Photo: Amelia Shepherd-Smith/IRIN. There are more than 100,000 Sri Lankan refugees in India
Source: IRIN
TAMIL NADU, 4 September 2012 (IRIN) - More than three years after the
end of Sri Lanka’s 1983-2009 civil war, most Sri Lankan refugees in
India say they would rather not return, citing economic hardship and
concern over human rights abuses.
According to Indian government figures, there are more than 100,000
ethnic Tamil Sri Lankans in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu,
including 68,000 in 112 government-run camps and 32,000 outside the
camps.
“My relatives who have returned say `Don’t come. ‘There aren’t any jobs
and the cost of living is too high’,” 46-year-old Sivabalan Palaniyandi*
from Gummidipoondi, an industrial town 40km north of Chennai, the
capital city of Tamil Nadu State at the extreme southern tip of India,
told IRIN.
Others cite reports of ongoing alleged human rights abuses in the north,
and mention the government’s inability to account for thousands of
people still missing in the aftermath of the war which left tens of
thousands dead, according to the UN.
The Working Group
on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances of the UN Office for the High
Commissioner for Human Rights has recorded more than 5,000 reported
cases of wartime-related disappearance in the country, not counting
those who went missing in the final stages of the conflict from 2008 to
2009.
“The reason no international NGOs or media are allowed in most Tamil
areas is because there are still human rights violations,” said Rathi
Bathlot*, a 49-year-old resident of Kottapattu camp, 5km from Tamil
Nadu’s southeastern city of Trichy.“We hear of constant intimidation by
the military and also violence. We fled a judicial system that failed us
and did not allow us our most basic constitutional rights. Nothing has
changed,” she said.
Yet others have been put off by reports of illegal land-grabbing in former Tamil areas of northern and eastern Sri Lanka.
“My brother went back to check on his property and found that nearly 100
percent of our areas are still under Sinhalese military occupation. He
said it was very intimidating,” said Dibakar Ramachandan*, a 35-year-old
man also from Kottapattu camp.
“My mother went home and came back as a tourist and her children now
suffer because they have no local identification papers, so she can’t
register them in the school,” said Konashwari Nishantan*, a 40-year-old
woman from the Puzhal camp in Thiruvallur District.
“As long as Sri Lankan Tamil refugees continue to hear stories such as
these they will never want to go back,” said Thiru Murugan, an official
of the May 17 Movement, a Tamil Nadu-based human rights organization.
Few returnees
Such stories may account for the small number of returnees, despite assistance offered by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR).
Since the end of the war, little more than 5,000 Sri Lankans have returned under a UNHCR-facilitated voluntary repatriation programme, mostly to Trincomalee, Mannar, Vavuniya and Jaffna districts.
In 2011, 1,728 Sri Lankan refugees returned with UNHCR’s help after the
agency stepped up its assistance package to returnees. However, the
numbers are low. In fact, the number of Sri Lankan refugees returning
home with UNHCR’s help declined during the first half of 2012 compared
with the same period in 2011.
“It is difficult to determine why the numbers of refugees returning to
Sri Lanka have fallen,” said UNHCR representative in Sri Lanka Michael
Zwack in June. “It is an individual decision to return home based on
individual considerations,” he added.
Keeping options open?
For some, maintaining their refugee status at this time may seem more beneficial.
According to Valan Satchithananda, project director for the Adventist
Development Relief Agency (ADRA), although some Tamil areas in the north
such as Jaffna and Trincomalee are more stable, other areas devastated
by the war lack basic infrastructure.
Furthermore, it is estimated that more than half of the refugees in
Indian camps were born in India and know little of life back in Sri
Lanka. The largest wave of refugees arrived in the camps between 1983
and 1987, with many staying on and having children.
According to aid workers, living conditions in the government-run
refugee camps vary from poor to adequate. Some live in thatched huts,
others in small cement block houses; water and sanitation are
problematic in the more remote camps.
Refugees apply for day release to access free health and education
facilities, and informal jobs outside of the camps also allow refugees
to supplement a monthly government grant of US$38 per family (two adults
and one child).
Though UNHCR does not have access to the camps, four NGOs have been
working with the refugees since 2006 and deliver 23 welfare schemes.
Meanwhile, refugees outside the camps do not face travel restrictions
but lose out on their grant and access to welfare schemes.
*not a real name