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Irish News Service Unison

Peter Apps

in Colombo

MANY residents of Sri Lankan fishing communities have had to start rebuilding inland in case of further tsunamis, but a threatened return to civil war could yet again displace them. Some residents are now closer to ceasefire lines that will become battlefields if the 2002 truce fails, amid a string of attacks on government forces blamed on Tamil Tiger rebels.

After the tsunami, no one predicted a return to war, but many people have been panicked by the gunning down of a pro-rebel politician in a cathedral at midnight mass on Christmas day. The shooting followed a rebel ambush that killed 13 sailors and the first naval clash since the ceasefire.

Sporadic attacks continued yesterday, when the military shot dead two suspected rebels in restive Batticaloa and a policeman and three civilians were shot dead in separate incidents.

The courts blocked an aid-sharing deal with the rebels after the tsunami, and many minority Tamils in the north and east feel sidelined in favour of the Sinhalese southern majority. The UN says inequalities must be addressed.

The rebels have threatened a return to war if they do not win concessions from the government, which has already rejected their demands for a minority Tamil homeland in the north and east.

The two sides cannot even agree on a venue for emergency talks, aimed at averting a return to a war that killed more than 64,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands more.

Rebuilding

Many say they are putting off or limiting rebuilding until they see how the next few months pan out. A British former investment banker, Lee Blackmore, said he was worried while rebuilding his hotel in Arugam Bay, an eastern resort, though tourists have never been directly targeted.

“Since the ceasefire, weA?a??E?d probably doubled our tourist numbers every year,” Mr Blackmore said. “We will wait and see how things turn out before we put a lot of money in and go crazy.”

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The Tsunami, One Year Later: More Than A Million Still Homeless in Sri Lanka PDF Print E-mail
Written by Kannan – Holland
Friday, 30 December 2005
Memorials are being held across the world this week to mark the devastating tsunami that hit South Asia one year ago. It was one of the worldA?a??E?s worst-ever natural disasters.

On the morning of a December 26 scientists recorded one of the worldA?a??E?s most powerful earthquakes ever off the coast of the Indonesian island of Sumatra. Scientists soon realized the earthquake could form a deadly tsunami. But, unlike the Pacific Ocean, the Indian Ocean region had no tsunami warning system. The results were catastrophic. Within hours some 218,000 people had died across Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and India. Nearly 2 million were left homeless. And the effects will be felt for years.
A new survey from Oxfam found that 80% of the 1.8 million people left homeless by the disaster were still without satisfactory permanent housing. On the Indonesia island of Sumatra, all residents are still living in tents or shelters. Overall Oxfam estimates some 300,000 new houses still need to be built in India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka.

We begin in Sri Lanka where more than 31,000 people died in the tsunami. The United Nations has reported Sri Lanka alone needs 100,000 homes – only about 6,000 have been built so far.

* Prasad Kariyawasam, Ambassador from Sri Lanka and the Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the United Nations.
* Sarath Fernando, co-director of the Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform in Sri Lanka.
* Dr. Karunyan Arul, a physician who works with Tamil refugees and other war victims.

RUSH TRANSCRIPT

This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help us provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
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AMY GOODMAN: WeA?a??E?re joined in the studio by the Ambassador from Sri Lanka to the United Nations. We are joined on the telephone from California and Sri Lanka: on the phone, Sarath Fernando is with us, heA?a??a??s the co-director of the Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform in Sri Lanka; also joining us from California is Dr. Karunyan Arul, physician who works with Tamil refugees and other war victims. We welcome you all to Democracy Now! And we begin with the ambassador. Welcome. Can you talk about Sri Lanka today, a year after the tsunami?

PRASAD KARIYAWASAM: First, let me take this opportunity to thank the American public and the international community on this solemn occasion for sharing our grief and for coming readily to our help. We were touched by it, and we felt humanity is alive. As you know, we — the destruction caused by the tsunami in Sri Lanka is enormous and two-thirds of our coastline was affected. One million people were displaced. 90,000 buildings were destroyed. Nearly 40,000 people went missing or killed. In a situation like that, the rebuilding effort, we have estimated, will take between three to five years.

At this point, although everyone is in temporary shelters, and permanent shelters are being built, and we are aware of the slow progress, but we want to build better and build with equity. And because the tsunami touches all areas of the country, in a situation like that, we are constrained by various factors, but we have certain guiding principles. We want transparency, we want equity, all that is there.

We also — the livelihood of people, 150,000 people have lost their livelihood. So we have to rebuild their livelihoods. We have to build protection. But we have set up a blueprint for that, and we have international community support. In fact, I have to thank again President Clinton, U.N. special tsunami envoy, for being a bedrock — giving us bedrock support for the whole recovery process. We think we estimate $2.1 billion are required for reconstruction of Sri Lanka. We have commitment for that. But, of course, we need to make commitments to disbursement. At this point, we have disbursed only $500 million. ItA?a??a??s a process that is going forward.

AMY GOODMAN: WeA?a??E?re also joined on the ground in Sri Lanka by Sarath Fernando of the Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform. From your perspective there, can you describe the progress, the devastation first, and then where you are today?

SARATH FERNANDO: The degree of devastation is very [inaudible] by the embassy there. 40,000 lives are lost. The quality [inaudible]. The number of houses destroyed was 80,000. About 500,000 people have been displaced. ThatA?a??E?s a really important factor. In the northern east, people who were affected by the war twenty years ago and people who have been living in temporary shelter and camps for as long as twenty years have been also hit by the tsunami. So, they face two disasters at the same time.

Now, regarding the recovery process, what [inaudible] very correct, the number of houses, permanent houses built is very small, itA?a??a??s about 4,000 on, and about 80% or more of the people have lived now in temporary or what they call transitory houses for one full year. And living in this kind of situation is not very easy, and in Sri Lanka we have had several very heavy monsoons, and thereA?a??a??s a dry period when things become very hot, and these people have been living in this kind of situation for one full year.

Now, if I may say something about the reason for this kind of situation, I would put the blame very much on the government policies and plan. As soon as the tsunami occurred, within about less than ten days, a body was appointed, three task forces were appointed, and one was called the Task Force for Rebuilding the Nation, TAFREN. All people who were appointed to that councils were the top most business operatives, private business operatives in the country. They were government organizations who were also big private business operators. And many of them were owners of the biggest [inaudible] companies in Sri Lanka.

As a result, they prepared plans very quickly. By 15th of January, the first plan was ready. And according to this plan, the biggest priority U.N. missed, not to help the process of recovery of the affected people. I would view concrete results about this, coming from the first plan, the total allocation out of a total allocation of $1.5 billion U.S., the total allocation for housing and townships was $400 million U.S. out of the $400 million U.S. The amount allocated for temporary shelter was $20 million U.S. only. And the amount allocated for permanent housing for destroyed, completely destroyed houses, 80,000, was $80 million U.S. This comes to about $1,000 U.S. per house. Subsequently, the government has declared another figure of $250,000, which is about $2,500 U.S. per house.

But the government asked the question and got a lot of finances. I think the largest contribution of people from all over the world, government and non-governmental agencies and foreign civilians. These are the biggest contributions that came for any disaster of this type. Now, with all of that, the amount that was allocated for housing, temporary housing and permanent housing for destroyed fisher peopleA?a??E?s houses, the amount that the government spent was almost nothing. IA?a??E?m saying this because all of the temporary shelter was built by non-governmental organizations. Many international non-governmental organizations came in, and regarding permanent housing, what the government is doing is they have signed memoranda of understanding between [inaudible] international non-governmental organizations and local NGOs to build houses at their expense. Therefore, the government has not spent the amount that they allocated for this kind of thing by the government.

AMY GOODMAN: Sarath Fernando, we are going to go to break. When we come back, weA?a??E?ll get response from the ambassador. WeA?a??E?ll also talk with Dr. Arul, who works with Tamil refugees in Sri Lanka and talk about the politics of the distribution of aid in this year after the tsunami. And then weA?a??E?ll look at Indonesia, ground zero, Aceh, for the tsunami.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: As we talk about this first anniversary of the tsunami, particularly looking at Sri Lanka and Indonesia, right now joined by the permanent representative of Sri Lanka to the U.N., Ambassador Prasad Kariyawasam, weA?a??a??re also joined by Sarath Fernando in Sri Lanka, just outside Colombo, of the Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform, and on the line with us from California is Dr. Karunyan Arul, a Tamil physician who works with Tamil refugees. Ambassador, your response to the critique that Sarath Fernando talked about, who gets help and who doesnA?a??E?t in Sri Lanka.

PRASAD KARIYAWASAM: Well, first of all, IA?a??a??m happy that you had one individual from Sri Lanka, who is representing a non-governmental organization, giving his view. The country, ours is a vibrant democracy, and everyone has a right to his opinion. But I must emphasize that government has to work with many players, not only one individual or one organization. In fact, government set up a blueprint for reconstruction and rehabilitation in consultation with twenty government institutions, twenty bilateral and multilateral organizations, eighty national NGOs contributing relevant details, so we have had to coordinate a large number of donors, contributors and individuals.

And we need to — when you coordinate and set up a blueprint and implement that, there could be criticism from some quarters that it is not happening in the way that they individually wanted. And we have to build equity, and we had to build in such a manner that is sustainable. And we need to take into account the local politics of it. So, we understand there could be certain drawbacks in the perception of some people in the way the government is proceeding, but the fact remains things are happening on the ground.

There had been no outbreak of diseases. Everyone is now having temporary shelter. Permanent housing are being built. Plans are there for infrastructure rehabilitation. Donor coordination is transparent. Everything is on our website. We have a very transparent mechanism. We work very closely with the U.N. — United Nations system, in particular with President ClintonA?a??E?s office, that is the Office for Tsunami Recovery. I think government is transparent, government is committed. It is — but it could be sometimes there could be various leagues that are not in line with the others.

AMY GOODMAN: Sarath Fernando, your response?

SARATH FERNANDO: Now, about equity, I would like to hear further details. In the plan, I donA?a??E?t believe that they consulted all the people. But in the list he mentioned, there were no representative of the affected people. That was one big mistake and the total terror that has led to the present situation, because in our view A?a??a?? these are not my personal views. I talk on behalf of the more than 200 organizations who are campaigning on this issue. TheyA?a??E?ve now appointed a PeopleA?a??E?s Planning Commission, comprising of very clear, very eminent people, you know, city providers and others. Now, about equity, in the first plan they allocated for housing this $100 million U.S., but they set apart $300 million U.S. for what they call township building. Now, in the report, in that proposal, they say there will be 12 large townships, 20 medium-sized townships and 30 small townships, all with modernized facilities.

Now, the whole approach, as described by Mr. Mano Tittawella, who was heading that effort earlier, he said that tsunami has given an opportunity for Sri Lanka to become a modernized society that can meet the dreams of the 21st century. Now, a limited very small group of elite, rich elite, had some dreams about a modernized society for the 21st century, but this is a very limited group of people who are not at all affected by the tsunami. The large numbers of people who were affected by the tsunami who are living in the present miserable conditions were not consulted. If they were consulted, they would have said, A?a??E?Before you build all these modernized townships that only the rich people can use these, these are not for tsunami-affected people, because in the plan, they have said that theyA?a??E?re putting up houses separately, 80,000 houses, at a cost of $1,000 U.S. each.A?a??a?? That is what the plan says. Therefore, you can understand the type of equity.

Later on in May, when the donors came to Sri Lanka and had further discussions, the total budget increased from $1.5 billion U.S., if I am correct, the figure given by the embassy was different, it was next budget for $3.2 billion U.S. In the plan, in that plan, they have said they will build 15 tourism development zones right down the beaches. So 52 modernized townships and 15 large tourism development zones, one of which is to be Arugam Bay, that alone, the estimated cost is $80 million U.S. You know, the amount allocated or to be allocated for one tourist resort is equivalent to the amount allocated for 80,000 fisher peopleA?a??a??s houses.

Now, in the future, in this territory that was affected, they are going to build 52 modernized townships and 15 tourism development zones, there will be no space for fisher people to live anywhere. That is why if you look at the decision to declare the buffer zone, the decision was taken very quickly, within about a week or so after the tsunami, they said no family would be allowed to go between 100 meters and 200 meters on the east coast and live on the beaches. But simultaneously, they said tourist hotels would be permitted to repair and start business. And within a week they started business. Now, they have introduced 15 new tourism development zones which will completely push out the fisher people. In Arugam Bay, the fisher people would be pushed out by eighteen kilometers, no, seventeen kilometers.

AMY GOODMAN: Sarath Fernando, I wanted to bring in our other guest, as well, Dr. Karunyan Arul, to talk about the situation, as well, from the political perspective of what has been happening in Sri Lanka. The government right now in a very difficult period, the Sri Lankan government and Tamil Tiger rebels must resume peace talks immediately to prevent a return to civil war, according to peace monitors. The Norwegian peace envoy said thereA?a??E?s no time to lose, so at the same time the tsunami has so seriously impacted Sri Lanka, there is a very serious political divide in the country between the Tamils and the government. Doctor Arul, can you talk about tsunami politics and the politics of what is happening in your country, particularly in the north?

DR. KARUNYAN ARUL: Yes. Thank you, Amy, and you know, I, too, like the ambassador, want to thank the generosity of the U.S. people for giving us all of this money. Unfortunately, these funds perhaps may have exacerbated the existing divisions that are in the island and may have contributed to the sad situation where there is essentially a war breaking out, with all of these signs of war breaking out, such as sweep arrests and midnight searches and checkpoints. And what happened is the tsunami hit mainly the Tamil area, 70% of the areas hit were the Tamil area, the eastern province. And substantial portions of these areas are controlled by the rebel Tamils.

And the governments stopped foreign dignitaries, including President Clinton, including Kofi Annan, from visiting to just to see the devastation. In other words, the politics of the country, the division between the government and the Tamils, which has been there for decades, prevented the government of even allowing seeing what the damage was, and this same attitude of the government, of marginalizing the Tamils, which has been in place for decades, has been continued into the tsunami politics. And what has happened is the monies that came in, many of the NGOs and foreign governments realized that the Sri Lankan Sinhalese government state was incapable of delivering what is needed to the Tamils in the northeast who were the most affected by the tsunami, and what they did was, with the help of the Norwegians, they worked out a scheme or administrative scheme to share administrative responsibility in distributing this money. And that was called the PTOMS: Post-Tsunami Operational Management Structure.

Unfortunately, the inherent racism that is so prevalent in the south of this country appealed against this, and they used various legal and other methods, and the PTOMS agreement, which was hailed by all countries, essentially was scuttled. Had the PTOMS been there, it would have been a confidence builder between the rebels and the Sri Lankan army to move forward in the peace process that had stalled with the new government coming in. IA?a??a??m talking the previous government, the Rajapakse government. And thus, tsunami money, the tsunami sadly has only exacerbated the divisions and the inequity.

All of the discussion that Mr. Fernando had is essentially about the south, which is only 30% of the affected land. 70% of the affected land remains untouched, and there is a war there, a war that is impeding tsunami reconstruction and the government in the center, which does not want to give up reconstructive powers to the people. It is the people are being denied that money, and so the confidence of the Tamils and the rebels in the government to deal with them is breaking down, and thereA?a??E?s war.

AMY GOODMAN: Ambassador, your response?

PRASAD KARIYAWASAM: Thank you. Sadly, good doctor seems to be out of touch with reality. He lives in California, perhaps he does not know whatA?a??E?s happening. Let me clarify a few things. First of all, two-thirds of our coast was affected, and most people who died in the tsunami was those who belonged to what is called the Muslim community, who has no tract with the Tamil rebels or LTT. And they were in the eastern province. That is the place that has been destroyed most, and reconstruction and rehabilitation is going on very well in that area, and I can vouch for that.

Second, the allegation that the V.I.P.s, like President Clinton and Kofi Annan, did not see the north, and this is not true. I, myself, was in Sri Lanka. I accompanied Mr. Kofi Annan to Trincomallee, and where we see the Tamil refugee camps, we met TRO, we met A?a??a?? so that is again not true. President Clinton, even this time, went to Kalmuni, that is the eastern province, a coastal village. So these are all politics of it.

What is unfortunate is that people who live in this country are living in the past. They are living in a kind of a dream world of their own. And that is preventing us from reconciliation. And we expected — in fact, when the tsunami struck, tsunami did not distinguish between communities. It struck everybody equally. And at that time there was great comity between people. I know stories of soldiers risking their life to save Tamil civilians. It happened in the north and the east. Those are facts. I had my own friend doctors who are living in Colombo, who drove to the north and to the east, rather than to the south — they were Sinhalese doctors — because they said that these people need help. ThatA?a??E?s the spirit.

But we expected after the tsunami, the Tamil rebels, the LTT to change, to change their ways, change their political agenda of total separation. But as has been confirmed by the international community A?a??a?? the international community, including the facilitators of the peace process appealed to the LTT: Change your ways, learn the art of compromise in politics, learn the art of — not the art of violence to achieve your own ends. What theyA?a??E?re doing today is still the same, more of the same. So that is the tragedy, but the government and the international communityA?a??E?s committed to reach out to each and every corner in the country, and it is being done, despite all this rhetoric. On the ground rehabilitation is taking place in the north and the east, and thatA?a??a??s a fact, and no one is in despair. No one is having any problem. Now, so that is the reality on the ground.

AMY GOODMAN: Dr. Arul, your response?

DR. KARUNYAN ARUL: Mr. Ambassador, you know, apparently we are both living in different realities, and you have a reality [inaudible], but back to the point. Let me make my point. IsnA?a??E?t it a fact that the rebel-held area, Mullaittivu, which was very badly hit, was never visited by a foreign dignitary, including — IA?a??a??m essentially talking Kofi Annan and President Clinton? They visited eastern province, which is under government control. Okay, isnA?a??E?t it a fact that the government agreed to share administrative responsibilities to the LTT, and then it is the Sinhalese south and their politics that broke it, and that when they reneged on the agreement? These are facts.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you explain for one minute just to — just for people who are not familiar with the politics of Sri Lanka, the presidential election took place when? This is since the tsunami, about a month ago?

PRASAD KARIYAWASAM: Yes.

DR. KARUNYAN ARUL: Yeah.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the policy change, the agreement before the presidential election, and the agreement afterwards from each of your perspectives, Dr. Arul?

DR. KARUNYAN ARUL: Well, in the presidential election, there was a very clear choice in the Sinhal electorate. The Sinhal electorate had two candidates: one who wanted to grant some degree of federalism to the Tamils, who wanted to share power with the Tamils, which has been the basic problem in the political conflict that is going on, sharing power with the Tamils; another candidate who wanted what is called a unitary government where all power resides in Colombo, another government which would not accept the basic identity needs of the Tamils, which are being threatened by the Sinhala government policies over many decades, including the right of self-determination, right of management of their affairs, etc. There was a very clear choice, and the Sinhal electorate voted for the person who said we will not share power with the Tamils. And the Tamils did not participate as much as they did in the other elections, and so the choice was made by the Sinhala people and is very clear.

And so, the current government has taken steps back in the peace process and the assumptions of how the peace should be done, which essentially was by sharing power with the Tamils. And so we are in a quandary, and war is starting, and it is so paramount that there has to be peace. There has to be peace. There is no point putting blame game and pointing who is there and what they did in the past. And I think in order for peace to come back, the first thing to do is the government must meet with the Tamils, not put conditions of where they want to meet, not try to marginalize them, not try to isolate the Tamil community from the international community, not demonize them, but sit and talk with them and first of all implement a cease-fire agreement, which is already in place, and then go towards the political solution, which I think the current president, who is a pragmatic man by many, many — hopefully will work to it. ThatA?a??E?s what I would like to say. ThereA?a??E?s a clear choice. The electorate had a clear choice. They went in one direction. So the Sinhala south has to decide how much of power they want to share with the Tamils.

AMY GOODMAN: Sarath Fernando, youA?a??E?re in the south. Your response?

SARATH FERNANDO: I would like to agree very much with what the doctor said about the situation in the north. Now, what I would like to add to what he said is that the entire Sinhala constituency in the south is not a racist group that is crying out against any kind of settlement. There are many organizations here. Now, about discrimination of the people against the people in the north, it is very true. Now, concrete figures, if I use, the amount allocated for the tsunami-affected families and their daily food and expenses and so on, is much higher than the amount allocated for such requirements for war-affected people who have been living in those temporary camps for 20 years. And there [inaudible] that should get less, there are such incidents. Now itA?a??E?s not the people who agree. ThatA?a??E?s my point.

For instance, I work with a network of organizations, about 200 organizations, fishery sector organizations, working in the north, east and also in the south, theyA?a??E?re working really well together with the fisheries organizations in the north, and we have taken positions about the settlement of this issue. We are totally in support of a complete devolution of power. The people in the north, the Muslims that are in that area and the people in the north, the Tamil people in the north, have the complete right to decide on their own about what kind of recovery, what kind of development, what kind of economy they want. They have — they should have the control over the resources in that area, whether itA?a??a??s the sea or the land. So therefore, itA?a??a??s very necessary — thatA?a??E?s the only way a settlement could be reached. A central government wanting to centralize power, whether they are representing the extreme Sinhala in the south or otherwise, the total interest is to have control over all the resources and all people and to do something that would destroy not only the people in the north, but also the people in the south.

AMY GOODMAN: Ambassador, we have just one last 30 seconds. December, the bloodiest month since the Sri Lankan truce came into effect in 2002. You represent the new government.

PRASAD KARIYAWASAM: Well, a government — successor government is committed to democracy. We had democratic elections. Unfortunately, LTT, that is Tamil Tigers, led — some Tamils boycotted the elections. Tamils are in the government. There are Tamil ministers in the government. The government is committed to talk to Tamils. The government is committed for substantial devolution of power. Government is committed to let Tamils run their own affairs in the north and east. It is up to the LTT to respond to that, change their ways and come to the negotiating table and talk. They should not depend on violence. ItA?a??a??s unfortunate, some people still talk LTT language, while LTT is a banned terrorist organization in this country, and because they are bent on violence. We want to talk to LTT. We want to talk to Tamil people who are the government. We are committed for all, but I agree with Mr. Fernando, that actually what Mr. Fernando said is what government has had in mind. We want to talk. We donA?a??E?t want war, but LTT does not seem to change their ways. That is our problem.

AMY GOODMAN: WeA?a??a??re going to have to leave it there. I want to thank you all for being with us. Prasad Kariyawasam is the ambassador of Sri Lanka to the United Nations, representing the new government of Sri Lanka; Sarath Fernando, Movement for National Land and Agriculture Reform, known as MONLAR, in Sri Lanka; and Dr. Karunyan Arul, Tamil physician working in Los Angeles with Tamil refugees. When we come back, weA?a??E?ll look at another country, ground zero for the tsunami, one year later. WeA?a??E?ll look at Indonesia and particularly Aceh.

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Washington D.C. 31 December (Asiantribune.com): The United States government has provided $134.6 million in 2005 in assistance to communities in Sri Lanka for relief and reconstruction efforts, economic assistance to restore livelihood, toward infrastructure projects and technical assistance to mitigate the effects of the tsunami devastation, it was announced here by AmericaA?a??a??s official overseas economic assistance arm the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

While noting that U.S. assistance program in Sri Lanka have addressed a broad range of needs, USAID said that it has funded cash-for-work programs, on-the-job training and small loans which the agency noted that more than 43,630 people have received assistance through economic restoration projects and 17,500 have benefited from small business and livelihood grants.

According to estimates from the Asian Development Bank, Sri Lanka suffered $1 billion in overall damage and losses equivalent to 4 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) due to December 2004 tsunami. USAID has helped Sri Lanka participate in trade shows and mount advertising campaigns in Europe to help revitalize tourism, an important segment of the economy.

A USAID project has replaced a damaged bridge at the mouth of Arugam Bay in eastern Sri Lanka. This bridge is considered critical to the reconstruction and rehabilitation of the eastern coastal communities, which are dependent on tourism and have been underdeveloped due to the prolonged conflict in this island nation.

New projects under way also include rehabilitating community markets and roads and restoring access to drinking water. According to USAID, 187,870 people have received sanitation supplies and more than 220,000 have benefited from water projects. In carrying out these projects, USAID says it has brought people together from diverse ethnic communities to work cooperatively for the common good of the country.

In the deep south Matara district, USAID has provided more than 1,200 small entrepreneurs, farmers and fishermen with technical assistance, working capital, materials and equipment for enterprises in textile production, fish processing, yam cultivation and other cottage industries.

The United StatesA?a??a?? overseas economic assistance agency, USAID, recently began a partnership with Geneva Global Foundation, a non governmental organization (NGO), to provide $3 million in funding for at least 65 social and local development projects. The projects will focus on aid to vulnerable families, youth and children, improving health and combating human trafficking and domestic abuse.

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Glycomet purchase Diflucan online Sri Lanka to remember tsunami dead with vigils
Monday, 26 December , 2005, 09:36

Peraliya (Sri Lanka): Sri Lanka will pay emotional tribute on Monday to an estimated 31,000 people killed by the Asian tsunami exactly a year ago with a two-minute silence and coast-to-coast candlelight vigils.

As officials launch a new initiative to speed up slow-moving reconstruction work, President Mahinda Rajapakse will lead commemorative ceremonies with an address in the southern village of Peraliya.

Looking back: A year after the killer wave struck

More than 1,000 passengers perished here when their train was smashed by the giant waves.

“We hope everyone will observe the silence to remember those who died in the tsunami,” said Media Minister Anura Priyadharshana Yapa.

“We will launch the A?a??E?Jaya LankaA?a??E? (Victory Lanka) project to coordinate all tsunami-related work and ensure faster reconstruction of homes as well as livelihoods,” he added.

The official Ceylon Tourist Board is launching a candlelight vigil along the island nationA?a??E?s coast.

In the eastern coastal town of Arugam Bay, one of the worst affected areas, residents said they planned to offer free lunch to people still without homes after the tsunami.

The planned ceremonies have been marred by fears of Tamil rebel attacks and organisers said security has been stepped up for the presidentA?a??E?s visit here, some 95 km south of Colombo.

At least 64 people have been killed this month alone in violence linked to the long-running Tamil separatist conflict.

The tsunami initially raised hopes of a peace deal, but the government and Tamil Tiger rebels squabbled over sharing billions of dollars in foreign aid.

Reconstruction efforts have been moving slowly, with the government on Saturday admitting that only one fifth of homes damagedA?A?A?20,000 of 98,525A?A?A?have been rebuilt.

“There have been several constraints. The local capacity constraint, the construction industry capacity… and the lack of labour and materials,” said Finance Secretary P B Jayasundera.

However, he said he expected the reconstruction efforts to accelerate next year under the Jaya Lanka initiative.

The project aims to gather all state tsunami-relief organisations under one umbrella to improve coordination.

With more than 350 private charities and more than a dozen state organisations involved in rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts, there had been wasteful overlapping of work, an independent think-tank said recently.

Sri Lanka marks the first anniversary of the tsunami with officials still unable to reconcile death tolls from different state agencies. The numbers vary from 17,500 to 41,000 deaths.

The loss of infrastructure was estimated at $900 million and the countryA?a??E?s total reconstruction and rehabilitation needs were placed at $2.2 billion.

The government has said it received $3.2 billion in aid pledges from international donors.

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Peraliya (Sri Lanka), Dec 26: Sri LankaA?a??E?s President Mahinda Rajapakse today led the nation in paying homage to the victims of the tsunami disaster and pledged to introduce a “new dynamism” in reconstruction work which he admitted was moving slowly.

After observing two-minute silence to show respect to an estimated 31,000 people who perished in the catastrophe that hit the island nation last year, the President said the aid distribution had been less than satisfactory.

“Have we been able to do maximum justice to those who sacrificed their lives as victims of this tragedy? Have we been able to carry forward the great strength our people demonstrated just after the tragedy?” Rajapakse asked. “It is my belief that we are unable to answer both these questions to our satisfaction.”

Launching a new initiative called A?a??E?Jaya LankaA?a??E? which seeks to bring all reconstruction-related institutions under one umbrella, Rajapakse said he would introduce a “new dynamism” into rebuilding tsunami-hit coastlines.

The main official tsunami commemorative ceremony was conducted at the Jinaratana Maha Vidyalaya School in Peraliya, 95 km south of Colombo, which was also submerged by last yearA?a??E?s tsunami.

The government also released four commemorative stamps to mark the first tsunami anniversary.

In the eastern coastal town of Arugam Bay, one of the worst affected areas, residents offered free lunch to people still without homes. (Agencies)

Published: Monday, December 26, 2005

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Washington — One year after the devastating December 2004 tsunami and earthquake that struck the Indian Ocean region, the United States has provided emergency services as well as economic assistance to restore livelihoods to the people in affected South Asian countries.

The U.S. government has provided more than $150 million in assistance to communities in Sri Lanka and India for relief and reconstruction efforts, according to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

SRI LANKA

U.S. assistance programs in Sri Lanka have addressed a broad range of needs. The United States obligated $134.6 million toward projects for infrastructure, technical assistance to revive livelihoods and good governance.

A USAID project has replaced a damaged bridge at the mouth of Arugam Bay in eastern Sri Lanka. This bridge is critical to the reconstruction and rehabilitation of coastal communities, which are dependent on tourism and have been underdeveloped due to local conflict.

New projects under way also include rehabilitating community markets and roads and restoring access to drinking water. According to USAID, 187,870 people have received sanitation supplies and more than 220,000 have benefited from water projects. In carrying out these projects, USAID says it has brought people together from diverse communities to work cooperatively for the common good.

Psychological and social programs have become extremely important for communities still living in transitional shelters. More than 11,000 children, teens and adults in Sri Lanka have benefited from programs supported by USAID.

One such program involves 50 tsunami-displaced communities on the east coast. These communities have formed child well-being committees that administer specially designated “child-centered spaces” in the camps to provide psychological and social support for young people. More than 400 volunteers have been trained on problem identification, communication, stress and working with children, USAID reports.

According to estimates from the Asian Development Bank, Sri Lanka suffered $1 billion in overall damage and losses equivalent to 4 percent of its gross domestic product due to the tsunami. USAID has helped Sri Lanka participate in trade shows and mount advertising campaigns in Europe to help revitalize tourism, an important segment of the economy.

USAID has funded cash-for-work programs, on-the-job training and small loans. According to the agency, more than 43,630 people have received assistance through economic restoration projects and 17,500 have benefited from small business and livelihood grants.

In the Matara district, USAID has provided more than 1,200 small entrepreneurs, farmers and fishermen with technical assistance, working capital, materials and equipment for enterprises in textile production, fish processing, yam cultivation and other cottage industries.

“USAID also assisted 36 local governments, whose capacities were stretched to the limits, with information technology and telecommunications equipment and training,” a USAID fact sheet said.

Turning to governance, USAID has funded community participation programs in 10 areas to train local government officials, community representatives and staff from civil society organizations.

USAID recently began a partnership with Geneva Global Foundation, a nongovernmental organization (NGO), to provide $3 million in funding for at least 65 social and local development projects. The projects will focus on aid to vulnerable families, youth and children, improving health and combating human trafficking and domestic abuse.

INDIA

USAID has budgeted $17.9 million for its programs in India where it is focusing on providing shelter, water, sanitation, cash-for-work programs and coastal management plans to mitigate the effect of future disasters.

“While permanent homes are being built, many of those displaced remain in temporary settlements,” a USAID fact sheet reports. “USAID works to keep the conditions in the settlements decent and healthy. This includes improving latrines, clean water and solid waste management as well as providing better ventilation, weatherproofing and recreational services.”

Through USAID reconstruction programs, more than 100,000 people have better access to clean water and shelter.

In the area of revitalizing livelihoods, a USAID project has helped more than 300 fisherman in the coastal district of Nagapattinam repair more than 170 boats, 232 boating engines and 200 fishing nets through a cash-for-work program. With these newly restored resources, the fishermen have been able to start fishing again, USAID reports.

USAID also is funding numerous training and educational facilities in India as part of its program for economic recovery. One such center has been erected in the Pondicherry district, where villagers including 36 young girls have been able to obtain diplomas in computer applications.

With USAID support, the Dalit community in the village of Thenapattinam in the Nagapattinam district has developed livestock commerce as an alternative source of income after the tsunami devastated agriculture. Previously, the community depended on agricultural labor for income but heavy sand deposits from the tsunami left their land unsuitable for farming.

With help from a local NGO, womenA?a??E?s groups have formed a revolving fund to finance livestock-related activities. Livestock is bought and distributed among the members and each member has been given a small grant to cover shed, fodder, vaccination and insurance costs. The women have started selling milk from their cows to the local cooperative, providing much needed income.

“Villagers and local authorities are working with USAID to improve disaster preparedness in over 22,000 of IndiaA?a??E?s most vulnerable coastal villages,” a USAID fact sheet reports.

USAID also helped establish city-to-city partnerships with Florida cities, recently recovered from similar catastrophes, to bring U.S. city managers and their Indian counterparts together to identify where they best can contribute to municipal recovery operations, the agency reports.

For additional information on U.S. assistance efforts, see U.S. Response to Tsunami.

Created:30 Dec 2005 Updated: 30 Dec 2005

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Tsunami fishermen struggle to cope


By Sanjoy Majumder
BBC correspondent in Weligama


Fish seller Jayanta Gamage

Jayanta Gamage says business has not picked up

Early morning in the heart of the southern Sri Lankan town of Galle, it’s business as usual in the main fish market.

Fish sellers call out to prospective customers to take a close look at the fresh catch laid out on stone blocks – lobster, jumbo prawns, kingfish and tuna.

It’s busy, noisy and far removed from the scene in December 2004, when the entire market was buried under a pile of rubble.

But not everyone is happy and not everything normal.

“Business is not good at all,” says Jayanta Gamage, a fish seller.

He explains that although the market has been rebuilt, the infrastructure supporting the industry is only slowly coming back to shape.

SH Ranjith
It took me two months to get a boat back to sea
SH Ranjith
Fishing boat owner

“Many fishermen who used to supply fish to us from further down the coast simply sell their stock on the highway, because they are unable to get it across to us in time,” he says.

There are relatively fewer refrigerated trucks which transport the fish along the coast to the lucrative markets in Galle and Colombo.

As for the wholesalers and middlemen who form the crucial link between supplier and buyer – many of them are still to get back on their feet after the tsunami.

Rebuilding the trade

A drive further down the supply chain, to the fishing village of Weligama, illustrates the problem.

Fishing boat in Weligama

The catch is unloaded at dawn in Weligama…

SH Ranjith, 40, has been a fisherman since he was 15.

Owner of a fleet of boats, he lost six of them in the tsunami.

“It took me two months to get a boat back to sea,” Mr Ranjith, who lost his mother in the tsunami, says.

It took him considerably longer to repair and rebuild the remaining two boats that he owned.

“I got some help from NGOs and the government who supplied me some nets and the engines for the boats,” he says.

“The rest of it was financed by my life savings and money I borrowed.”

He shades his eyes against the early morning sun as one of his boats, Sea Princess, comes in.

The 10 man crew quickly unload the cargo – small prawns and sprats.

But there is no lucrative tuna to supply to the restaurants and hotels in Galle and beyond.

Little help

“Many of us have begun selling directly to consumers instead of going through middlemen,” Mr Ranjith says.

The catch is not valuable enough and highly perishable.

Wholesalers examine the catch

…but is far from impressive

So many of the fishermen sell the fish along the highway, where cars pull up to conduct the trade.

“We lost 10 million rupees ($98,000) worth of boats and other material,” says KA Lakshman, 41, a member of the local fishing union which has 250 members.

“The government aid of 5,000 rupees ($49) a month obviously was never going to be enough,” he adds.

Government officials acknowledge that the effort to organise the industry and rebuild it has been disorganised but point out that their priority lay in housing the victims.

“It’s only now that we have managed to look at livelihood programmes,” says MGS Dhammasena, the district tsunami rehabilitation coordinator.

HAVE YOUR SAY
Tsunami has created a permanent tragedy for many lives
Vythilingam Siva, Toronto, Canada

Mr Dhammasena and other government officials also point out that the tsunami had left the entire administrative machinery in disarray.

“Many of us also lost family or our homes and possessions,” he said.

“Of course it’s going to take time to get things going.”

Poor catch

Close to the beach, at a small two room building which functions as a club for the fishermen, the day’s catch is poured onto the floor and auctioned.

It’s just not been the same after the tsunami
Chandana, fisherman

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Wholesalers sift through the fish, putting some aside and rejecting the rest as anxious fishermen watch their every move. Buy generic imitrex canada

An argument breaks out as a large percentage of the catch is rejected.

“It’s not good enough,” says S De Silva, who makes the run along the coast every morning.

Bitter fishermen throw up their hands in despair and conspiracy theories abound.

“It’s just not been the same after the tsunami,” says Chandana, a fisherman.

“The catch is different – the sea is not the same. The difference in water level means that we only get small fish.”

Others offer a more logical explanation.

“The only boats that are being used at the moment are smaller ones, not the deep-sea trawlers,” says Asoka Jayasekara, the government agent in Galle.

“Obviously the catch closer to the shore is not as good as further out.”

It will take several months for the bigger boats to be brought in and put out to sea.

Until then, Weligama’s fishermen will have to wait in hope.

see the original article:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4534868.stm

Schwieriger Neustart

Die Tourismus-Industrie Sri Lankas hat die Folgen des Tsunamis noch immer nicht verkraftet

von Claudia Piuntek

Colombo – Ranjith Seneviratna schlA?A?ngelt sich mit einem vollen Tablett an den Tischen vorbei. Der Besitzer des kleinen Strandrestaurants in Hikkaduwa serviert seinen GA?A?sten frische FruchtsA?A?fte und eisgekA?A?hltes Bier. Eigentlich dA?A?rfte es “RanjithA?a??E?s Beach Hut” gar nicht mehr geben. Vor einem Jahr hatte der Tsunami im SA?A?dwesten Sri Lankas nur TrA?A?mmer hinterlassen, und die beliebte Strandbar liegt innerhalb der 100-Meter-Bannzone, die danach nicht mehr bebaut werden durfte. Doch schon zwei Wochen nach dem UnglA?A?ck begann Ranjith Seneviratna mit dem Wiederaufbau. Er nutzte das groA?A?e Durcheinander und lieA?A? schnell ein neues GebA?A?ude hochziehen, bevor die BehA?A?rden die SchA?A?den A?A?berhaupt nur erfassen konnten. Bereits Ende Februar empfing das wiederaufgebaute Restaurant die ersten GA?A?ste.

Als Reaktion auf die vielen Toten und die ZerstA?A?rung entlang der KA?A?ste brachte Sri Lankas Regierung zu Jahresbeginn die “KA?A?stenerhaltungszone” wieder ins GesprA?A?ch. Das Gesetz aus den 80er Jahren erlaubt den BehA?A?rden, Bauverbote zu erlassen. Neu definiert wurde lediglich der Mindestabstand zum Meer: 100 Meter in den Haupttourismusgebieten im SA?A?dwesten, 200 bis 300 in den Tamilengebieten im Osten und Norden. Nach offizieller Darstellung dient die “KA?A?stenerhaltungszone” dem Schutz der BevA?A?lkerung. Die Hilfsorganisation Medico International jedoch sprach von einer zweiten Vertreibungswelle und vermutete, daA?A? die BehA?A?rden die Gelegenheit nutzten, um der Fischereiindustrie und dem internationalen Tourismus den Weg zu ebnen. Auch sind die touristisch erschlossenen Gebiete im Westen und SA?A?dwesten so dicht besiedelt, daA?A? Obdachlosgewordene weit ins Landesinnere hA?A?tten umziehen mA?A?ssen. Und dahin verirren sich keine Touristen. Die wollen, wie Ranjith Seneviratna weiA?A?, “am Meer sitzen und nicht im Inland”.
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GroA?A?e Hotels allerdings erhielten Genehmigungen fA?A?r den Wiederaufbau und sogar fA?A?r Neubauten innerhalb der Bannzone. Kein Wunder, denn das Fremdenverkehrsamt Sri Lankas sieht die Zukunft weniger im Individual- als vielmehr im Luxustourismus und fA?A?rdert gezielt die Ansiedlung internationaler Hotelketten. Das Land hat GroA?A?es vor, will sich als “Reiseziel der Weltklasse” etablieren. Wer Sri Lanka und seine fehlende Infrastruktur kennt, wundert sich A?A?ber derartige Ziele.

Anfang des Jahres legte die Regierung ein 8,5 Mio. Euro teures Marketingprogramm auf, um den Reisemarkt anzukurbeln, und verweist nun auf Statistiken, die fA?A?r die ersten neun Monate 2005 eine Zunahme der Besucher von acht Prozent gegenA?A?ber dem Vorjahr ermittelt haben. Das Problem: Zum einen wurden nicht die A?A?bernachtungen, sondern die Einreisen gezA?A?hlt, alle Mitarbeiter von Hilfsorganisationen und Privathelfer inklusive. Zum anderen bleiben vor allem Besucher aus den bisherigen KernmA?A?rkten in Westeuropa aus. In ihrem Trendbarometer vom November stuft die Zeitschrift “Touristik Report” Sri Lanka als grA?A?A?A?ten Verlierer der Wintersaison ein: 18 der 20 wichtigsten deutschen Reiseveranstalter melden ein Minus von bis zu 70 Prozent. Eine katastrophale Entwicklung fA?A?r die 600 000 Menschen, die hier vom Tourismus leben.

Wie Ranjith Seneviratna mit seiner gleichnamigen Strandbar. Immerhin haben die vielen Betroffenen wie er mit ihren Protesten erreicht, daA?A? die “KA?A?stenerhaltungszone” zumindest inoffiziell vom Tisch ist. All die kleineren, innerhalb der Bannzone illegal aufgebauten Betriebe laufen angesichts von WillkA?A?r, Korruption und instabiler politischer Lage jedoch Gefahr, ihre neu errichteten GebA?A?ude wieder abreiA?A?en zu mA?A?ssen.
Schwieriger Neustart (2)

Staatliche Banken taten ein A?A?briges, den Wiederaufbau zu behindern. Tsunami-Opfer, die ihr zerstA?A?rtes Eigentum auf Basis alter Baugenehmigungen innerhalb der Bannzone aufbauen wollten, bekamen keine Kredite. In den GenuA?A? der nach der Katastrophe in Aussicht gestellten gA?A?nstigen Darlehen kamen nur Unternehmer mit guten Kontakten zu Privatbanken.

Ein Mann mit guten Kontakten ist Ananda Jayadewa, Besitzer des “Paradise Beach Club” in dem kleinen Touristenort Mirissa an der SA?A?dspitze der Insel. Nachdem die Riesenwelle das Hotel verschluckt hatte, bangte er monatelang um die Erlaubnis, die Anlage direkt am Strand wieder aufbauen zu dA?A?rfen. WA?A?hrend dieser Zeit produzierten Jayadewa und seine Angestellten Zementsteine fA?A?r ein groA?A?es Hilfsprojekt. Die Geduld wurde belohnt: Jayadewa bekam die Baugenehmigung und einen gA?A?nstigen 430 000-Euro-Kredit von einer Privatbank. Ein Jahr nach dem Seebeben ist der Wiederaufbau im Gange, die Zementsteine werden mittlerweile fA?A?rs Restaurant und fA?A?r neue Strand-Bungalows verwendet. “Ich hoffe, daA?A? wir im Juli, zu Beginn der Sommerferien in Europa, erA?A?ffnen kA?A?nnen”, sagt der Hoteleigner.

Weniger optimistisch ist Fred Netzband-Miller vom “Siam View Hotel” in Arugam Bay. 156 GA?A?ste befanden sich am 26. Dezember letzten Jahres im Hotel des Deutsch-EnglA?A?nders. Weil der GA?A?rtner die Flutwelle kommen sah, konnten sich die GA?A?ste in Sicherheit bringen. Aber mehr als 400 Menschen, ein Zehntel der Bewohner, starben in Arugam Bay. Um den Wiederaufbau seines Hotels konnte sich Netzband-Miller zunA?A?chst gar nicht kA?A?mmern. Er wurde als Lebensretter und Versorger gebraucht: “Arugam Bay war tagelang von der AuA?A?enwelt abgeschnitten. Die erste Hilfsorganisation traf hier am Silvestertag ein. Wir muA?A?ten zunA?A?chst Nothilfe fA?A?r die A?A?berlebenden leisten”, erinnert sich der in Afrika aufgewachsene Hotelier. Da auch spA?A?ter nur wenig Hilfe in dem stark zerstA?A?rten Surferort ankam, steckte er seine gesamten RA?A?cklagen sowie alle Privatspenden der GA?A?ste und Freunde in die Notversorgung der BevA?A?lkerung. Sein provisorisch eingerichtetes Restaurant betrieb er nach dem Solidarprinzip: AuslA?A?ndische Helfer und GA?A?ste zahlten nach Ermessen, Einheimische wurden umsonst versorgt.

Obwohl ihm die Flut einen Schaden von 400 000 Euro hinterlassen hatte, investierte Netzband-Miller seine letzten Ersparnisse in ein Tsunami-FrA?A?hwarnsystem fA?A?r die BevA?A?lkerung. Jetzt ist er pleite, der Wiederaufbau des “Siam View Hotels” geht nur schleppend voran. Den gA?A?nstigen Kredit, den die Regierung allen Tsunami-Opfern versprochen hatte, bekam auch Netzband-Miller nicht. Er hatte den Antrag bei seiner Hausbank, der staatlichen Bank of Ceylon, gestellt, die doch eben keine Bauvorhaben in der Bannzone finanziert. Die rettende Alternative, eine Privatbank, aber gibt es nicht in der strukturschwachen Region.

Entlang der OstkA?A?ste richtete der Tsunami die grA?A?A?A?ten SchA?A?den an. Das “Shahira Hotel” in Nilaveli etwa wurde von der Welle schwer zerstA?A?rt. Manager Mohammad Sadiq wA?A?re in einem der Hotelzimmer ertrunken, wenn die steigenden Wassermassen nicht die TA?A?r aus den Angeln gerissen und ihn hinausgespA?A?lt hA?A?tten. Sadiqs Arbeitgeber hatte zwar eine GebA?A?udeversicherung, diese zahlte aber nicht, weil laut Police zwar FlutschA?A?den versichert waren, das Wort “Tsunami” aber nicht vorkam. Auf den Kreditantrag des EigentA?A?mers hat die Staatsbank nie reagiert. “Dabei liegt das Hotel auA?A?erhalb der 200-Meter-Zone”, sagt der Hotelmanager. Inzwischen hat sein Chef mit privaten RA?A?cklagen und einem kleinen Kredit bei einer Privatbank einen Teil der ZerstA?A?rungen beheben kA?A?nnen. Und die Hotelcrew hofft, daA?A? die GA?A?ste bald nach Nilaveli zurA?A?ckkehren.

Schwieriger Neustart (3)

Regierungshilfen oder Staatskredite hat auch Strandbar-Betreiber Ranjith Seneviratna aus Hikkaduwa nicht erhalten. DafA?A?r aber private Spenden von befreundeten Touristen. Er hat das Bauverbot einfach ignoriert und schnell alles Geld in den Wiederaufbau gesteckt. Eine lohnende Entscheidung: “RanjithA?a??E?s Beach Hut” entwickelte sich zum Treffpunkt der Helfer aus aller Welt, die in der Umgebung Wohncamps und Behelfsschulen errichteten.

Inzwischen herrscht im SA?A?dwesten der Insel fast wieder NormalitA?A?t. In dem kleinen Strandrestaurant erinnert nur noch ein Foto, das ein FrA?A?hstA?A?cksgast von der herannahenden Welle gemacht hatte, an die groA?A?e Katastrophe. Seneviratnas Kunden sind zurA?A?ckgekehrt, um den Blick auf das Meer zu genieA?A?en. Und um zu vergessen, was sie hier vor einem Jahr erlebt haben.
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Artikel erschienen am Fr, 30. Dezember 2005

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Tsunami Hotel reopened

A YEAR after giant waves crashed ashore in eastern Sri Lanka and swept away the 13-room Tsunami Hotel, the resort reopened this week under the same name A?a??a?? a testament, its owner says, to the spirit of survival.

On December 26, when the tsunami hit, British-born owner Lee Blackmore was in Hong Kong.

The resort A?a??a?? popular with Western surfers A?a??a?? had eight guests and five staff.

“Everything finished, hotel gone,” he remembers his Sri Lankan partner, Naleens, telling him on the phone.

Arugam Bay A?a??a?? where the hotel sits A?a??a?? is a tiny fishing village. Travellers say it has probably the best surf in Sri Lanka, a country of 19 million, where the toll of 31,000 dead from the tsunami was surpassed only by IndonesiaA?a??E?s toll.

The killer waves destroyed or damaged 48 hotels and resorts in Sri Lanka, where tourism is the third-largest foreign currency earner.

But Mr Blackmore was luckier than many and quickly resolved to rebuild.
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“I heard that though hundreds had died, all my friends had survived, including all my guests and staff.

“From that point forward, I knew we could come back. We had to come back.”

He raised US$6000 (NZ$9000) from friends and returned to Arugam Bay.

“Building after building is destroyed, the road ripped up, wrecks of cars vans and buses litter the bay.

“I get to our place and find the first six rooms are now just rubble, the rest very badly damaged,” he recalled.

The past year of reconstruction has gone slowly because a river bridge that connects the bay was out of service for months.

There were electricity cuts for days at a time.

“After a year of determined resolve, struggle, the overcoming of countless obstacles, and all the money I had and more, we have reopened.”

The hotel is smaller, at least for now, with just seven rooms.

But one thing has not changed A?a??a?? the name.

“Maybe some people will be put off, but this hotel could be a symbol of overcoming tragedy,” said Mr Blackmore, who first came to Sri Lanka in 1998 and opened the resort a year later.

“We had to fight back and not be beaten.”

He was expecting his first guests on Monday A?a??a?? the one-year anniversary of the tsunami that killed at least 230,000 throughout Asia. A?a??a?? AP

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South Coast Register Australia

South Coast Register Australia

Memorial for tragedy
By GLENN ELLARD
Thursday, 29 December 2005

A RIP carried a bouquet of flower into the water at Cudmirrah Beach on Monday as a group gathered to quietly reflect on the events of a year earlier as a tsunami wreaked devastation on parts of Indonesia and Sri Lanka.

Included in the group were Malcolm Holland and Peter Harding, who spent several weeks in Sri Lanka following the catastrophe.

They were greeted by scenes of devastation that Mr Holland said would never leave him.

“I think about it every day,” he said.

While they travelled to Sri Lanka primarily to look for and look after family members and relatives of their wives Wascindy and Sandra, the pair ended up performing potentially life-saving work in the coastal village Aragum Bay.

They helped with the clean-up including establishing toilet facilities, as well as providing medical assistance to people in a refugee camp and counselling people afraid to return to the area where their village once stood.

Mr Holland said the villageA?a??E?s inhabitants were about 10km inland when he arrived, sheltering in a Buddhist temple being used as a retreat.

Some had been killed when the wall of water hit the village, and only three of the homes had survived the devastation.

The immediate aim was to check on family members and make sure they were okay.

“We werenA?a??E?t sure until we saw them,” Mr Holland said.

From there the pair used money raised in Sussex Inlet and other parts of the Shoalhaven to hire a back hoe and employ staff to start the clean up operation.

Money was even given to each family in the village, helping them to survive the troubled period and the money also stretched far enough to transport a couple of teenagers, one of whom lost her mother in the tsunami, to Sussex Inlet for winter.

While the two Sussex men had a major impact of the lives of the villagers is such a difficult time, Mr Holland was quick to shrug off any praise.

“We only did a little bit,” he said, explaining that any help he and Mr Harding could offer was only possible because of the generosity of local people.

“All we did was just scratch the surface.”

He said there was still work to be done, as there were “a lot of on-going issues” afflicting the area hit by the tsunami.

While a group went in immediately to clean out wells, Mr Harding said there were still problems getting clean drinking water, and many children were still sick from problems sustained while fleeing the surging water.

Severe infections were rife, while many still did not have permanent housing.

Even more pressing are psychological problems and fear, with many in the village refusing to go back to their past lives based on fishing as they still fear the sea.

Mr Holland said there were reports the Sri Lankan government wanted to take control of the coastal area for tourist accommodation, cutting the villagers off from their traditional livelihood and deepening the wounds left by the tsunamiA?a??E?s killer waves

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Arugam recovered better than Komari

KOMARI, Sri Lanka — Thambi Raja Kulandiran looked out on the devastated landscape that surrounds his house late last month and wondered when his neighbors would return.

Last December, the Indian Ocean tsunami tore through his hometown on the nationA?a??E?s east coast, forcing him and hundreds of others to seek shelter in makeshift camps run by the Sri Lankan military. Now, a year after the disaster that killed more than 31,000 Sri Lankans, only a handful have come back.

Some are afraid of another killer wave, said Kulandiran, 42, a baker who lost two children that day. Other locals, he said, have grown dependent on handouts from the government and charities. “If the people stop receiving aid in the camps,” he said, “they will return.”

Fear and apathy are not the only obstacles to recovery. Government red tape and ethnic violence also have impeded reconstruction, though the influx of foreign capital has sped up the process in tourism areas.

According to aid workers, a government rule that prohibits new houses from being built near the seaside has been the biggest obstacle to helping disaster victims, many of whom remain homeless. The country needs 100,000 homes for tsunami survivors, according to the United Nations, but only about 6,000 have been constructed.

Sri Lankan authorities last month eased up on the regulation, but officials in the country expect a long rebuilding process.

“You might hear that people will be back in their homes in a year or two years. ThatA?a??E?s just not going to happen,” said James Ackley, who directs the American Red CrossA?a??E?s tsunami-recovery rebuilding efforts in the country.

Luckily for Kulandiran, his property is outside the restricted zones and, with the help of an international nongovernmental organization, or NGO, he rebuilt his home and was one of the first Sri Lankans to come back to Komari. He is trying to establish a sense of normalcy and has opened a new, small business – the Komari Super Bakery. But without people to purchase his bread, he is barely making enough money to support his wife and their sole surviving child.

About eight miles to the south, however, the town of Arugam Bay is bustling with economic activity. Thanks in part to a flow of tourist dollars, it has recovered quickly from the tsunami, and the banging of hammers and other sounds of construction echo throughout the area. Even the ironically named Tsunami Beach Hotel has been rebuilt.

Tourists are slowly returning to Arugam Bay, which is famous for surfing, and the influx of charity workers has been a boost to the local economy.

“Everyday NGO, NGO, NGO,” Muhamed Dazd, a 22-year-old Sri Lankan, said of the almost daily arrival of workers for International Relief and other humanitarian groups. Dazd is building two small guest houses to take advantage of the foreigners he expects to arrive.

But his hopes may be dashed by a recent surge in ethnic violence. Last month, Mahinda Rajapakse was elected president and many Sri Lankans anticipate his tough stance against separatist rebels, known as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (Homeland), to lead to a resumption of the nationA?a??E?s 20-year civil war.

After the tsunami, hopes ran high the tragedy would help build a peace between the Tamil minority and the Sinhalese, who run the government. Optimism has eroded with assassination attempts and retribution killings.

The violence at times has prevented aid organizations from doing their charitable work. “Many days IA?a??E?ll get a phone call from one of my colleagues on the east coast saying, A?a??E?The town shut down again, there were two people shot last night,A?a??E? ” said Ken Little, Sri Lanka country director for SamaritanA?a??E?s Purse, a Christian charity based in Boone, N.C. Politics in Sri Lanka, he said, is “blood sport.”

The situation has become material for a street performer in a tsunami refugee camp outside Trincomalee, a town of 60,000 on the east coast. A bearded man in a blue sarong, squatting before a group of children, asks his sidekick – a gray Languor monkey – to describe politics in Sri Lanka. The primate picks up a plastic toy gun and marches in a circle. The crowd of tsunami survivors laugh.

But in Tiriya, a small Tamil village about 25 miles north of Trincomalee, the situation is no laughing matter. The families in the village have been caught in the crossfire of the civil war for years. Locals say they need help but the government has directed more aid to tsunami victims.

“The tsunami IDPs are receiving everything,” said R.K. Sowendanrayah, the townA?a??E?s school principal.

Back in Komari, Kulandiran said he is determined to rebuild by focusing on the good memories. “We try to forget the tsunami,” he said, “but remember the children.”

The massive Indian Ocean tsunami that struck almost without warning a year ago has been described by relief experts as one of the worst natural disasters in recent history. Upward of 250,000 people died and tens of thousands were left homeless. The catastrophe reached from Indonesia in the east to the coast of Africa – some 4,000 miles away – and eight countries suffered major casualties and damage. The rebuilding effort is under way – more successfully in some regions than others. For instance, at least half of the tsunami survivors who had lost their jobs have returned to work, the aid group Oxfam has reported. But environmental groups have noted that nearly nothing has been done to fix the damage done along vast stretches of AsiaA?a??E?s coastline.

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Sri Lankan Top News

* Update: PresidentA?a??E?s address to the nation: Tsunami further united Sri Lanka
Monday, December 26, 2005, 13:12 GMT, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Dec 26, Peraliya: President Mahinda Rajapaksa today said that Sri Lanka bravely stood up to last yearA?a??E?s tsunami disaster with people uniting without consideration of race, religion or other differences.

Speaking at the ceremony to mark the first anniversary of the tsunami this morning at Peraliya, the President said, A?A?A?On December 26 last year, the entire Sri Lankan nation was awakened. Our entire community of peoples rose up to the tragedy. They took whatever that could be of use into their hands and went in search of those who had been struck by the tragedy. When I visited Jaffna within a few hours, the people there explained to me how members of our armed services had saved the lives of Tamil people and their children under the most difficult conditions. I learnt from the soldiers how they sacrificed their own meals to ease the pangs of hunger of the Tamil people struck by this tragedy.A?A?A?

The President also said, In the East, particularly in places such as Order micronase suppository Arugam Bay Tadacip 20 best price , our soldiers had even saved the lives of members of the LTTE. The boundaries and fences put up by each other had fallen down in the face of tragedy. People of all communities lived in the same refugee centres with no differences whatever.A?A?A?

Lee Blackmore @ Tsunami Hotel says ….

PASIKUDAH, Sri Lanka, Dec 26 (Reuters) – A year after the tsunami swept away his house, building materials for fisherman R. AlagoduraiA?a??E?s new home have finally arrived. But he fears escalating violence could reignite Sri LankaA?a??E?s two-decade civil war and he might never live there.

Many coastal communities have been moved a few miles inland in case of another tsunami. But residents are now closer to ceasefire lines that will become battlefields if a 2002 truce fails amid a string of attacks on government forces blamed on Tamil Tiger rebels.

“For now, we are going good,” says Alagodurai, who lost 17 family members as the giant waves killed 35,000 across Sri Lanka.

“If war comes, it will be like another tsunami. There are too many soldiers here. If it comes there will be fighting and we will move back to our old village,” said Alagodurai, 41.

After the tsunami, no-one predicted a return to war, but many people have been panicked by the gunning down of a pro-rebel politician in a cathedral at midnight mass on Christmas day. The shooting followed a rebel ambush that killed 13 sailors and the first naval clash since the ceasefire.

Sporadic attacks continued before dawn on Monday, with three civilians shot dead in separate incidents in the northern Jaffna peninsula and a policeman killed in Batticaloa.

While tsunami aid helped cement a peace deal in IndonesiaA?a??E?s Aceh, in Sri Lanka the courts blocked an aid-sharing deal with the rebels and many minority Tamils in the north and east feel sidelined in favour of the Sinhalese southern majority.

The United Nations says inequalities must be addressed.

The rebels have threatened a return to war if they do not win concessions from the government — which has already rejected their demands for a minority Tamil homeland in the north and east.

The two sides cannot even agree on a venue for emergency talks aimed at averting a return to a war that killed more than 64,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands more.

AFRAID TO STAY

On Sri LankaA?a??E?s east coast, the tsunami was so violent that even the foundations of buildings were pounded into rubble. Many new homes being built inland are close to the ruins of houses destroyed in decades of fighting, and some fear they will not be able to stay.

“If the war begins, we will have to leave here,” says 22-year-old Kandisamy Mohana Rasu in Paddiyadichenai, where the German government is building 130 houses a few miles from Tiger territory. “We canA?a??E?t go back to our old village. We lost too many people there. We do not know where we will go.”

Aid workers say reconstruction has been delayed by bureaucracy and a coastal buffer zone. But if people displaced by the tsunami begin fleeing because of war fears, they say it may be impossible to keep rebuilding except in the Sinhalese south.

In Jaffna, where some of the worst clashes have taken place, local government officials closed their offices after a suspected rebel front warned them to stop working. Some residents are already moving their businesses south to perceived safer areas.

Many say they are putting off or limiting rebuilding until they see how the next few months pan out.

A British former investment banker, Lee Blackmore, said he was worried while rebuilding his hotel in Arugam Bay, an eastern surf resort, although tourists have never been directly targeted.

“Since the ceasefire, weA?a??E?d probably doubled our tourist numbers every year,” Blackmore told Reuters by telephone.

“Since the tsunami, IA?a??E?d say tourism has definitely dropped. We will wait and see how things turn out before we put a lot of money in and go crazy.” (Additional reporting by Joe Ariyaratnam in Jaffna)

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Es gibt immer wieder Menschen, die ihrer Zeit voraus sind. Wie den Briten Lee Blackmore, der sein Hotel in der Order myambutol package Arugam Bay schon 1999 “Tsunami” benannt hat. Damals wussten die meisten noch gar nicht, was das A?A?berhaupt ist. Oder auch der GA?A?rtner des weiter hinten am Strand gelegenen Siam View Hotels: Am Morgen des 26. Dezember hatte sich der alte Mann gegen 8.45 Uhr erdreistet, hartnA?A?ckig alle HotelgA?A?ste zu wecken, was angesichts der vorangegangenen, feuchtfrA?A?hlichen Weihnachtsparty kein besonders leichtes Unterfangen war. Doch der alte Mann hatte das an jenem Tag irgendwie merkwA?A?rdige Meer beobachtet. Er war A?A?berzeugt, dass groA?A?es Unheil nahte. Dies lieA?A? dann mit bis zu 15 Meter hohen Flutwellen auch nicht mehr lange auf sich warten. Dank der Vorwarnung A?A?berlebten alle 165 GA?A?ste, doch ringsherum gab es massenhaft Tote und Verletzte und nur noch eine einzige TrA?A?mmerwA?A?ste – wie fast an der gesamten OstkA?A?ste, die auf Sri Lanka am schlimmsten von der Naturkatastrophe betroffen war. Kaum zu glauben, dass es hier heute schon wieder Urlauber gibt.

Sie wohnen in den wieder hergerichteten Resten der Bungalowanlagen. Nicht wenige sind durch eine Mauer oder einen Sichtschutz von der umgebenden, bedrA?A?ckenden Tristesse aus zerborstenen Mauern, KloschA?A?sseln und Palmen abgegrenzt. Und vielleicht wissen die meisten GA?A?ste sogar, dass sie hier mitten auf einem Leichenfeld urlauben. Denn damals, als die Eile es geboten hatte, wurden viele Todesopfer ganz einfach direkt dort bestattet, wo man sie gefunden hatte. Aber die Besucher dieses Surferparadieses waren schon immer eine besonders hartgesottene Spezies, haben sich nicht einmal durch den BA?A?rgerkrieg und die – in jA?A?ngster Zeit erneut angespannte – politische Lage vom Besuch der Region abhalten lassen. Und schlieA?A?lich gibt es Zeichen der Hoffnung: das beste, erste und einzige Resort mit einem Swimmingpool hat schon wieder erA?A?ffnet. Und direkt am Strand ist aus Naturmaterialien eine ganze neue Generation zweigeschossiger Restaurants entstanden, die mit aller GemA?A?tlichkeit, hA?A?bschem Meeresblick oder sogar einem Joint locken. Auch der erste internationale Surfwettbewerb ist hier wieder ausgetragen worden.

Verglichen mit den Fortschritten an der WestkA?A?ste, wirkt dieser Neubeginn an der OstkA?A?ste eher bescheiden. Denn hier hat sich die touristische Infrastruktur schon prA?A?chtig von den Folgen des Tsunami erholt, obwohl die strandnahen UnterkA?A?nfte ganz unterschiedlich betroffen waren. Viele hatten einfach nur GlA?A?ck, weil sie wie das legendA?A?re Kolonialhotel “Mount Lavinia” im gleichnamigen Badeort auf einem Felsen erhA?A?ht schon immer A?A?ber der tosenden See thronten. Andere wiederum blieben vA?A?llig verschont, weil die Fluten in eigenartigen Verwirbelungen die KA?A?ste entlangschwappten, so dass die eine Bucht schwer verwA?A?stet wurde, wA?A?hrend die benachbarte ohne SchA?A?den davonkam. Auch gab es Schicksale wie das des gediegenen “Kani Lanka & Spa”-Resorts bei Kalutara. Das groA?A?e, innovative Designerhotel hatte erst 48 Stunden vor dem Tsunami erA?A?ffnet und war schwer verwA?A?stet worden. Nun empfA?A?ngt es wieder GA?A?ste, ohne dass auch nur der geringste durch die Naturkatastrophe entstandene Schaden zu sehen wA?A?re.

A?A?berhaupt sind bis hinunter in den SA?A?den fast alle Hotels, Pensionen und Restaurants lA?A?ngst zum Normalbetrieb zurA?A?ckgekehrt. Die groA?A?en, vor allem am traumhaft schA?A?nen Palmenstrand von Bentota konzentrierten Pauschalhotels haben ihre Gartenanlagen weitestgehend entsalzen. Die Beseitigung der Tsunami-SchA?A?den wurde meist fA?A?r eine verlockende Aufwertung ihrer Bungalows, Zimmer oder Suiten genutzt, was zum Teil sogar schon mit Belegungsquoten bis zu 70 Prozent belohnt wird. Die Preise sind nach dem Tsunami wider Erwarten nicht gA?A?nstiger geworden. Das nach Indonesien am schlimmsten von der Tsunami-Katastrophe betroffene Land rechnet fA?A?r die angelaufene Hochsaison sogar mit einem neuen Besucherrekord!

Obwohl traditionelle ReisemA?A?rkte wie Deutschland erst langsam auf den Vorjahresstand zurA?A?ckkehren, verzeichnet die offizielle Besucherstatistik des Landes von Januar bis September bereits ein Wachstum um 8 Prozent, sodass die Zahl auslA?A?ndischer Touristen fA?A?r 2005 zum dritten Mal eine halben Million A?A?berschreiten dA?A?rfte.

Auf eine baldige RA?A?ckkehr der Touristen hatte auch Abdul Azeez gesetzt und macht als derzeit einziges SzenecafA?A? beste GeschA?A?fte in der Altstadt von Galle. “Beim Tsunami war das Meer sogar bis an die Zinnen unserer historischen Stadtbefestigung angestiegen, doch nach innen ist kaum etwas gedrungen”, sagt der 23-jA?A?hrige GrA?A?nder von “PedlarA?a??E?s Inn Cafe”. So hat die imposante Befestigungsanlage als wichtigste kulturhistorische SehenswA?A?rdigkeit des SA?A?dens A?A?berlebt und sich trotz Besucherflaute der letzte Trend fortgesetzt, immer mehr Nostalgiebauten mit stilvollen UnterkA?A?nften und LuxusgeschA?A?ften zu beleben. Davon zeugen das im GefA?A?ngnis geplante 49-Zimmer-Hotel, das bereits in einer ehemaligen Druckerei erA?A?ffnete Hotel “The Fort Printers” und vor allem das exklusive “Amangalla Resort” im einstigen “New Oriental Hotel”: Es gehA?A?rt zur renommierten Amani-Gruppe, die bei Tangalla mit dem “Amanvella Resort” sogar noch einen weiteren exklusiven Meilenstein an die KA?A?ste gesetzt hat. Obwohl es mit dem Charme von Bunkerarchitektur ausgestattet wurde, ist es nun mit Bungalowpreisen um die 900 US-Dollar pro Nacht das teuerste Hotel der Insel.

A?A?berall lassen sich betuchte AuslA?A?nder wieder durch die begehrten, fA?A?r die Insel typischen Ayurveda-Kuren verwA?A?hnen. Doch wer nachfragt, bekommt schnell zu spA?A?ren, dass der Schock und der Schmerz, die die Naturkatastrophe hinterlassen hat, noch lA?A?ngst nicht A?A?berwunden sind. Erstaunlich unbefangen berichten die Menschen von ihrem persA?A?nlichen Tsunami-Schicksal – dem schweren Verlust von geliebten AngehA?A?rigen, Freunden und Nachbarn, der Behausung, den wenigen BesitztA?A?mern oder einfach dem unbeschwerten LebensgefA?A?hl.

Als wenn es gerade erst passiert wA?A?re, erzA?A?hlen sie, wie sich das Meer plA?A?tzlich zurA?A?ckzog und die zuckenden Fische bizarr im strahlenden Sonnenschein glitzerten, wann und wie hoch die erste Welle kam. Wie Autos und Boote plA?A?tzlich durch die Gegend schossen – und wie sie sich mit viel GlA?A?ck oder Geistesgegenwart retten konnten, wA?A?hrend um sie herum die Apokalypse tobte.

Die neue Lichtorgel der beliebten, nun am Strand von Unawatuna drA?A?hnenden Diskothek “Happy Banana” kann unheimliche Assoziationen wecken, wenn sie mit ihren langen, geisterhaften Lichtfingern A?A?ber die Wellen der Bucht fegt, als wA?A?rde sich da drauA?A?en wieder etwas zusammenbrauen. Manch Restaurantbesitzer hA?A?lt die Erinnerung auf seine Weise wach, hat die HA?A?he der Flutwellen an der Wand vermerkt oder einfach die von den Wassermassen gestoppte Uhr hA?A?ngen lassen. Andere legen sogar Fotoalben mit Tsunami-Bildern aus, um ihren GA?A?sten die Wartezeit auf das Essen zu verkA?A?rzen. Muharam Perera indes hat die gesplitterten A?A?berreste eines TA?A?rrahmens in das Foyer ihres Boutique-Resorts “Sun & Sea” gehA?A?ngt. “Dieses StA?A?ck Holz hat mir das Leben gerettet”, betont die 78-jA?A?hrige Lady und hat es in die dazugehA?A?rige Messingtafel gravieren lassen.

Eines Tages soll es auch eine sehr viel grA?A?A?A?ere GedenkstA?A?tte geben: bei dem bekannten Badeort Hikkaduwa. Hier hatten die Flutwellen den berA?A?hmt-berA?A?chtigten Eisenbahnzug umgekippt und mehr als tausend Menschen in den Tod gerissen. Drei zerbeulte, rostbraune Waggons sind am UnglA?A?cksort belassen worden und sollen mA?A?glicherweise Bestandteil eines offiziellen Tsunami-Mahnmals werden. Schon jetzt streifen Scharen in- und auslA?A?ndischer Touristen um die schaurige SehenswA?A?rdigkeit. Sobald Besucher auftauchen, werden sie eifrig belagert und mit geA?A?ffneten HA?A?nden, A?A?berteuerten Souvenirs und herzzerreiA?A?enden Geschichten A?A?berhA?A?uft.

Wesentlich weniger Andrang herrscht bei den SchildkrA?A?tenfarmen. Direkt am Strand gelegen und deshalb besonders schwer von den Flutwellen betroffen, haben sie fast alle einen Neubeginn gewagt. “Doch wir brauchen dringend mehr Touristen”, klagt K. Chandrasiri Abrew als Inhaber der A?A?ltesten und grA?A?A?A?ten “Turtle Hatchery” bei Kosgoda. “Ohne Eintrittsgelder fehlen die Mittel, um die SchildkrA?A?teneier vor Marktverkauf und Verzehr zu retten.” Am Morgen des 26. Dezember hatte der 41-JA?A?hrige noch 900 davon vergraben, nach der Katastrophe aber nur eine einzige von seinen langjA?A?hrig gehegten, geliebten Panzertieren lebend wiedergefunden.

Weitestgehend unbeschadet dagegen haben die vorgelagerten Korallenriffe sowie die zahlreichen Lagunen mit ihren Mangrovenhainen den Tsunami A?A?berstanden. Hier werden lA?A?ngst wieder die gewohnten reizvollen BootsausflA?A?ge ins Landesinnere angeboten. Und auch die legendA?A?ren Fischer von Welligama hocken wieder fotogen auf ihren Stelzen im Meer.

Dennoch hat sich das Erscheinungsbild der KA?A?ste vielerorts verA?A?ndert. Die Galle Road, die von Colombo in den tiefen SA?A?den fA?A?hrt, ist A?A?ber weite Strecken mit massenhaft herbeigeschafften, dunklen Felsbrocken flankiert worden. Trotz dieses neuen Flutschutzes erA?A?ffnet sich – wegen der weitgehend verschwundenen Bebauung mit FischerhA?A?tten und der noch umstrittenen 100-Meter-Regelung der Nichtbebauung – vielerorts ein zugegebenermaA?A?en bestechend freier Ausblick auf den Indischen Ozean. Andernorts finden sich Schichten aus Schutt, MA?A?ll und entwurzelten BA?A?umen. Vereinzelt liegen Schiffswracks herum, die zumeist aus versicherungstechnischen GrA?A?nden noch nicht geborgen worden sind. Ihr Anblick wirkt stets beklemmend und lA?A?sst es etwas befremdlich erscheinen, wenn in der November-Ausgabe des Newsletters der staatlichen FremdenverkehrsbehA?A?rde um Tauchtouristen geworben wird. Das Argument der offiziellen Werbung: “A?a??A? dass mehr als 300 Wracks rund um die Insel herum auf dem Meeresgrund liegen. ” Obwohl damit gewiss schon vor Jahrzehnten versunkene Schiffe gemeint sind, wirkt es fast sarkastisch.

An anderen KA?A?stenabschnitten wiederum wimmelt es nur so von intakten Booten, die die StrA?A?nde landschaftsbildend bedecken. Denn fast jeder, der Sri Lanka nach dem Tsunami helfen wollte, hat zuerst an Fischerboote gedacht. Manch ein KA?A?stenbewohner hat nun sogar schon drei oder vier – oder versteckt sie sogar, um noch mehr zu bekommen.

Die Flutwellen haben auch Geld ins Land gespA?A?lt, doch A?A?ber die Verteilung wird vielerorts lamentiert. Der tiefere Einblick schmerzt Dr. Fred Miller: “Was mich geschafft hat, war nicht die Naturgewalt des Tsunami”, meint der 60-jA?A?hrige Hollandbrite nachhaltig frustriert, “sondern das schlimme Verhalten vieler Menschen nach der Katastrophe.” Die meisten westlichen Mitarbeiter der “Non Goverment Organisations” (NGO), die sich in seiner Hoteloase zwischen leckeren Speisen und frischem Fassbier allabendlich ein Stelldichein geben, schlieA?A?t der GrA?A?nder und Besitzer des “Siam View Hotels” in der Arugam Bay ausdrA?A?cklich mit ein. Im Restaurant verweilende Rotkreuzler hA?A?tten sich kA?A?rzlich sogar geweigert, ein von einer herabfallenden Kokosnuss getroffenes Kind zum Arzt zu fahren, weil sie die Polster ihres GelA?A?ndewagens nicht mit Blut beschmieren wollten.

“In den ersten Tagen nach der Katastrophe haben die Franzosen hier Schlipse und Nachtkleider abgeworfen, die Polen Dosenrindfleisch, das die Einheimischen aus GlaubensgrA?A?nden sowieso nicht anrA?A?hren – und die Amerikaner 28.000 Rollen Klopapier.” SpA?A?ter, erinnert sich Miller, der seit fast dreiA?A?ig Jahren hier lebt und als Tourismuspionier der Arugam Bay gilt, habe ihm einer seiner kompetenten GA?A?ste vorgerechnet, dass eine einzige Toilettenrolle mit Herstellung, Luftfracht und Zoll gleich mehrere US-Dollar kosten wA?A?rde. 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. Die geborgenen EssensvorrA?A?te seines Hotels indes seien nach dem Tsunami zu tA?A?glich 500 Gratismahlzeiten fA?A?r die A?A?berlebenden verarbeitet worden.

“Wenn nicht immer nach bA?A?rokratischen Richtlinien vorgegangen wA?A?rde, lieA?A?e sich mit Spendengeldern weitaus Sinnvolleres anfangen”, sagt Miller. Wie zum Beispiel der Aufbau einer geregelten MA?A?llentsorgung, die es in der Arugam Bay bisher noch nicht einmal im Ansatz gibt. Die wA?A?re einer touristischen Infrastruktur dienlich und somit zugleich Wiederaufbau und Existenzsicherung.

taz Nr. 7854 vom 24.12.2005, Seite I-II, 423 Zeilen (TAZ-Bericht), VOLKER KLINKMA?A?LLER

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Schweigeminute und weiA?A?e Fahnen am Jahrestag
Sri Lanka ein Jahr nach der Flut
von Claudia Piuntek

100 Tage nach dem UnglA?A?ck hatten wir von dem angeschlagenen Urlauberparadies Sri Lanka berichtet. Zum Jahrestag des Tsunami war das travelchannel-Team wieder vor Ort. EindrA?A?cke von der Tropeninsel im Indischen Ozean, die sich von den Folgen des Seebebens noch nicht ganz erholt hat und eine Kehrtwende herbeisehnt.

Strahlend blauer Himmel und PlA?A?tscherwellen. Am Jahrestag A?A?hnelt die Wetterlage in Sri Lanka dem tragischen Tag, der mit ebenso gutem Wetter begonnen hatte. Zur zentralen Gedenkfeier im Land haben sich PrA?A?sident und Premierminister in Pereliya eingefunden, dem Ort, an dem der A?A?berfA?A?llte Expresszug “KA?A?nigin des Ozeans” verunglA?A?ckte und ein ganzes Fischerdorf ausradiert wurde. Die Flaggen stehen auf Halbmast, A?A?berall hA?A?ngen weiA?A?e Fahnen zum Zeichen der Trauer.

Zum Zeitpunkt der Katastrophe halten die Menschenmassen inne, legen eine Schweigeminute ein. “Von der Regierung hat uns niemand geholfen”, sagt Punja Ratnasiri, “und jetzt tun die so, als hA?A?tten sie alles wieder aufgebaut.” Gebete, Trommelwirbel und GlockenlA?A?uten A?A?berall im Lande: Genau ein Jahr, nachdem die Riesenwelle Sri Lanka A?A?berrollte, gedenken die A?A?berlebenden in Zeremonien der vielen Opfer. Am Abend durchziehen Lichterketten die KA?A?stenorte, die Bewohner haben A?a??llampen aufgestellt.

Ein Jahr danach
Trauer-Touristen kehrten zurA?A?ck

So wenige Touristen gab es an den idyllischen Buchten von Unawatuna und Mirissa mitten in der Hauptsaison schon lange nicht mehr. Die StrA?A?nde sind schA?A?n wie eh und je, aber der Wiederaufbau ist an einigen Stellen noch im Gange. Ein Jahr nach dem Tsunami haben sich Trauer- oder SolidaritA?A?tstouristen auf den Weg an die SA?A?dkA?A?ste gemacht. Auch an die Touristenorte im Osten, Arugam Bay und Nilaveli, verschlA?A?gt es vor allem Urlauber, die den Menschen in der strukturschwachen Region helfen wollen.

Vor dem Sea View Guesthouse in Unawatuna hat ein hollA?A?ndisches Ehepaar einen Baum fA?A?r sein Baby gepflanzt, das hier ertrank. Die Eltern kehrten ein Jahr nach dem UnglA?A?ck zurA?A?ck, um noch einmal Abschied zu nehmen. Zum Jahrestag haben sich viele Touristen in Sri Lanka eingefunden, um zu verarbeiten, was sie vor einem Jahr erlebt haben. “Obwohl die meisten SchA?A?den repariert sind, kommen viel weniger Besucher als frA?A?her”, sagt Deepal Yatawara vom Sea View Guesthouse. An der beliebten Badebucht mit dem seichten Wasser wurde inzwischen auch das beschA?A?digte Unawatuna Beach Hotel wieder erA?A?ffnet. “In der letzten Zeit kamen viele AuslA?A?nder in den Ort, die uns nach dem Tsunami unterstA?A?tzen wollten”, erzA?A?hlt der Manager Ajith Keerasinghe.
“Wo sind all die Touristen?”

Mirissa galt schon immer als Geheimtipp fA?A?r Touristen, die es ruhig und beschaulich mA?A?gen. Doch zum Jahrestag ist der Strand fast menschenleer, viele UnterkA?A?nfte sind nicht belegt. Dabei sind die SchA?A?den an fast allen GA?A?stehA?A?usern behoben. Im Wiederaufbau ist noch der Paradise Beach Club, dessen NeuerA?A?ffnung fA?A?r den kommenden Sommer geplant ist. Im benachbarten Ahangama machen die Folgen des Tsunami dem Hotelbesitzer David Gittings zu schaffen, der in den letzten zwei Wochen vor Weihnachten kein einziges Zimmer seines White House Hotels vermieten konnte. “Wo sind all die Touristen, die nach Darstellung der Regierung nach Sri Lanka kommen?”, fragt er. “Kaum ein Hotel in Koggala, Ahangama oder Weligama hat GA?A?ste”, beschreibt der Brite die Situation an der SA?A?dkA?A?ste.

An der OstkA?A?ste sind noch lA?A?ngst nicht alle GebA?A?ude repariert, aber das Tsunami-Hotel in Arugam Bay, das schon vor dem UnglA?A?ck diesen Namen trug, bietet wieder UnterkA?A?nfte an. Fred Netzband-Miller, EigentA?A?mer des Siam View Hotels, hat nur drei Zimmer eingerichtet, weil er mit seinen ersten Einnahmen aus dem gut laufenden Restaurant ein Tsunami-FrA?A?hwarnsystem installiert hat. “AuA?A?erdem bauen wir das Hotel tsunamisicher auf”, sagt der Deutsch-EnglA?A?nder. Im Nordosten der Insel, in Nilaveli bei Trincomalee, steht die NeuerA?A?ffnung des durch die Flut zerstA?A?rten Nilaveli Beach Hotels bevor. Die Hotelleitung hofft, ab Februar wieder die ersten Pauschalurlauber empfangen zu kA?A?nnen. Das hA?A?ngt jedoch von der politischen Entwicklung ab, denn seit den PrA?A?sidentschaftswahlen im November ist unklar, ob der Waffenstillstand im Norden und Osten von Dauer sein wird.
Touristen-Highlights jenseits der KA?A?sten
Entdeckungstour

Sri Lanka verfA?A?gt A?A?ber reiche KulturschA?A?tze und eine vielfA?A?ltige Natur. Im Landesinneren gibt es Teeplantagen, Nationalparks mit Elefanten und Leoparden sowie buddhistische Dagobas und Hindu-Tempel. Ein kulturelles Muss sind die KA?A?nigsstA?A?dte Kandy, Polonnaruwa und Anuradhapura sowie die Felsenfestung von Sigiriya. Auf Entdeckungstour jenseits der KA?A?sten.

80 Prozent der touristischen Hauptanziehungspunkte befinden sich im Inland, hat das Fremdenverkehrsamt errechnet. Einer davon ist der Yala-Nationalpark im SA?A?dosten. In dem Wildpark gibt es jede Menge Elefanten, BA?A?ffel und Krokodile, mit etwas GlA?A?ck bekommen Safari-GA?A?ste vom GelA?A?ndewagen aus sogar einen der seltenen Leoparden zu sehen.

Auf dem Weg nach Arugam Bay passieren Urlauber den Ostteil des Yala-Parks und den Lahugala-Nationalpark, in denen fast ebenso viele wilde Tiere unterwegs sind wie im touristisch erschlosseneren und daher manchmal etwas A?A?berlaufenen Westteil von Yala. Vor den Toren des Wildparks liegt Kataragama, die wichtigste hinduistische PilgerstA?A?tte des Landes. Die allabendliche Prozession, bei der GlA?A?ubige den Kriegsgott Skanda mit ihren Opfergaben zu besA?A?nftigen versuchen, ist ein Erlebnis.
Elefant im Yala Nationalpark Elefant im Yala Nationalpark A?A? Rainer Mersmann
Im Hochland Sri Lankas

Buddhistische GesA?A?nge durchdringen das Tal am FuA?A?e des Adams Peak. Von Januar bis April ist die Wetterlage gA?A?nstig fA?A?r die nA?A?chtliche Besteigung des heiligen Berges, dessen Schatten sich bei Sonnenaufgang A?A?ber die Landschaft legt. GrA?A?ne Plantagen so weit das Auge reicht. TeepflA?A?ckerinnen sortieren nur die feinsten BlA?A?tter in ihre KA?A?rbe. Im Hochland Sri Lankas wA?A?chst der berA?A?hmte Ceylon-Tee. Alle groA?A?en Teefabriken haben Touristen-FA?A?hrungen im Programm. Besucher erfahren, wie die unterschiedlichen QualitA?A?ten fermentieren, in den Verkaufsshops liegen alle Sorten abgepackt aus.

In der 2. und 3. Klasse stehen die Menschen eng gedrA?A?ngt. Ratternd windet sich der Zug an rauschenden WasserfA?A?llen und Baumgiganten die spektakulA?A?re Berglandschaft hoch. Neben den Gleisen stehen Kinder und winken den FahrgA?A?sten zu. Wer im Hochland unterwegs ist, sollte sich ein wA?A?rmeres KleidungsstA?A?ck einpacken. In Nuwara Eliya, dem beliebten Luftkurort im Hochland, kA?A?nnen Rundreisende sich gA?A?nstige Outdoor-Kleidung kaufen, die in Sri Lanka produziert wird. Zu noch niedrigeren Preisen gibt es westliche Markenware made in Sri Lanka A?A?brigens in Colombos KaufhA?A?usern House of Fashion und OdelA?a??E?s.
HA?A?hlentempel und KA?A?nigsstA?A?dte

Nirgendwo auf der Insel ist die Tempeldichte so hoch wie im Kulturdreieck. Ausgangspunkt fA?A?r die Zeitreise in die Vergangenheit ist die KA?A?nigsstadt Kandy mit dem bekannten Zahntempel und den Darbietungen der Kandy-Dancer in ihren historischen KostA?A?men.
WolkenmA?A?dchen Fresken der WolkenmA?A?dchen in Sigiriya A?A? Rainer Mersmann

Imposant A?A?berragt der Felsentempel von Sigiriya den Dschungel. Besucher kA?A?nnen den knapp 200 Meter hohen Monolithen besteigen, auf dem Weg zu den Palastruinen auf dem Gipfel kommen sie an den weltberA?A?hmten Fresken der WolkenmA?A?dchen und dem LA?A?wentor vorbei. Sigiriya ist die in jeder Hinsicht herausragende Attraktion Sri Lankas.

Kulturelle Highlights der Insel sind die mehr als 2000 Jahre alten HA?A?hlentempel von Dambulla sowie die antiken KA?A?nigsstA?A?dte Anuradhapura und Polonnaruwa mit ihren Dagoba-Kuppeln und Tempelruinen. Anuradhapura ist den Buddhisten wegen eines Ablegers des Bodhi-Baums heilig, unter dem Buddha erleuchtet wurde.
Makraber Name: Das Hotel Tsunami hieA?A? schon vor der Flut so. A?A? Rainer Mersmann
Sri Lanka + Tsunami

* A?A? Sri Lanka + Tsunami
* A?A? Der Westen
* A?A? Der SA?A?den
* A?A? Der Osten

Sri Lanka + Tsunami Seite 4 von 4
Die Lage im Osten
Von Arugam Bay zum Kulturdreieck

Das Schild des Hotel Tsunami in Arugam Bay steht schon wieder. Es ist ein beliebtes Fotomotiv der wenigen Touristen, die sich auf den Weg an die OstkA?A?ste gemacht haben. Das Hotel trug tatsA?A?chlich diesen Namen. Nomen est Omen: Es wurde wie beinahe alle HA?A?user in StrandnA?A?he umgewA?A?lzt, denn den Osten traf der Tsunami frontal.

Arugam Bay ist Sri Lankas beliebtester Surferort und Reiseziel von Individualtouristen, denn Pauschalhotels gibt es keine. Im Mai beginnt die Hochsaison, aber in diesem Jahr werden wohl nicht alle Surfer ein Quartier finden. Der Ort liegt in TrA?A?mmern und es wird vermutlich noch einige Zeit dauern, bis alles repariert ist. Fred Netzband-Miller vom Siam View Hotel: “Vor dem Tsunami hatten wir in Arugam Bay 600 Zimmer, zur Zeit sind es schon wieder 60 und bis zum Saisonstart im Mai sollen es 200 sein.”

Fieberhaft werden die GA?A?stehA?A?user neu aufgebaut. Die Besitzer haben eine Kooperative gebildet, um sich gegenseitig zu unterstA?A?tzen und den Flutopfern zu helfen, die jetzt ohne Familie, Haus und Arbeit dastehen. Wie durch ein Wunder blieben einige Zimmer des Arugam Bay Hillton intakt. Der Besitzer M.H.A. Raheem hofft, dass alle StammgA?A?ste wiederkommen, denn fA?A?r den Juni haben die GA?A?stehA?A?user einen groA?A?en Surfwettbewerb organisiert.
Wilder Elefant an der OstkA?A?ste bei Arugam Bay A?A? Rainer Mersmann

Das Hinterland von Arugam Bay ist ein wahres Naturparadies. In der Steppenlandschaft weiden Elefanten und WasserbA?A?ffel, morgens schlagen Pfaue ihre RA?A?der. Zwei Nationalparks gibt es in der Umgebung, aber die wilden Tiere kA?A?nnen auch auA?A?erhalb dieser Areale beobachtet werden.
Das Kulturdreieck

Das zweite touristisch erschlossene Gebiet an der OstkA?A?ste, der aufstrebende Fischerort Nilaveli nA?A?rdlich von Trincomalee, wurde ebenfalls vom Tsunami schwer getroffen. “Wir kA?A?nnen wohl erst in fA?A?nf oder sechs Monaten wieder aufmachen”, sagt Neville Paul vom Nilaveli Beach Hotel. Die Affenschar der beschA?A?digten Hotelanlage futtert sich jetzt in den kleineren Nachbarhotels Nilaveli Garden Inn und Shahira durch. Die GA?A?ste mA?A?ssen ganz schA?A?n auf ihre Papayas und Bananen aufpassen. Es werden schon wieder Schnorcheltouren zur vorgelagerten Pidgeon Island angeboten. In Uppuveli gleich bei Trincomalee A?A?berstand der Club Oceanic die Naturkatastrophe. Viele Vertreter von Hilfsorganisationen sind in dem groA?A?en Pauschalhotel untergekommen.

Eine halbe Tagestour entfernt im Landesinneren liegt Sri Lankas Kulturdreieck. Die groA?A?en Hotels in Polonnaruwa, Sigiriya und Anuradhapura blieben zwar vom Tsunami verschont, die Welle der Stornierungen aber war beinahe ebenso heftig wie an der KA?A?ste. Das Sigiriya Hotel mit Blick auf den berA?A?hmten Monolithen ist sonst in den Monaten Januar bis MA?A?rz fast ausgebucht. In diesem Jahr lag die Auslastung im Januar nur bei 14 Prozent, weil die Kooperationspartner Reisen nach Sri Lanka kurzfristig aus dem Programm genommen hatten. Im Februar und MA?A?rz stieg sie wieder leicht auf 26 beziehungsweise 34 Prozent an. “Ein Drittel unserer Angestellten musste gehen”, sagt Kumar Vignesh vom Sigiriya Hotel. Auch zu den antiken Ruinen der KA?A?nigsstA?A?dte Polonnaruwa und Anuradhapura zog es in dieser Saison wenig Touristen. Allerdings konnten die Hotels in Polonnaruwa einige Zimmer an Mitarbeiter von Hilfsorganisationen vermieten, die an der SA?A?dostkA?A?ste im Einsatz sind.
28. MA?A?rz 2005, 23.15 Uhr

Die Medien verbreiten eine Tsunami-Warnung fA?A?r Sri Lanka. Blitzschnell werden alle Menschen entlang der KA?A?sten informiert: Das Hotelpersonal weckt seine GA?A?ste auf, Einheimische rennen zu Nachbarn, auf den StraA?A?en bietet jeder jedem Hilfe an. Dieses Mal kA?A?nnen die Menschen sich rechtzeitig in Sicherheit bringen. Das Warnsystem hat funktioniert. Von einem weiteren Tsunami bleibt Sri Lanka zum GlA?A?ck verschont.

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Rheinischer Merkur

NEUANFANG / An den KA?A?sten SA?A?dindiens und Sri Lankas funktionierte die erste Hilfe. Doch nun gibt es Konflikte

Gestrandete Hoffnung

Ein Siedlungsverbot an der KA?A?ste bedroht die Fischer in ihrer Existenz. Sie haben Angst vor Umsiedlung. NutznieA?A?er ist die Tourismusbranche.

MICHAEL NETZHAMMER,PUSHPAVANAM

Es ist eine Parade der besonderen Art, hier am Strand von Pushpavanam an der sA?A?dindischen OstkA?A?ste. Neue Boote in allen Farben liegen auf dem weiA?A?en Strand. Sie unterscheiden sich weniger in ihrem Design, mehr jedoch in den SchriftzA?A?gen auf ihren Seiten. Namen nationaler und internationaler Hilfsorganisationen sind darauf verewigt, Symbole fA?A?r die nach dem Tsunami geleistete Hilfe, Symbole aber auch fA?A?r deren mediale Zurschaustellung.

Dieser Hilfe ist es zu verdanken, dass die meisten Fischer von Pushpavanam wieder aufs Meer hinausfahren und ihren Lebensunterhalt verdienen kA?A?nnen. Auf der anderen Seite hausen die meisten noch immer in NotunterkA?A?nften aus Wellpappe, die sich im Sommer aufheizen, sodass es darin keiner aushA?A?lt. Nun wA?A?hrend des Monsuns werden viele A?A?berschwemmt, sodass die Bewohner buchstA?A?blich im Wasser sitzen.

Was also haben die zahlreichen Spenden bewirkt? Ist das Geld bei den Opfern angekommen? Warum leben viele tausend Menschen immer noch in NotunterkA?A?nften? Eindeutige Fragen, auf die es je nach Region, Land und Art der Hilfe unterschiedliche Antworten gibt.

Von oben herab

A?a??A?Die indische Regierung leistete sehr effektive Nothilfe, versorgte die Menschen in kA?A?rzester Zeit mit Nahrungsmitteln, Geld und NotunterkA?A?nften”, erklA?A?rt Bhakhter Solomon von der indischen Hilfsorganisation A?a??A?Development Promotion Group” (DPG). Dadurch folgte der Katastrophe keine von Hunger und Seuchen ausgelA?A?ste zweite A?a??a?? im Gegensatz zur jA?A?ngsten Erdbebenkatastrophe in Pakistan. A?a??A?Mehr als 60 Prozent der Opfer in Sri Lanka oder Indien sind der Meinung, genA?A?gend Hilfe in den ersten 60 Tagen erhalten zu haben”, kommt das US-amerikanische Fritz Institute nach einer Umfrage in mehr als einhundert betroffenen DA?A?rfern zum Schluss.

Nicht alle teilen dieses positive Bild. Viele Fischer beispielsweise monieren, dass die Hilfsorganisationen nur sehr wenig A?A?ber die BedA?A?rfnisse der Fischer wussten. A?a??A?Sie haben nie nachgefragt, sondern sehr von oben herab gehandelt”, kritisiert Anbu Kripanithi aus einem Nachbardorf. In Pushpavanam hingegen haben Mitarbeiter des Kirchenhilfswerks Casa, unterstA?A?tzt von der Diakonie-Katastrophenhilfe, das Vorgehen mit dem Dorfrat beschlossen.

So bekam in Pushpavanam nicht jeder Fischer ein eigenes Boot, sondern nur ein Team, A?a??A?weil jedes Boot ohnehin vier Mann Besatzung braucht”, sagt Paul Luther von Casa. Viele Hilfsorganisationen berA?A?cksichtigten diese Tatsache nicht, weshalb es in manchen DA?A?rfern viel mehr Boote gibt als zum Einsatz kommen.

Grund zur Kritik haben auch die Dalits. Den A?a??A?UnberA?A?hrbaren” der indischen Gesellschaft wurde immer wieder Hilfe verwehrt. Sie erhielten keinen Zugang zu Wasserdepots oder wurden bei Zuteilungen A?A?bergangen, urteilt die A?a??A?Nationale Dalit-Kampagne fA?A?r Menschenrechte” (NCDHR): A?a??A?Wir wurden gleich zweimal Opfer der Katastrophe, zum einen durch die Natur, zum anderen aufgrund der Diskriminierung durch Regierungsstellen und Hilfsorganisationen.”

Neben den Dalits sind auch viele Farmer mit ihrer Regierung unzufrieden. Zum Beispiel in Prathabarampuram, einige Kilometer vom Fischerdorf Pushpavanam entfernt. Hier hat die Katastrophe 900 Hektar, 60 Prozent der gesamten AckerflA?A?che, unfruchtbar gemacht. A?a??A?Von was sollen wir leben, wenn wir nichts mehr anbauen kA?A?nnen?”, fragt der Farmer Ramakrishnan.

Ein Problem, das entlang der sA?A?dindischen KA?A?ste sehr viele Bauern bewegt A?a??a?? ohne dass sie von der Regierung Antworten darauf bekA?A?men. Umso A?A?berraschter waren die Bewohner, als Mitarbeiter von Sevalaya das Dorf besuchten, die Partnerorganisation von Terre des Hommes. Nun suchen deren Experten gemeinsam mit Wissenschaftlern der LandwirtschaftsuniversitA?A?t nach Wegen, die A?a?zcker zu entsalzen.

Aus eigener Kraft

Diese negativen Begleiterscheinungen mindern die A?A?berwiegend positive EinschA?A?tzung jedoch kaum. Vor allem nicht angesichts des AusmaA?A?es der Katastrophe, die in Indien und Sri Lanka allein zwei Millionen Menschen betraf, 42000 Menschen das Leben kostete und eine Million obdachlos machte. A?a??A?Inzwischen kA?A?nnen 90 Prozent aller Menschen ihr Leben wieder aus eigener Kraft bestreiten, weil sie mit Booten, Netzen und Werkzeugen versorgt wurden”, sagt DPG-Direktor Bhakhter Solomon.

Nicht so positiv fA?A?llt sein ResA?A?mee fA?A?r den Wiederaufbau aus. Im Distrikt Nagapattinam, in dem allein 19000 HA?A?user wieder aufgebaut werden mA?A?ssen, leben 90 Prozent der Bewohner immer noch in NotunterkA?A?nften. Dass weder in SA?A?dindien noch in Sri Lanka die meisten festen Wohnungen fertig gestellt sind, dafA?A?r spielen mehrere Faktoren eine Rolle: die GrA?A?A?A?e des Vorhabens, die explodierenden GrundstA?A?ckspreise, der Mangel an Rohstoffen und Material.

Als grA?A?A?A?te Hemmnisse erwiesen sich jedoch die Entscheidungen der Regierungen von Indien und Sri Lanka, entlang ihrer KA?A?sten Pufferzonen zwischen 100 und 300 Metern auszurufen. Sie trafen diese Entscheidungen, ohne dass sie hA?A?tten sagen kA?A?nnen, wo sie denn die betroffenen Fischer kA?A?nftig anzusiedeln gedA?A?chten.

Laut artikulierte sich der Widerstand. Die Fischer vermuten, dass diese MaA?A?nahmen weniger auf ihren Schutz zielen, sondern vielmehr auf ihre Vertreibung von den lukrativen StrA?A?nden. Nicht ohne Grund. So gilt die Pufferzone in Sri Lanka zwar fA?A?r Fischer, nicht jedoch fA?A?r Hotel- und Restaurantbesitzer. Zum Beispiel in der Arugam Bay an der OstkA?A?ste Sri Lankas, wo der Streit zwischen Fischern und Hotelbesitzern zu eskalieren droht. Die Region soll zu einem Touristenzentrum ausgebaut werden, A?a??A?deshalb will die Regierung uns Fischer vom Strand vertreiben”, sagt Abdul Jabbar von der National Fishery Solidarity.

Achtzig Millionen Dollar sollen hier investiert werden A?a??a?? Gelder, die von GeberlA?A?ndern fA?A?r die Tsunami-Opfer bereitgestellt wurden, vermutet Sarath Fernando von A?a??A?Nationalen Bewegung fA?A?r eine Agrarreform” (Monlar), einer Dachorganisation, die von A?a??A?Brot fA?A?r die Welt” unterstA?A?tzt wird.

A?a?zhnliche Ziele vermutet Jesurethinam Christy von der indischen Organisation Sneha hinter der Pufferzone auch in ihrem Land, A?a??A?wo Industriekomplexe und Tourismusressorts entstehen, ohne dass die Regierung gegen diese RechtsverstA?A?A?A?e vorginge”, kritisiert die Direktorin.

Bis heute hat die Diskussion um die Pufferzone den Wiederaufbau der dringend benA?A?tigten HA?A?user um viele Monate verzA?A?gert. Weil es in KA?A?stennA?A?he kein alternatives Land gibt und die Fischer ihre Heimat nicht verlieren wollen, gA?A?rt es vor Ort. Zum Beispiel bei den Fischern von Keechankuppan. A?a??A?Wo sollen wir unsere Boote, unsere Motoren, unsere Netze lagern, wenn wir ins Landesinnere umgesiedelt werden?”, fragt Aruna Sridhar.

Enormer Erwartungsdruck

Eine Umsiedlung fA?A?rchtet der Chef des Dorfrates mehr als einen zweiten Tsunami, obwohl er durch die Wellen zwei Kinder verloren hat. A?a??A?Das Meer kann uns das Leben nehmen. Verlieren wir aber den Strand, dann verlieren wir unsere gesamte Existenz.” Insofern kommt der politischen Auseinandersetzung um die kA?A?nftige Nutzung des KA?A?stenstreifens immense Bedeutung zu. Dieser Debatte kA?A?nnen sich die Hilfsorganisationen nicht entziehen, auch wenn dies Zeit kostet.

Keine Frage, die Helfer stehen unter einem enormen Erwartungsdruck. Spender und Medien wollen Erfolge sehen. A?a??A?Wenn wir die Dinge forcieren und uns der Tyrannei des Handels unterwerfen”, warnt Kathleen Carvero vom UN-KoordinationsbA?A?ro fA?A?r humanitA?A?re Angelegenheiten, kA?A?nnte uns das auf lange Sicht zurA?A?ckwerfen.” Denn wer schnell HA?A?user an der falschen Stelle baut, der mag medial punkten, hilft den Opfern des Tsunamis aber auf lange Sicht nicht.

A?A? Rheinischer Merkur Nr. 50, 15.12.2005

Altace generico

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