends.
A?a??A?In a merged council, the Sinhalese could have been looked after like how Tamils are looked after in the Sinhala dominated provinces. I really donA?a??a??t understand why and how all of a sudden the de-merger came about. It is very unfortunate, but we canA?a??a??t help but face it,A?a??A? he said.

He said he could not fathom who will be the beneficiary of this exercise and it was his view, only the JVP would benefit out of this.

A?a??A?The government should have given the people a chance to decide. This is a highly sensitive issue and therefore the government should have treated this with sensitivity. But unfortunately a rash decision has been taken,A?a??A? he added.
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****

Ferial says it is not a matter for concern
Housing Minister Ferial Ashraff says, to an average Muslim, what mattered was his day-to-day problems rather than either the merger or the de-merger.

She told The Nation, the long standing issues faced by the Muslims have still not been solved and therefore, the Muslims do not feel for either the merger or the de-merger.

She says the de-merger was not required at a time when both the government and the LTTE were engaged in war.
A?a??A?When we talk about it, I think we are talking in terms of the Muslim and Tamil interests. When talking about the Muslim interest, I donA?a??a??t think it is the merger or de-merger that bothers them. We have other problems and whether these provinces are merged or de-merged, it does not become an issue for our community,A?a??A? she said.

She further said, when the provinces were merged, the Muslim problems were never looked into. A?a??A?As for us, we maintain that it is not the merger or the de-merger but the day-to-day problems faced by the Muslims that will have to be dealt with,A?a??A? she said.
She also said as far as the national issues were concerned, the Muslims would have been preferred to go into the issues of North-East before the change to status quo.

A?a??A?Basically, we have a war situation here. I donA?a??a??t understand why this came up at this stage,A?a??A? she said.
She said unresolved land disputes is the main problem faced by the Muslims and added if Muslims are appointed to the administrative systems these issues could have been looked into with deeper interest.

A?a??A?I would continue to ask for better treatment by the government officials for all the people in the East,A?a??A? she said.
She also said her party, NUA, has been asking for an additional Secretariat in Ampara district for a long time but to no avail.
She said the people were forced to travel to Trincomalee to attend to their personal needs.

A?a??A?Our people had a lot of problems going to Trincomalee and we have been agitating for an additional Secretariat in Ampara. It will be good if the government can establish an administrative unit at least in Kalmunai,A?a??A? she added.

source:
http://www.nation.lk/2007/01/07/newsfe4.htm

Desolate East

After the Mighty waves…Two years and counting…

Warm greetings for an active, energetic and joyous 2007.

On the 26th of December 2006, disaster struck our land causing destruction as never seen before. The extent of the destruction and the pain caused was there for all to see.

The emotional wounds caused will be very difficult to heal for years to come. The sad thing however is that the physical wounds still remain and the people continue to suffer the ignominy of being homeless, hungry and desperate.

To say nothing has been done will be wrong. Many organisations both local and foreign, the government, all religious establishments and many others all did do something to help and many communities who were affected have been able to get back on their feet.

However what was done was far from substantial. It is clear that while certain areas thanks to the weight of some of the politicians involved in those areas, other areas have been left to rot…

A decent portion of the south are getting close to being back on track. However many areas in the East (Ampara in particular) are still as desolate as could be.

It is indeed disappointing to note how politicians have maneuvered funds to their strongholds and left other areas to scrounge for scraps from the table. Absolutely no justice has been done for the amount of funds received for relief and reconstruction. It is no secret that a good portion of this money has ended up in the pockets of our country’s leaders. Due to the misappropriation of funds some of the pledged sums of money have not been received.

It is also interesting to note how our great leaders have all the money in the world to spend on a massive number of billboards exalting themselves all over the country which are of no benefit to the nation, but people displaced by the tsunami are still in refugee camps.

What was amazing immediately after the Tsunami in 2004 was how the entire nation Buy procardia xl rallied round to give their support to those who were affected. The enthusiasm with which everybody pitched in to help slowly faded away with time. The media and other commercial organisations who made a tremendous effort soon after the Tsunami slowly lost the drive which they used to spur up the country to help their citizens.

Now there exist very small groups of people who still help those whose lives were torn apart by the waves. They too are frustrated by the lack of financial and material assistance available for them to help.

It is indeed upto each one of us to look to do our part to bring normalcy back into the lives of our fellow citizens. If those in authority aren’t interested in the people, we in our small way will have to help in whatever way we can.

For those who lost their loved ones, their homes and their livelihood after the 26th December 2004, days have turned to months, months to years and possibly years to a How much nasonex should i take lifetime…

read the original Blog:
http://myasylumsrilanka.blogspot.com/2007/01/after-mighty-wavestwo-years-and.html

Cash in Arugambay / 2007

Warning!
There are still NO ATM machines on the East Coast! And since 26/Dec/04 there is no more Bank at Arugam Bay. The only exchange place is now located in Pottuvil, where the main 3 currencies are still honoured.
Come, ENJOY and spend more!
Your holiday money goes a long way in Sri Lanka in 2007. This is what you will get for your cash today; the base currency is the LKR (Sri Lanka Rupee):

Currency Unit LKR per Unit Units per LKR
==============================

== =================== ===================
USD United States Dollars 107.5600000000 0.0092971365
EUR Euro 141.9372099486 0.0070453689
GBP United Kingdom Pounds 210.6411571206 0.0047474103
CAD Canada Dollars 92.2729468936 0.0108374126
AUD Australia Dollars 84.8777995335 0.0117816438
JPY Japan Yen 0.9035178470 1.1067849997
INR India Rupees 2.4285391736 0.4117701748
NZD New Zealand Dollars 75.7704906484 0.0131977501
CHF Switzerland Francs 88.2248543535 0.0113346744

ZAR South Africa Rand 15.3228104165 0.0652621792
AFN Afghanistan Afghanis 2.1906031823 0.4564952740
ALL Albania Leke 1.1447424436 0.8735589438
DZD Algeria Dinars 1.5125861342 0.6611193752
ARS Argentina Pesos 35.1641166471 0.0284380811
AUD Australia Dollars 84.8777995335 0.0117816438
BSD Bahamas Dollars 107.5600000000 0.0092971365
BHD Bahrain Dinars 285.3262311259 0.0035047601
BDT Bangladesh Taka 1.5590552322 0.6414140945
How much nizoral Premarin online canada BBD Barbados Dollars 53.9147869674 0.0185477873
BMD Bermuda Dollars 107.5600000000 0.0092971365
BRL Brazil Reais 50.4621158808 0.0198168464
BGN Bulgaria Leva 72.4504917149 0.0138025288
CAD Canada Dollars 92.2729468936 0.0108374126
XOF CFA Francs BCEAO 0.2163818817 4.6214590257
XAF CFA Francs BEAC 0.2163818817 4.6214590257
XPF CFP Francs 1.1894338194 0.8407361416
CLP Chile Pesos 0.2020665039 4.9488657493
CNY China Yuan Renminbi 13.7615148414 0.0726664187
COP Colombia Pesos 0.0480876271 20.7953700260
CRC Costa Rica Colones 0.2079277782 4.8093622164
HRK Croatia Kuna 19.3295055305 0.0517343808
CYP Cyprus Pounds 245.6268554464 0.0040712161
CZK Czech Republic Koruny 5.1638658360 0.1936533659
DKK Denmark Kroner 19.0411480260 0.0525178418
DOP Dominican Republic Pesos 3.2368828902 0.3089391967
XCD East Caribbean Dollars 40.0595903166 0.0249628115
EGP Egypt Pounds 18.8340352379 0.0530953663
EEK Estonia Krooni 9.0714178858 0.1102363503
EUR Euro 141.9372099486 0.0070453689
FJD Fiji Dollars 64.4456486712 0.0155169514
XAU Gold Ounces 68,467.0959778731 0.0000146056
HKD Hong Kong Dollars 13.8233627168 0.0723412979
HUF Hungary Forint 0.5642935819 1.7721271908
ISK Iceland Kronur 1.5126393137 0.6610961324
XDR IMF Special Drawing Rights 161.9337054704 0.0061753666
INR India Rupees 2.4285391736 0.4117701748
IDR Indonesia Rupiahs 0.0119690466 83.5488434362
IRR Iran Rials 0.0116691710 85.6958906657
IQD Iraq Dinars 0.0813492664 12.2926738565
ILS Israel New Shekels 25.5426042598 0.0391502757
JMD Jamaica Dollars 1.6296969697 0.6136110078
JPY Japan Yen 0.9035178470 1.1067849997
JOD Jordan Dinars 151.7066290550 0.0065916698
KES Kenya Shillings 1.5454245032 0.6470714020
KWD Kuwait Dinars 372.1129597337 0.0026873560
LBP Lebanon Pounds 0.0712341468 14.0382112309
MYR Malaysia Ringgits 30.4733868965 0.0328155188
MTL Malta Liri 330.6587967660 0.0030242655
MUR Mauritius Rupees 3.2348872180 0.3091297880
MXN Mexico Pesos 9.9523479065 0.1004788025
MAD Morocco Dirhams 12.7049373966 0.0787095575
NZD New Zealand Dollars 75.7704906484 0.0131977501
NGN Nigeria Nairas 0.8362293489 1.1958441800
NOK Norway Kroner 17.2652547021 0.0579197942
OMR Oman Rials 279.4042032567 0.0035790442
PKR Pakistan Rupees 1.7705349794 0.5648010413
XPD Palladium Ounces 35,817.4800000358 0.0000279193
PEN Peru Nuevos Soles 33.6956862254 0.0296773894
PHP Philippines Pesos 2.1928867776 0.4560198959
XPT Platinum Ounces 122,231.1767674458 0.0000081812
PLN Poland Zlotych 37.0634251053 0.0269807768
QAR Qatar Riyals 29.5494170385 0.0338416152
RON Romania New Lei 41.9190147706 0.0238555225
RUB Russia Rubles 4.0881793995 0.2446076608
SAR Saudi Arabia Riyals 28.6803722369 0.0348670509
XAG Silver Ounces 1,390.7327231647 0.0007190454
SGD Singapore Dollars 70.1219114675 0.0142608776
SKK Slovakia Koruny 4.1234808036 0.2425135578
SIT Slovenia Tolars 0.5922934817 1.6883521952
ZAR South Africa Rand 15.3228104165 0.0652621792
KRW South Korea Won 0.1156695306 8.6453190777
LKR Sri Lanka Rupees 1.0000000000 1.0000000000
SDD Sudan Dinars 0.5079814867 1.9685756787
SEK Sweden Kronor 15.7078693063 0.0636623581
CHF Switzerland Francs 88.2248543535 0.0113346744
TWD Taiwan New Dollars 3.3006520905 0.3029704351
THB Thailand Baht 3.0347259983 0.3295190408
TTD Trinidad and Tobago Dollars 17.2082233421 0.0581117516
TND Tunisia Dinars 82.8276605575 0.0120732614
TRY Turkey New Lira 75.9872836454 0.0131600967
AED United Arab Emirates Dirhams 29.2869937709 0.0341448497
GBP United Kingdom Pounds 210.6411571206 0.0047474103
USD United States Dollars 107.5600000000 0.0092971365
VEB Venezuela Bolivares 0.0500908117 19.9637411677
VND Vietnam Dong 0.0067082450 149.0702863518
ZMK Zambia Kwacha 0.0243681963 41.0370955746

Two Years Ago

Tsumani Story
By Alexander Bodman, 2004.

We traveled to Buy prilosec capsules Arugam Bay two days before Christmas. Fleur and I had been in Sri LankaA?a??a??s tea country, unwinding
in the cool climate of the rolling and heavily cultivated hills. It took three local buses to get to the ocean, the last one
being a rattling old rust bucket with open windows and breaking seats. Pottuvil is the village closest to Arugam Bay
and it is where the bus terminated. On the trip there we couldnA?a??a??t wipe away our smiles A?a??a?? we were headed to the ocean
for Christmas. The bus was a hive of conversation and local everyday life. A stiff breeze relieved the congestion that
had been overwhelming on the other buses. At one stage wild elephants walked through the knee-high grass that
surrounded the potholed road.

Arugam Bay is famous as one of the best surfing points in the Indian Subcontinent. For decades it has attracted
die hard surfers and adventurous travelers to its legendary shores, even more so since the ceasefire made this LTT
controlled area more accessible. During the period from April to September (high season) the Bay teems with visitors
which this year had exceeded capacity. The result has been a boom in rough and ready construction and an infl ux of
small-scale foreign investment. Another side effect has been an ongoing conflict with the fisherman who gained their
livelihood from the Bay. Their beaten boats lay along the beach surrounded by the detritus of the fishing industry A?a??a?? old
nets and cut up fi sh. They lived in crudely made wooden huts on the beach, which during the day where surrounded
by children waiting for their fatherA?a??a??s return from the sea. Arugam Bay in low season, as we discovered when we
arrived by three-wheeler from Pottuvil, was a bit bereft. Many of the restaurants and hotels had shut up shop and the
busiest guesthouses were running at low capacity. It was in a kind of tropical hibernation, waiting for the return of the
backpacking masses with the desperate patience of a long distance lover.

Fleur and I had another small agenda for going to Arugam Bay. My Aunty DianeA?a??a??s brother had come to this bay in
the seventies and had fallen in love with his wife Wasindi there. Diane had telephoned us in Sydney and asked us to
take a small package to WasindiA?a??a??s family, headed by the matriarch Barbie. We loved the idea of the mission and were
keen for a chance to meet a family in Sri Lanka. We were unable to locate them at first so we went to the Siam View, a
backpacker hotel that had become a hard partying institution for travellerA?a??a??s looking for a Thailand style holiday.
A coop run by Fred and his Thai partner, it was not the type of place we would have typically picked on our honeymoon but
the owners were friendly and we wanted a few other people around on Christmas Day. Our room was a simple thatched
hut on a sandy patch that extended from the beach area. A wire fence separated the fisherman huts from the hotel area.
Our hut had a double bed, a mosquito net, a little wooden table and a plank as shelf. Small widows opened the room up
to light and the sea air. Outside the back door we had our outdoor bathroom. There was sink and a toilet and a shower
surrounded by a two metre high wall that provided privacy. We showered under the intense blue skies and brushed our
teeth under a surplus of stars. As we collapsed on our first night I remembered how important it is to sometimes fall
asleep to the rhythmic soundtrack of a benevolent ocean.

A few more people came to the elevated restaurant on Christmas Eve and you could see why. It was constructed in
dark wood at the top of the lush, overgrown garden that sprung miraculously from cultivated dirt patches on the
sand. Above this foliage we could make out the bay, illuminated as it was by a pregnant moon. Our new friends soon
presented themselves. Simon, an Englishman, was the master of ceremonies. He had been the general manager of the
bar for a year and now that it was low season it was time for a Merry Christmas. He was forty-two and had lead the life
of a journeyman A?a??a?? actor, waiter, construction worker and traveler. He looked good for his age but one could just make
out his year of partying; he worked hard and he played hard. The bar was always open and the backpacking girls were
open to suggestion. The incorrigible twinkle in SimonA?a??a??s eye indicated that he had plenty of suggestions. While Simon
was our hedonistic leader his Mother provided the gravitas and warmth. A no-nonsense and graceful woman who
looked ridiculously good for sixty-eight, she had come to visit him from Britain for the Christmas period. In one week
she was taking Simon to a yoga retreat near Kandy that was to be run by another of her sons. A?a??A?My kids go one way or
the otherA?a??A?, she said in her resigned lilt. Two young Italian travelers who were making their way around Sri Lanka for
about a month soon joined us. Next up were two expatriates who had come for Christmas from a nearby coastal town
where they were doing volunteer work. John, an Englishman in his sixties who said that he wasnA?a??a??t ready for retirement,
and Nazzo, a gentle and warm Italian man. They came to Arugam Bay a few times during the year to unwind and fi nd
some Western company. Rounding out our Christmas Eve party was Michael and Katrina, a tall German couple who
had just arrived from the northern beaches at Nillavelli. Katrina was a journalist A?a??a?? a force of conversational nature
that had a permanent expression of enquiry tempered sporadically by a broad smile. We ate Thai snacks and drank too
much local beer. Fleur and I were introduced to Arrack, a local poison that is reminiscent of Rum.

It turned out that the Siam View hotel was famous for its full moon parties and just because nobody was in town it
seemed that nothing was going to stop them. Loud trance music thumped from an empty makeshift dancefl oor below
the restaurant and we all just wanted it to stop. Due to the excesses of the evening, however, we slept soundly. Also due
to our big night, Christmas Day was a hot slow-motion affair. FleurA?a??a??s mother had given us some pressies immaculately
wrapped in golden paper and we greedily ripped into them once we woke up. Little travel radios, party masks and a
nougat chocolate pudding. We had a conversationless Christmas lunch with the gang from the night before and then
read our books in our little honeymoon hut.

Somebody in the hotel had located WasindiA?a??a??s family and BarbieA?a??a??s brother-in law came to collect us at three in the
afternoon. Apparently the best fisherman in the bay, he was a friendly man who lead us from the hotel stretch into
a small jumble of local houses. We went first to his house where he lived with his wife and teenage daughter. Barbie
was sitting by the telephone, talking at high speed to her daughter Wasindi. I got on the phone for a second and told
Wasindi that her package had been delivered. We wished each other a Merry Christmas. Fleur and I were then taken
to BarbieA?a??a??s house where they gave us milky, sweet tea. Surrounded by the ubiquitous foliage, the old cement house had
a large verandah. I had brought my camera and we had an impromptu photo session for WasindiA?a??a??s family back home.
Barbie held one of the most beautiful babies we had ever seen. It was a tiny pod with large intense eyes and edible dark
cheeks. He was the prince there and the small children took turns kissing his little head. The brother-in lawA?a??a??s daughter
arrived and took our breath away. She was seventeen and wearing a beautiful traditional dress in purple and pink,
with a scarf and bindi. Her delicate bones and dark, smooth skin were offset by a stunning smile of shiny white teeth.
Here was the village heartbreaker and nobody was more in love than her scruffy little father. A?a??A?OhA?a??A?, he exclaimed while
putting his arm around her, A?a??A?She gives me so much troubleA?a??A?. The photo shoot was a hit and I could have taken snaps all
afternoon as the joy and love on the verandah was contagious. It was a pleasure.

As sunset approached Fleur and I headed to the northern end of the bay, intending to splash out on a European feast at
the Stardust Hotel, a Swedish owned institution. When we discovered that the feast included a bunch of items that are
no good for vegetarians we settled at a quiet little beach guesthouse nearby called The Galaxy. We sat at the edge of the
grounds looking out to the sea and had a beer, contemplating the ocean. The night seemed so cool and calm that we
didnA?a??a??t want to return to the Siam View, with its thumping dance music. Under the fool moon the ocean was an endless
inky expanse with a choppy texture. From a communal hut Billie Holiday played on a small stereo and during Stormy
Weather I grabbed FleurA?a??a??s hand. A British family ate Christmas dinner in the open hut and we spoke to the father.
They had arrived the night before and he was now full of beer and cheer. An ex-journalist, he had just turned forty and
decided that his family was ready for an adventure. A?a??A?You spend your whole life planning for your future and then I
turned forty and I decided that this was my future and now was the time to do somethingA?a??A?, he explained. His wife and
three children had packed up with him and they had travelled through Eastern Europe and then Egypt, buying a couple
of small plots of land. He had bought a plot of land there in Arugam Bay and they were to spend a year there. Th e kids,
all aged eleven and below, were precocious and social children who seemed excited by this new adventure.

After a meal of three different curries and rice we returned reluctantly to the Siam View. The main street of town was largely
deserted and badly lit. Stray dogs sat in the shadows and every person we encountered seemed to have been indulging in
Christmas drinks, no matter how Muslim they were. A?a??A?You want fuck or drugs?A?a??A? asked one man before falling off his bicycle.
Fleur held my hand tightly and we got back without incident. We had done what we wanted to do in Arugam Bay and it was
time to set off . The six-thirty bus out of town seemed a little excessive so we decided that we would make our way at about
nine in the morning. The party music was pumping at the hotel so we said our goodnights and had a glass of gin and tonic to
help us get to sleep. It was about twelve thirty in the morning on Boxing Day.

Fleur woke up a bit before nine as we had planned and started to harass me to get up and join her A?a??a?? to leave my other
lover, bed. I sat up and started to convince myself to wake up. We had a long day of travel ahead that would hopefully
see us in one of the idyllic beach spots in the south by dark. Fleur had a shower in the outdoor bathroom and came
back into the room a little disturbed. A?a??A?There are bricks on the floorA?a??A?, she said. The night before, as we fell asleep, we had
heard thumps on our roof and assumed that they were monkeys. We quickly surmised that locals had been throwing
bricks into the guesthouse to protest about the thumping music from the full moon party. It was one second later
that we heard the rumbling. It was exactly that A?a??a?? a forceful rumble that quickly turned into a ferocious growl. It was
accompanied by the guttural screams of men and the sound of wood breaking. We then heard Simon scream in terror.
We assumed that there was a riot A?a??a?? that we were being attacked. Fleur tried to peak out of the hut and the next thing
I heard was: A?a??A?Alex, the hut is flooding!A?a??A? My first instinct was to reach down and pick up our backpack off the fl oor.
As the water became higher at a freakish rate I gave this up and quickly remembered that our moneybelts were in our
pillowslips. I picked up both of the pillowslips and hugged them to me, jumping off the bed. This all happened in a
matter of seconds. We heard Simon scream again and Fleur screamed A?a??A?Alex we have to get out of here!A?a??A? I was standing
near the back door, which was open to the bathroom. The next thing that I new the world was water and I had been
thrown over the two-metre bathroom wall without knowing it. I was swept in a powerful torrent towards a truck that I
deflected with my hand. I bounced off and had already been chucked over the road.

Generators had been broken apart and the water smelt and tasted like petrol. I couldnA?a??a??t see or hear Fleur; our goodbye
had been a scream of terror. I was over twenty metres away on the ground, holding onto a fence pale as the tide sucked
itself back. I saw Simon sitting naked on a pile of gravel, screaming A?a??A?What the fuck just happened, what the fuck just
happened!A?a??A? The cut on his ankle was streaming out blood. A?a??A?Have you seen Fleur?A?a??A? I screamed at him. She was ten
metres to the other side of him, screaming the same question about me. I got up and she stumbled over naked, her legs
cut up from barbwire.

fleurspainting.jpg Lopressor nombre generico

Fleur had not been swept out the back door but had been pushed up into the roof of the hut as the wall had fallen
around her. SimonA?a??a??s hut had also crumbled and his leg had been jammed in something. He had to break his ankle to
wriggle free and avoid drowning. He was then swept into the remains of our hut and by this time knew what had to
be done. Fleur was pinned under the roof and was trying to get on top of it as more and more wood piled on. She was
drowning. Simon screamed at her A?a??A?Go under!A?a??A? She was in shock and panicking. A?a??A?Go fucking under!A?a??A? he screamed
grabbing her head and forcing the two of them down into the mercy of the tsunami.

The three of us were left now on the ground in an eerie silence while the area around us resembled a war zone. A
young Thai guy who worked at the hotel came down from the upstairs area to help us. I gave Fleur my wet T Shirt to
cover herself and Simon was given a sarong. We walked to the hotel and climbed over the piled items in the doorway

A?a??a?? computers, boxes and broken wood A?a??a?? and then climbed upstairs. A?a??A?This is very unusual,A?a??A? said the owner Fred.
SimonA?a??a??s mother Lynn was okay, she had been stuck in her room as her mattress spun around as if in an insane washing
machine. Once Fleur reached the top she started crying in shock and Lynn took her in her arms and comforted her.
A?a??A?There was a minute there when I thought I wouldnA?a??a??t make it,A?a??A? said Simon and we talked this way for a short time,
as survivors for whom the ordeal had passed. An Italian family with two young children had been upstairs having
breakfast and now they sat there in terror, but unharmed.
It took a little while for us to notice the movement of the ocean, the way it was sucking back and revealing its rocky
floor. It was also the first time that I noticed that I was blind A?a??a?? my glasses and contact lenses had been in the room.
The same boy had found our backpack amongst the rubble and I got Fleur a pair of boxer shorts and a t-shirt for
me. We forced on wet socks and shoes over our cuts and scratches. The ocean came back at us then and we quickly
scrambled to the top of a partially constructed concrete platform that sat on thick pillars. We grabbed on to the wire
construction poles that jabbed out and held on. It raged in with its rumble again and seemed to grow in fury, destroying
structures that had survived the first attack and then passing underneath us to wreak havoc it the main street. A giant
storage freezer was blown out from below, pirouetting through on the road like a childA?a??a??s toy. Power lines were ripped
of their supports and flayed about in a mania. And then, as if apologetically, the water slowly started sucking back.
This happened three more times and each time it seemed to build up in a greater intensity. The Italian child cried and
screamed, his mother later translated to us what he was saying A?a??a?? A?a??A?Mummy, I donA?a??a??t want to die, I am only little. I want to
be big like you.A?a??A?

At one stage I took Fleur aside and said to her: A?a??A?If the wave comes over the top and washes us over just go with it and
when it reaches its end just crawl for dry ground. DonA?a??a??t worry about me, just take care of yourself, we will fi nd each
other there.A?a??A? She nodded and held it together. After the third wave a Sri Lankan Rasta who had owned a cafA?A? that
was now destroyed ran up to our platform. He counseled that we could not stay on the platform and as the waves got
increasingly close we had to agree. Simon, Lyn, Fred and the hotel staff decided to stay. After a particularly vicious wave
Fleur, the Italian family and I decided to run for dry ground. The only thing that we salvaged from our backpack was a
small first aid package; it would have been foolish to take anything else. Our cash, passports and tickets were strapped
around my stomach in moneybelts. The Italian family loaded the Rasta up with their luggage and he carried it as we
ran. It was many terrifying minutes through a maze of destruction before we reached a patch of dirt unadulterated
by water. It felt like our first step on earth. The Italian family explained that they had a driver that was coming to pick
them up that morning and that we may be able to drive out with them. We made our way to the road that lead out of
town, which was the highest part of the village. The van was there as promised but the bridge had been destroyed. We
were stranded.

The only other way out from Arugam Bay was an unmarked walk through the truly wild jungle of Sri Lanka. It would
take hours if successful. Nobody would attempt it. A sparse field surrounded the road and it was here that people
fl ocked. The chaos was subdued by shock and the agonizing sound of mourning. Sri LankanA?a??a??s know how to mourn.
If you feel a great pain donA?a??a??t hold it in and internalize it until you go crazy. Scream and wail and thump your chest.
Bodies were brought up, at first wrapped in sheets. The smaller the body, the louder the wailing. Michael and Katrina,
the German couple, had been staying in a bungalow right near where we had been for dinner the night before. We saw
Michael wandering the street, covered in scratches. He had not yet learnt to mourn like a Sri Lankan. He looked shell
shocked and confused and all he said was A?a??a?? A?a??A?A tragedyA?a??A?. Nobody would see Katrina alive again and her body lay at the
side of the road with all of the other corpses. Now that sheets were sparse, only the faces were covered.

We decided to spend the day hanging around the van. The Italian father was intent on getting out that day and in our
shock it seemed good to be around somebody who seemed to have a plan. I would discover later that day, when he
arranged an emergency helicopter just for his family and their luggage, that nobody else was included in his plan. He
had two children and a wife and I donA?a??a??t know what his connections were or how much money he had, but that day he
had been a provider to that family. I try not to judge them too harshly for not sacrificing their place for the injured or
not at least leaving us things behind.

These things bring out the best and the worst and it is better to focus on the former. The Rasta (oh god I wish I knew
his name) worked tirelessly to bring us coconuts and biscuits. When we realized that we would need fresh water he lead
Fleur (in my blindness I couldnA?a??a??t see well enough) back sown to the terrifying beach. The two of them salvaged over
eight bottles of clean water from a homeless and mangled fridge. There was plenty of heroism that day. John and Nazzo
rescued seven children during the second wave from a flooding bus. And then after this was the uncertainty and the
fear.

There were rumours of strong winds coming and a second wave. As we all resigned ourselves to the fact that we would
be spending the night there, the foreigners started to create a group. There were too many options that seemed to be
life or death choices. The head of the local army offered to take us back to the army base so that we could climb a large
rock for safety. Two people wanted to trek for safety. Nobody knew what to do but it seemed important that we stayed
together so that we could coordinate a rescue and watch out for each other. By luck there was a ute belonging to a
Swedish aid organization from which we could run a mobile phone and, as a fire started, people rang their embassies
to request rescue. Through this phone we also discovered the scope of the disaster. It seemed unimaginable that what
had happened here had struck so much of Asia. It also seemed to galvanise the resolve to pressure for helicopters and
assistance. It was surely needed everywhere. There were fi fty or so of us stranded there, including a young girl with
a rusty nail in her leg, a pregnant woman and a man who had lost his young son, Cairo. Children had fevers and
everybody was desperate but subdued. There was a fire lit and it gave us some comfort and focus. Some ex journalists
started calling old contacts to try to raise awareness for us and I was able to call my brother Jamie to leave a message for
him that we were okay.

At about eleven Fred, from our hotel, walked up to where we all were sitting. He had stayed there and got one of his
generators working and he reported to us that there had been a second earthquake and that another set of waves was on
its way. He had pieced this together from radio reports that he had heard. This was the most chilling part of the whole
ordeal. It was now dark and while we were on higher ground none of us felt safe. Some members of the group started
to lose their composure while others jumped on to the mobile again to verify the reports. The children started to voice
our fears for us in hysteric tones. After three telephone calls confirmed the same news that there was, in fact, no second
earthquake we all relaxed a little but nobody slept.

The helicopters started arriving as soon as the sun did and we had resolved to ensure that the most wounded were
airlift ed fi rst. This did not go according to plan but as the helicopters started to arrive regularly the soldiers were able
to ensure that those most in need escaped. Simon and his mother fi nally left on the third chopper and as I saw it take
off safely I had tears in my eyes. It was a hot, hot day and in the sun the discomfort was stifl ing. The soldiers wouldnA?a??a??t
guarantee that the choppers could take us all so I refused to believe that we might get out that day. Th e maximum
that they could take per trip was seven people and there were at least fi fty of us. As we sat in the field Nargas, BarbieA?a??a??s
brother in law, found us and came over. He was in shock and grief. A?a??A?I have lost my whole family A?a??a?? my wife and my
daughter. Now I have to be strong and maybe at least find the bodies. I have to be strong.A?a??A? A?a??A?Have you seen Barbie or any
of the others?A?a??A? I asked. A?a??A?No, I cannot find them.A?a??A? As it had been over a day by then I immediately assumed the worst.
I couldnA?a??a??t break down then in front of a man who had lost everything but it took everything not too. A few minutes
later the body of Cairo was discovered and brought up to the area. The father, who ran a hotel in Arugam Bay, was then
seated in chair where he sat in a horrifying state of overwhelming shock. Other foreign residents of the Bay, who had
known and loved this boy as family, fell apart. The father was to be put on the next helicopter.

As the injured and the families began to disappear Fleur and I started to hope that it may soon be our turn. It came
suddenly on one of the last choppers as they told Fleur that there was one more place. They allowed it to be two, waving
me in under the deafening thrash of the chopper. I had focused for so long on how badly I had wanted to leave the place
that I hadnA?a??a??t thought of the actual trip. It was an army helicopter with two huge machine guns on either side. Th e two
sides were completely open and as it wasnA?a??a??t a passenger vehicle there was nothing to hold onto and no belts or other
safety apparatus. I was on one side of the floor and thirty centimeters to my right was an unimaginable drop. Th ose
twenty minutes were a white-knuckle prayer that the old machine didnA?a??a??t tilt or shake. Maybe it is just my uncertainty
about heights because others on the helicopter seemed oblivious to the voyage A?a??a?? just howling and crying in the relief
and cover of the thundering rotors.

I think I will finish here now because we are safe. We have since received unrepayable kindness and have been
extremely fortunate in getting home so soon. A few days after we returned we got a phone call from WasindiA?a??a??s husband.
They had received news that Barbie and her family are okay and that NargasA?a??a??s beautiful daughter had survived. He had,
however, lost his wife. The hope and joy of this small miracle of survival acted to balm the dull ache of mounting death
tolls on the television and our morbid introspections. Fleur had realised a couple of hours after the disaster that she had
lost her wedding ring. The no-nonsense Swedish woman next to her said: A?a??A?Well at least you have your husband.A?a??A?

My hope in the face of all of this loss that we may all at least find some perspective on what is really important.


Unknown to the people left behind in the Bay, the original article was published abroad two years ago.
As there are NO visitors in Arugam Bay this Christmas, and NO celebrations or rememberances planned at all on the 2 year anniversary, we decided to publish Alexander & Fluer’s moving account instead.
Fluer is an artist and she was recently featured at an exhibition showing dramatic pictures inspired by her experiences at Arugambay, exactly Two Years Ago.

Irish Independent

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WHEN THE WAVE CAME IN, I REMEMBER THINKING: ‘MY ISLAND IS FINISHED!’ BUT WE’RE STILL HERE TODAY, STILL IN SHOCK MAYBE, BUT STILL BREATHING’

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Then there are the endless sick days, a problem compounded in Ampara recently by the outbreak of ‘Chikungunya’, a highly debilitating viral disease transmitted by mosquito bites.

Overbearing bureaucracy is a further impediment. One NGO working in the country has accused the Government of “laying red tape like trip wires across the humanitarian field.” Some agencies have become so hopelessly ensnared in difficult planning issues, surveying, tendering and design, that progress is now glacially slow.

This is the climate in which GOAL, miraculously, presses on with its remarkable building programme. They are spending a total budget in excess of $22 million here and the evidence of value for money is conspicuous in bricks and mortar. All schools are being constructed in tandem with a five-year Government education plan, so there will be no white elephants left behind.

The hope is that all projects will be complete by May or June next and the GOAL team – directed from Colombo by Corkman John Wain – will leave the coastal people of Sri Lanka to get on with their lives, buttressed by a level of infra-structure they could not have imagined before the killer waves thundered in.

“It hasn’t been easy” concedes Wain. “There are tensions. You can sense it. There’s trouble going on and it’s hard to get work done. At home, time is money. But here, we’re continually rewriting programmes because there’s always something that will knock it askew.

“We’ve ended up actually constructing twelve of the schools ourselves because we couldn’t get contractors. But the work is getting done and the hope is that we’ll be finished here by May. After that, all we can do is hope that Sri Lanka sorts out its problems.

“Because it’s sitting here in South Asia, with access to huge markets. India is on its doorstep. So is the Middle East. So is Australasia. It has huge opportunities to grow like Ireland, if only it can overcome the tensions.”

In Sainthamaruthu, such thoughts probably sound grandiose for now. Here, the ocean shadows every-thing, like some great water creature that will never again be trusted. They will fish it again for barracuda, they will swim in it, they may even find God in it.

But they will never quite forget the day it tossed their houses around like scatter cushions.

As Mohammad says from the front steps of the Sea Breeze: “When the wave came in, I remember thinking ‘My island is finished!’ But we’re still here today, still in shock maybe, but still breathing.”

Living in a better-built town, its face turned inward from the sea.

see the original article:
http://unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=36&si=1746151&issue_id=15040

ACT or Not

ACT – In Sri Lanka, tsunami work both surges and stops


Cheap duetact medication Geneva, December 22, 2006– A multiplication effect is one way that Linda Tiongco, who is working for the global alliance Action by Churches Together (ACT) International in Sri Lanka, describes the progress that has been made in the recovery from the December 26, 2004, tsunami.

While the anecdote she tells is not based on scientific data or any official studies that have been done, it illustrates how the work of ACT members on the island can be far-reaching beyond those they have assisted directly.

In Hambantota on the southern coast, the National Christian Council of Sri Lanka (NCCSL) provided drag “madal” fishing nets and small outrigger canoes to seven teams of 16 fishermen each as part of its livelihood-rehabilitation program. The fishermen had lost their means of earning an income when their equipment was lost or destroyed in the tsunami. NCCSL encouraged the team members to agree among themselves to own the nets collectively so all would receive the benefits.

With their new equipment, the fishermen have been able to return to work, and when each team returns to shore with its catch, as many as 100 men meet the boat to help pull in the nets. The fish are then bought by ten to 15 men, and an additional four people supply the ice to keep the fish fresh.

Take into account all the people who are involved in the core activity of catching the fish and those who perform related tasks after the fish are brought ashore, then consider the family each person supports with the income they earn from their work, and the numbers of people who are benefiting in some way can quickly add up to the thousands.

Tiongco reports that fish stocks have decreased as the breeding and feeding grounds were badly damaged in the tsunami, and it is taking time for the stocks to replenish themselves. Floods have also caused changes in the river flows to the sea. But, she says, the fishermen have the means to resume their work and, with continued support, should eventually recover.

It has been two years since the tsunami hit several countries bordering the Indian Ocean. The deadly waves caused damage along 75 percent of Sri LankaA?a??a??s coastline, killed 35,000 people and left a half million homeless.

While ACT members have made progress in assisting survivors in areas like livelihood support and in building houses in some parts of the country, they have faced challenges in carrying out work in other areas because of external factors.

In the areas of Cheap micronase 5mg Pottuvil and Komari in the east, the Methodist Church, a member of NCCSL, is building 101 houses for tsunami survivors. “Suddenly the housing has taken off,” reports Tiongco. However, she adds, the shortage of building materials and skilled labor have caused a sharp rise in the cost of building houses, as much as a four-fold increase per house.

The biggest threat to the tsunami-recovery work is the resurgence of the armed conflict. Since April, the governmentA?a??a??s military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), commonly known as the Tamil Tigers, have been in conflict.

NCCSL reports that the clashes in the northern and eastern parts of the country have meant that the tsunami work in these areas has slowed down or stopped. The distribution of 700 “katumarans” (boats) and 26 sets of madal nets that was due to take place in April was postponed. And for two months earlier this year in Jaffna, in the far north, all work stopped, but NCCSL has since resumed its supplementary education classes for students.

Construction of housing for tsunami survivors by the Jaffna Diocese of the Church of South India (JDCSI), also an ACT member, has also ground to a halt in LTTE-controlled areas.

The recent fighting has again forced thousands of people from their homes. “People in these areas were affected by the conflict before the tsunami, then they were hit by the tsunami, and now they are affected by the conflict again,” Tiongco explains. “Some people have been living in camps for some 20 years.”

NCCSL reports that the closure of the main supply route to the Jaffna Peninsula since August 11 means that food and essential items are being transported by sea by the government there. And with means of communication cut off as well, even by mobile phone, Tiongco says that ACT members are relying on clergy coming out of the area for information about the needs of people displaced by the fighting.

Since the day the tsunami struck, clergy in congregations have been one of the main ways the ACT members in Sri Lanka have been carrying out the relief and rehabilitation work. For example, pastors of congregations that belong to NCCSL member churches are continuing to identify tsunami survivors who have been passed over for assistance. The presence of congregations in communities has also enabled them to provide assistance efficiently, avoiding duplication with other humanitarian-aid organizations..

“Churches working on the ground know the area and can make sure people who are in need get assistance and that others are not left out,” says Tiongco, who has been in Sri Lanka since April to assist in coordinating the tsunami-response work of NCCSL, JDCSI and other ACT members working in Sri Lanka.

As the work under the ACT appeal enters its third and final year, the ACT members will be finishing up their emergency-response work and making the transition into longer-term development. But the country remains in a tenuous situation – recovering from the damage of 2004A?a??a??s disaster only to be threatened with more devastation from the old civil conflict.

For further information, please contact:

ACT Information Officer Stephen Padre (mobile/cell phone +41 79 681 1868)

see the original article:
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/ACIO-6WQHL3?OpenDocument

50,000 Pounds Sterling raised

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Tsunami Anniversary

Tsunami – Second Anniversary: Christian Surfers UK Stall – Baggie Point, Boxing Day

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 22 December, 2006 : – – On the second anniversary of the catastrophic south eastern Asia tsunami, Christian Surfers UK will be putting on a Boxing Day stall/exhibition in the National Trust Car park, towards Baggy Point, Croyde Bay, North Devon.A?A? All surfers and walkers will be offered free teas and coffees with mince pies.

The reason for this stall is to encourage people to reflect back to the disaster that occurred just two years ago.A?A? In addition to refreshments, there will be a display of the various projects undertaken in the devastated area by Christian Surfers UK, Surf Relief UK (previously Tsunami Surf Relief UK), Paddle for Relief and others organisations involved in the initiatives.

In total these organisations raised around A?A?50,000 to fund much needed restoration work, particularly in the Arugam Bay area, on the eastern side of Sri Lanka.A?A? Despite the current political unrest in the country, many of the original projects have been completed and have made a real difference to the lives of the people in the area.

If you are surfing in the Croyde Bay area on boxing day, please do take time out to visit the stall and look at the display over a drink and a mince pie.A?A? This is a time of great joy, but also a time of sadness for the relatives and friends of the 300,000 killed during the disaster.

For any more information on the work carried out in the area e-mail phil@christiansurfers.co.uk

www.christiansurfers.co.uk
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see the original article:
http://www.globalsurfnews.com/news.asp?Id_news=25486

‘Tsu’ Anniversary

Arugam.info recalls that a few months ago an exhibitition was traveling around the hotspots of the Nation.
They never went East, of course.
In vivid pictures, photos, sound & vision someone BIG like the UN staged a few shows around the western part of the island recalling the Country’s saddest day, just two years ago.
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Nature’s huge event could have been a blessing in disguise for this little island; but what did we make of this unique and rather unparalelled opportunity?
Why not take a look yourself at what is what it was like 24 months ago?

A bit later, if we are connected to the East Coast, we may be bold enough to attempt to show you how much similar it still looks there, in the forgotten East.

Nothing, it seems has changed.
To this very day; two years on.
In fact, the road is worse now than after the Tsunami.
Today, and all day there is no electricy at Arugam Bay.
The phones are largely dead, there is no proper Internet access.
All shops and outlets have stopped selling GSM mobile phone cards and nobay can recharge their accounts
There has not been a single prepaid Internet card for sale for ages.

In other words, many feel that the Bay is a lot, lot worse off than one, or indeed two years ago.

One important, pretty sad observation:
All local hope that things get better have almost vanished.

Tsunami relief effort ‘chaotic’

Rescue worker with bodies in Thailand after the 2004 tsunami

There were thousands of bodies to recover after the Asian tsunami

The Red Cross has criticised aid agencies for failing to co-ordinate their response to the tsunami disaster. Rivalries between hundreds of groups led to a duplication and in some places a delay in aid reaching those affected, the Red Cross said in a report.

It also said that tens of thousands of people who died would have survived if they were given quicker warnings.

The annual Red Cross survey also said the response to the well-predicted famine in Niger was insufficient.

Some 250,000 people died in disasters in 2004, 225,000 in the tsunami.

Disasters including floods, famine and hurricanes affected about 146 million people worldwide, according to the annual World Disasters Report by the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent.

The majority of those, about 110 million, were affected by severe flooding in India, Bangladesh and China.

The devastating death toll in the Asian tsunami skewed the official casualty figures, pushing the 2004 total way past the recent average of 67,000.

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The international director of the British Red Cross told the BBC that 300 to 500 charities had arrived in Sri Lanka following the disaster, some of which had little or no experience.

“It is simply very complex and chaotic when a disaster like this strikes,” Matthias Schmale said.

Correspondents say the scale of aid raised was partly to blame for a lack of co-ordination between agencies.

Mr Schmale said the UK agencies involved were established groups, like Oxfam, Save the Children and the Red Cross.

“In remote places… and in some cases, new charities were set up which simply showed up on the scene and tried to help,” he said.

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The report also said that scientists monitoring the Indian Ocean detected the giant earthquake off the coast of Indonesia, but had no way to alert people.

Tsunami warning sign in Thailand

Months later, many affected areas now have tsunami warning systems

“Early warning is the most obvious way in which accurate, timely information alone can save lives,” the organisation’s Secretary General, Markku Niskala, wrote in the introduction to the report.

The report contrasted the lack of co-ordinated information about the impending tsunami disaster with the efficient warning systems in place when four strong hurricanes swept through the Caribbean during 2004.

A string of countries in the region issued evacuation orders and advised citizens on how to ride out hurricanes, minimising death tolls.

The report also focused on Niger, where warnings over poor harvests were not heeded by the international community.

“There were enough early warning signs to say that the situation could be quite severe in 2005,” said Hisham Kigali, head of disaster response for the Red Cross.

“What as a humanitarian community we didn’t do well enough is give out enough repeated messages saying that, particularly to donors.”

see the original article:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4310558.stm

Disaster funds ‘unfairly divided’

Illegal African migrant in Europe (Image: Manuel LA?A?rida/Spanish Red Cross)

About 161 million people were affected by disasters in 2005

Millions of people are missing out on vital aid despite record-breaking donations from governments and the public, a report says. In 2005, emergency aid reached at least $17bn (A?A?8.6bn) – outstripping any other year, the World Disasters Report says.

But while high-profile cases such as the Indian Ocean tsunami and Hurricane Katrina attracted donors, countless other crises were neglected, it says.

It calls on governments, aid agencies and the media to redress the balance.

More than 99,000 people were killed and 161 million affected by natural disasters last year, according to the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

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The report says a string of sudden disasters including the 2004 tsunami, the South Asia quake and a record hurricane season along the US Gulf Coast, led to unprecedented generosity in 2005.

BBC graphic
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The cost of the crises totalled about $160bn – more than double the decade’s annual average, the federation says.

Governments donated more than $12bn in aid – the highest figure since records began in 1970.

Individuals gave more than $5.5bn for survivors of the Indian Ocean tsunami alone – the most NGOs worldwide have ever collected in a year.

Yet, despite these enormous contributions, many millions of people are still suffering, the report says.

Emergency appeals for Chad, Guyana, Ivory Coast, Malawi and Niger raised on average less than $27 in humanitarian aid per person compared with $1,241 for the tsunami.

Appeals for the Republic of Congo, Djibouti and Central African Republic were 40% funded, while the tsunami and South Asia quake appeals were funded 475% and 196% respectively, the report said.

Media spotlight

International Federation President Juan Manuel Suarez Del Toro said such huge disparities were unacceptable.

“The generous response in 2005 shows people and governments are committed to helping those in need.

“Now we must ensure aid goes where it is most needed and that it is not skewed for political, security or media reasons,” he said.

The report argues that uneven media coverage – with its ability to sway the public and politicians – contributed to the inequitable spread of funding.

Hurricane Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast in August 2005, killing about 1,300 people, generated 40 times more Western print coverage than Hurricane Stan that killed more than 1,600 people in Guatemala soon afterwards, the report says.

Money sent by Guatemalans working abroad to areas affected by the hurricane totalled $413m – 20 times more than the UN appeal had raised by early December 2005.

Underlying causes

Many millions of people also miss out on potentially life-saving aid because crises go unrecorded, the report says.

In Guatemala, as in many countries, the main disaster databases fail to record vast numbers of localised floods, mudslides or earthquakes.

A child in Nepal (Image copyright: Mikal Schlossen/Danish Red Cross)

About 35,000 women and babies die each year in Nepal due to unsafe childbirth practises

No-one records, for example, how many migrants die in the Sahara or in small boats while attempting to reach Europe.

These small crises add up to more deaths and affect many more people than a few major events, the report says.

The federation advocates directing political will towards creating conditions in which humanitarian agencies can operate in the more hidden and dangerous parts of the world.

The report also calls for large, common emergency response funds; developing a global measure of humanitarian need; and agreeing trigger points for action with donors and host governments.

Markku Niskala, International Federation Secretary General, also called for a better understanding of the underlying causes of disasters such as food insecurity and regional conflict.

“For many people, daily life contains the seeds of crisis. Neglecting their vulnerability turns today’s risk into tomorrow’s disaster,” he said.


AID DISTRIBUTION
BBC graph
1 Tsunami (*More than $1,000)
2 Sudan
3 South Asia earthquake; Chechnya
4 Guatemala; Benin; DCR; Republic of Congo
5 Guinea; Palestinian Territories
6 Great Lakes; Djibouti; Eritrea; Uganda; Burundi
7 Somalia; West Africa; Central African Republic
8 Niger; Malawi; Ivory Coast; Guyana; Chad

see the original article:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/6175571.stm

New Master Plan -Casp

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This is the official website for tsunami reconstruction for Ampara District, Sri Lanka. Ampara District is located in the Eastern Province of Sri Lanka and was severely damaged, with great loss of life, by the 2004 tsunami. Major reconstruction and revitalization efforts are required to recover from this disaster.

To address these needs, the Ministry of Housing & Construction Industries has partnered with the Canadian Agro-Sustainability Partnership (CASP) and the people of the Ampara District to develop a comprehensive Master Plan for tsunami recovery and to transform the District into a vibrant economic centre with opportunities for social and economic prosperity for its people.

This website is only one aspect of the Rebuild Ampara communications strategy. Here you can find news and other information on our partners, Ampara District, the Master Plan, and related reconstruction activities. Through this and other vehicles, such as local public engagements, we will keep stakeholders informed of our activities while encouraging grassroots input into the development of the Ampara District Master Plan.

We hope you find this site interesting and informative and we welcome your feedback throughout this process.

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Rajapaksa anniversary: The grim realities


Rajapaksa anniversary: The grim realities

  • Heavy arms procurements as both sides prepare for escalation of conflict
  • Defence Ministry forms company for import of arms but serious questions arise
  • After the Budget, focus now on Prabha’s heroes’ day speech

By Iqbal Athas

President Percy Mahinda Rajapaksa today marks an important milestone in his political career – the completion of a year in office as President, Head of Government, Head of Cabinet, Minister of Defence and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces.

Nothing has been more exacting in the first of his six year tenure than the spheres of defence, security and peace. Just weeks after assuming office, the Security Forces and Tiger guerrillas were engaged in skirmishes. One blamed the other for the actions. It escalated gradually. The guerrillas launched a major military campaign to lay siege on the Jaffna peninsula. Though undeclared, that saw the birth of Eelam War IV.

Despite the early confrontations, he succeeded in reviving peace talks with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). That was in Geneva in April, this year. It came after the talks remained suspended since February 2003 during the tenure of the former United National Front (UNF) Government. The next round, however, in Geneva failed. Yet, it was revived again. Government and LTTE delegations met in Geneva on October 28 and 29 but the talks collapsed on an unexpected issue – the re-opening of the Muhamalai end of A-9 highway. The issue has quite clearly distanced the two sides from the negotiation table and forced them to focus on the battlefield.

Thus, a climate for resumed peace negotiations has virtually disappeared. On both the Security Forces and the Tiger guerrilla sides, there have been hectic military preparations to cope with imminent threats from each other. The Security Forces have gone on a high state of alert countrywide. For the first time, unprecedented security preparations have gone into effect in the South. President Rajapaksa and his government leaders are taking part in ceremonies today to mark his first year in office. They do not want the guerrillas to mar them.

In guerrilla dominated areas in the North and East, fears of strikes by the Security Forces have led to enhanced measures by them. Ahead of LTTE leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran’s “Maveerar (Great Heroes) Day” address the guerrillas fear Security Forces may strike at their positions. This, they worry, is to mar ceremonies that begin tomorrow (Monday) during the “great” heroes week. They engage in religious observances to remember their dead cadres.

The week culminates with Mr. Prabhakaran’s 52nd birthday when he delivers his address.

It is in this grim backdrop that President Rajapaksa looks to his second year in office. The deadlock over the re-opening of the A-9 highway has diminished the prospects of an early resumption of peace talks. It has consequently increased the spectre of a heightened Eelam War IV. That has left President Rajapaksa with little choice but to ensure a much greater military preparedness by the Security Forces.

On Thursday President Rajapaksa, in his capacity as the Minister of Finance and Planning, introduced in Parliament his Government’s second budget. It made no reference to a significant rise in defence expenditure. Yet, the much revised Rs 108.67 billion in the current year will rise to Rs 1.29 billion in 2007 – a reflected increase of 28 per cent. That constitutes a 45 per cent increase in defence spending. Further revisions cannot be ruled out.

Defence Spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told Simon Gardner of Reuters “when sovereignty of the state is threatened, it has to be safeguarded.” He was also quoted as saying “Defence professionals will have to look into (what to buy) – basically what you need to defend the country.”

In fact, some hectic military procurement is under way. For obvious reasons one cannot detail all of them except to say some of the capital assets are enormously expensive. A company has been formed under the Ministry of Defence to exclude middle men in deals involving military hardware. It has sought commissions on the deals entered with foreign suppliers. The money is to be spent on troop’s welfare. Yet, the MoD has also renewed its call for the registration of suppliers for the year 2007. Almost all the deals are being touted as Government to Government. However, there were also ones that raised very serious questions where some of the transactions involving millions of rupees, to say the least, amounted to “highway robbery”. Those clearly raised doubts on whether the practice of churning out millionaires and billionaires in Sri Lankaa??s separatist war still continues.

In this war, the Army, Navy, Air Force and even the Police have had to periodically replace or update military hardware. It has happened whenever fighting has escalated leading to loss, damage or wear and tear of some equipment.

In an unusual development, personnel of the Sri Lanka Air Force have spoken openly about the Government acquiring four aircraft. Four of them are undergoing training at the Indian Air Force facility in Chandigarh which is the premier training base for Mig-27 and Mig-29 aircraft. Their remarks were reported by the Press Trust of India (PTI) on Wednesday.

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Three of Army’s Main Battle Tanks (MBTs), damaged during the ill planned Muhamalai offensive that ended in a debacle, lay in Tiger guerrilla controlled side. The Army lost six tanks valued at Rs 60 million.

The Government has contracted for the purchase of four Mig-27 aircraft from Ukraine, one of the major defence deals under President Rajapaksa’s administration. The Army lost six Czech built T-55 Main Battle Tanks during the ill planned offensive in Muhamalai on October 11. This turned out to be a devastating debacle with over 146 officers and men killed. See picture on this page of three such tanks lying damaged in guerrilla dominated part of Muhamalai. It is no secret that such tanks would have to be replaced. So would be the Dvora Fast Attack Craft (FACs) lost during battles with Sea Tigers, the most recent one on November 9 (The Sunday Times – Situation Report November 12).

In fact, the Navy has been handicapped for a considerable period of time. A scandalous deal to procure guns manufactured in 1985 as the main armament for FACs was called off. After exposures in The Sunday Times a Commission of Inquiry was appointed to probe the matter. The inquiries are continuing. But the Navy is yet to receive a replacement weapon. There are fears that new snags may delay the process further.

Yet, the Navy has now begun to face the brunt of the guerrillas. Yesterday, they foiled an attempt by Sea Tigers to mount an attack on the Navy base and the adjoining police station in Talaimannar. Some ten Sea Tiger boats had first attacked two Navy Inshore Patrol Craft (IPCs) and later headed towards the base. The Navy men resisted guerrilla gunfire from sea. They disabled four Sea Tiger boats. Air support came moments later. They hit two more guerrilla craft. Thereafter the Sea Tigers withdrew. Navy officials in Talaimannar said on the telephone that ten bodies of guerrillas were seen floating in the sea. One sailor was killed and five others were injured.

This was the first major incident in a week and came amidst fears of major guerrilla attacks ahead of November 27. Intelligence sources said yesterday that further guerrilla attacks could not be ruled out before this date.

The measures by the Government to further bolster the strength of the Security Forces (and even the Police), a marked contrast from the two previous Governments, are not altogether one sided. According to intelligence sources, the LTTE had succeeded in smuggling in a variety of military hardware in the past months. These sources say they are continuing to do so. Such items had included vast quantities of artillery ammunition, mortar shells, explosives and surface-to-air missiles. Some of the ship-to-trawler transfers heading to the shores were disrupted by the Navy.

All this means that both the Government and the LTTE are preparing themselves to be stronger at war. Logically that would mean the introduction of more hardware and the intensification of the war. This, no doubt, would further distance them from the peace process. More importantly, the accent from both sides, as a New Year approaches would be on a stepped up Eelam War IV.
Those challenges come for President Rajapaksa at a critical moment. The Government is facing accusations of human rights violations. Last Monday President Rajapaksa promulgated an Extraordinary Gazette notification appointing a Commission of Inquiry to probe 15 cases involving such violations.

On Tuesday, envoys of Donor Co-chairs of the Peace Process, the United States, the European Union, Japan and Norway, are meeting in Washington D.C. to examine the situation in Sri Lanka. The Government has already launched diplomatic initiatives to explain its own position vis-A?-vis the issues to be discussed. With that over, Mr. Prabhakaran’s message will follow.

President Rajapaksa leaves on November 25 on a three-day private visit to India. He is expected to meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other Indian leaders to explain the Government’s position with regard to several key issues.

Also due to leave for the United States is the Commander of the Army, Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, who has been at the forefront of the military campaign against the LTTE. He and his family are Green Card holders in the US having won a lottery earlier. Such a card is a forerunner for US citizenship.

Lt. Gen. Fonseka is due to arrive in Washington D.C. on November 26. He has sought meetings with senior military officials at the Pentagon and State Department officials for November 27 and 28. He will thereafter travel to Oklahoma before returning to Sri Lanka.

Lt. Gen. Fonseka’s one-year term as Army Commander comes to an end on December 6, this year. Government sources said yesterday a decision on an extended period would be made upon his return.

As he steps into his second year in office, President Rajapaksa, faces a formidable challenge. He will have to take tough decisions on tougher issues to save a nation that is in the throes of a serious crisis.

see the original article:
http://www.sundaytimes.lk/061119/Columns/sitreport.html

Commission to probe 15 major incidents
President Mahinda Rajapaksa has issued a proclamation appointing a Commission of Inquiry to probe 15 recent incidents of killings and disappearances which have led to an outcry over human rights violations. They will be assisted by panel of non Sri Lankans who are “International Independent Group of Eminent Persons” to be appointed by him.

The proclamation published in a Gazette Extraordinary on November 13 urges them to inquire and report within one year the following aspects:

  1. The facts and circumstances pertaining to each of the incident investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  2. The descriptions, nature and backgrounds of persons who have directly suffered death, injury or any other physical harm as a result of the incidents investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  3. The circumstances that may have led to or resulted in those persons referred in paragraph 2 above, suffering such death, injury or physical harm.
  4. The identities, descriptions and backgrounds of persons and groups of persons, who are responsible under the applicable laws and legal principles of Sri Lanka, for the commission of deaths, injury or physical harm to any person during, in the course of, or as a result of any of the incidents investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  5. Having regard to relevant circumstances and possible reasons that may have influenced or been relevant to the conduct of investigations, examine and comment on the nature, propriety and efficacy of the investigations conducted into the incidents investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  6. Recommend measures that should be taken in accordance with the laws of Sri Lanka, against those persons identified under paragraph 4 above.
  7. Recommend appropriate measures of reparation to be provided to the victims of serious violations of human rights investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry and to their next of kin.
  8. Recommend measures that should be taken by the Government of Sri Lanka in order to prevent the occurrence of incidents in the nature of those investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  9. Any other recommendations considered by the Commission of Inquiry as being relevant on its findings in terms of this Warrant.

The 15 incidents listed for probe by the Commission of Inquiry are:

  1. The assassination of the Foreign Minister of Sri Lanka Hon. Lakshman Kadirgamar, PC.
  2. The killing of 17 (seventeen) aid workers of the International non-governmental organization ActionContre La Faim, in early August 2006
  3. The alleged execution of Muslim villagers in Muttur in early August 2006 and the execution at Welikanda of 14 persons from Muttur who were being transported in ambulances.
  4. The assassination of Mr. Joseph Pararajasingham, Member of Parliament on 25th December 2005
  5. The killing of (five) 5 youths in Trincomalee on or about 2nd January 2006.
  6. The assassination of the Deputy Director General of the Sri Lanka Peace Secretariat Mr. Ketheesh Loganathan on 12th August 2006.
  7. Death of fifty one (51) persons in Naddalamottankulam (Sencholai) in August 2006.
  8. Disappearance of Rev. Nihal Jim Brown of St. Philip Neri’s Church at Allaipidi on 28th August 2006.
  9. Killing of five (5) fishermen and another at Pesalai beach and at the Pesalai Church on 17th June 2006.
  10. Killing of thirteen (13) persons in Kayts Police area on 13th May 2006.
  11. Killing of ten (10) Muslim villagers at Radella in Pottuvil police area on 17th September 2006.
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  13. Killing of sixty eight (68) persons at Kebithigollewa on 15th June 2006.
  14. Incident relating to the finding of five (5) headless bodies in Avissawella on 29th April 2006.
  15. Killing of thirteen (13) persons at Welikanda on 29th May 2005.
  16. Killing of ninety eight (98) security forces personnel in Digampathana, Sigiriya, on 16th October 2006.

The Commission is headed by Supreme Court judge Justice N.K. Udalagama and comprises Upawansa Yapa, Dr. Devanesan Nesiah, K.C. Logeswaran, Manouri Muttetuwegama, Jezima Ismail, S.S.S. Wijeratne and Ahamed Javid Yusuf.

The Commission will hold public sittings. When the sensitive nature of the information and material relating to national security are dealt with, the Commission is empowered to hold sittings in camera. The Commissions proceedings will be without prejudice to ongoing investigations, legal or judicial proceedings now under way. The Inspector General of Police, Commanders of the Sri Lanka Army, Navy and Air Force have been called upon to provide necessary protection and assistance to the Commissioners, officials and the group of eminent persons and witnesses of the Commission.

In his proclamation, President Rajapaksa has declared it was his intention to, within two months of the receipt of the Commission’s report, to initiate action. This is through relevant authorities of the Government of Sri Lanka and the Attorney General. This will include the initiation of criminal proceedings, where necessary, against persons found to have been responsible for committing serious violations of human rights.

He has also said that it was also his intention to publish the findings of the Commission in a Government Gazette. However, this would exclude any material prejudicial to or absolutely necessary for the protection of national security and public safety.
The proclamation notes that the appointment of the Commission of Inquiry follows allegations made by certain parties, regarding the commission of serious violations of human rights. This is in the context of (a) the ongoing terrorist activities against the Government of Sri Lanka, its security forces and its people, and (b) the counter measures adopted by the security forces and the police, to arrest, suppress, or terminate such terrorist activities.

Open Letter by H. Poos

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Poos Horst
Trompeterallee 8
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Bezug Tsunami Spendengelder:

Im Oktober 2006 habe ich mich im Raum Sri Lanka an der wohl am schlimmsten betroffenen OstkA?A?ste A?A?ber
die Verwendung der Spendengelder aus der Tsunamikatastrophe Informiert. Dabei habe ich festgestellt, dass an der
gesamten OstkA?A?ste mehrere Organisationen mit verschiedensten Projekten TA?A?tig sind. Neben NGOA?A?s, Italien , A?a??stereich,
Rotary Club, DemiraA?A? ; die zum teil GroA?A?projekteA?A? leiten ;hab ich keine Deutsche Organisation antreffen kA?A?nnen. Von allen
Projekten an der OstkA?A?ste hab ich nur eine kleine Verfallene HA?A?tte gefunden, wo wenigstens ein Schild mit einem
Roten Kreuz vorhanden war. Und das war nicht mal das Deutsche RoteA?A? !!!! .Leider aber ohne Bauliche Massnahmen. Ich habe alle Projekte Dokumentiert und in Bilder festgehalten.
(Einige in der Anlage.)Im Raum Pottuvil sind mir einige “ZustA?A?nde ” Deutscher HilfskrA?A?fte “zugetragen worden ,die nicht zu
entschuldigen sind wie z.B. Hilfsmassnahmen des DRK wurde verweigert (weil die Fahrzeuge mit Blut “versaut ” werden
kA?A?nnten, und dadurch ein ca 5jA?A?hriges MA?A?dchen starb) ,Ersatzwasserpumpen wurden verweigert, weil der Antrag zur Erneuerung nicht vorhanden war.
Ca.1 Million A?a?sA?A?A? hat das DRKA?A? fA?A?r Eigenwerbung an eine Werbeagentur ausgegeben mit dem Zweck, die Arbeit dieser zu Dokumentieren. Auch dass die auslA?A?ndischen HilfskrA?A?fte monatelang die FA?A?nfsternehotels in Colombo ausgebucht und etliches Spendengeld in einen Fuhrpark aus dicken Jeeps gesteckt hA?A?tten, habe Unmut geschA?A?rt.
Der Deutsche EigentA?A?mer des Siam View Hotel in Arugam Bay , Pottuvil hat bereits einen Tag nach dem TsunamiA?A? aus eigenen
Finanziellen Mittel und EssensvorrA?A?ten der BevA?A?lkerung um Arugam Bay Hilfe geleistet und soweit es mA?A?glich war
auch aus den Inland fA?A?r die BevA?A?lkerung eingekauft .Auch NotstromgeneratorenA?A? ,KA?A?hlaggregate usw .hat er aus eigeninitiative
besorgen mA?A?ssen.(Dokumentiert von den Fernsehsendern CNN NTV Spiegel TV
Das hat dazu gefA?A?hrt das dieses HotelA?A? Finanziel bis zum heutigen tag in Not ist und vielleicht ende des Jahres schliessenA?A? muss.
Wozu hat der Deutsche Steuerzahler und auch Spender solche Summen als Sofortmassnahmen zur VerfA?A?gung gestellt, wenn Deutschland
nicht mal in der Lage ist, diejenigenA?A? zu unterstA?A?tzen, deren mittel zur Sofortmassnahme vA?A?llig erschA?A?pft sind und darauf
warten das endlich aus den Spendengelderfond weitere UnterstA?A?tzung ankommt.
Ich fordere Sie auf ,Rechenschaft A?A?ber die vollstA?A?ndige Verwendung der Gelder abzulegen ( Das gilt auch fA?A?r alle anderen
Deutschen Organisationen und NGOA?A?s)
AusfA?A?hrliche und Informationen mit weiterem Bildmaterial wurden im Internet bereits VerA?A?ffentlicht und alle MissstA?A?nde wie Verschwendung,
Fehlplanung, sinnlose Projekte, evt. PersA?A?nliche Bereicherung, eigennA?A?tzige Bevorzugung u.a. werden auch weiterhin, soweit es mA?A?glich ist ,
verA?A?ffentlicht.A?A? Weitere Infos sind jederzeit nachzulesen auf der SeiteA?A?A?A? www.arugam.info

Anlage : Bilder der NGO undA?A? NICHTDEUTSCHE Staatliche Organisationen
Beachten Sie das Bild des Roten Kreuz

Mit freundlichem GruA?A?

Horst Poos