Photo: Amantha Perera/IRIN. War returnee Genzia Mary
Source: IRIN
PUTHUKKUDIYIRUPPU, 9 November 2012 (IRIN) - Genzia Mary, 10, is
fascinated by the buses arriving in northern Sri Lanka, their jovial
travellers singing in a language that, until two years ago, was
completely foreign to her.
Mary lives in Kilinochchi District, part of the country’s northern
former war zone popularly known as “the Vanni”. Thousands of
southerners, mostly from the majority Sinhala ethnic group, come to
visit war attractions as well as a well-known Buddhist temple north of
the Vanni.
“There are lots of people in [the buses]. Sometimes there are old ammas
[grandmothers] in them, all dressed in white,” she said. Many girls her
age also visit, especially during school holidays. “But I have never
spoken to anyone of them,” Mary said, disappointed. “They never talk to
us.”
For years, the Vanni was cut off from the rest of the country. It was
the main battle ground during two and half decades of civil war, as the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels fought successive
governments, demanding a separate state. The war ended in May 2009 with
LTTE’s defeat.
In late 2009, parts of the region were opened for unrestricted civilian
travel, and thousands of travellers from the south began streaming in.
The numbers have dropped from highs of over 100,000 a day, but they
still figure in the thousands.
These visits could help bring communities inside and outside the
war-scarred region together, but, so far, that has not been the case.
“The two communities still live in two separate cocoons. There is hardly
any interaction,” said Saroja Sivachandran, head of the Centre for
Women and Development, a women’s rights group in northern Jaffna. “One
example of how far the gulf is: the visitors will sometimes bring their
own fire wood. The only interaction with the Vanni population is if they
ask for directions,” she said.
Militarization
Mahendran Sivakumar, 61, is a retired government education officer who
remained in the Vanni even during the bloodiest years of fighting. He
said interaction with southern visitors is limited because mistrust
lingers from the decades of bloodshed and isolation.
“It will take another generation to break the ice. Unfortunately no one
[in authority] seems to doing anything tangible to bring them together,”
Sivakumar said.
He said there is still a significant military presence - mostly
Sinhalese - in the Vanni’s civilian affairs, contributing to Tamil
distrust. More than three years after the end of the war, the military
still plays a large role in daily village life, from attending school
events to repairing water distribution networks. “If the military role
in civilian affairs is reduced and we see public and elected officials
taking a larger role, then people will begin to feel that at last this
sense of being watched is over. But it will not happen overnight.”
Tens of thousands of security forces are posted in Northern Province - at least 80,000 according to
analysts in the north - but there are few other Sinhalese in the region.
Local media report that military-run businesses - from barbershops to
restaurants - have distorted prices and edged out local competition,
worsening the north’s already bleak employment situation.
Sivakumar said southern visitors mostly mingle with government soldiers
and other Sinhalese service personnel in the Vanni. “It is obvious they
feel most comfortable with those who speak the same language.”
Lack of rapprochement
With few chances to interact, deep divisions remain between the Tamil and Sinhalese, the country’s two main ethnic groups.
“Most of the tour buses will travel through areas devastated by the
fighting, with families living in huts. But they [visitors] don’t seem
to care,” Sivachandran said.
She blamed the apparent indifference on ignorance. “The visitors are
clueless as to what happened here, or only know part of the story. For
those living in the Vanni, especially the interior, the tourists are
alien.”
It does not help that there has been no national recognition of civilian
deaths, stripping northerners of the chance to mourn properly, added
Sivachandran. “Some of us feel like there is searing pain within that we
cannot let out. The more it stays in, the more painful it is. Also,
this idea of winners and losers has to end. If it’s one country, then
there are no winners and losers, only survivors.”
Some 40,000 civilians died in the bloodiest stage of fighting before the government declared an end to the war, according to a UN expert panel.
The furious pace of reconstruction masks the lack of rapprochement
between the Tamil and Sinhalese, said Ruki Fernando, a human rights
advocate who formerly headed the Human Rights in Conflict Programme at
the Law and Society Trust, a national advocacy body.
“[Mega development projects] give a false sense that things are moving
here. But nothing much has happened to make a Vanni civilian feel he can
trust the south.”
Officials say it may take years to finish repairs. Meanwhile, ethnic
reconciliation has slipped as a priority, even though it is as essential
to moving beyond conflict as physical repairs, said Fernando.
Repairing ties
There have been few grassroots efforts to bridge the ethnic and cultural
divide between Tamils and Sinhalese. But several small-scale, ad-hoc
exchange programmes are helping to widen people’s perspectives.
Since January 2011, the NGO International Alert has organized three visits to Sri Lanka - including the north - for the UK-based Sri Lankan diaspora.
Johann Rebert, the NGO’s manager in Sri Lanka, said the country’s
diaspora can play an important role in reconciliation efforts.
“Engagement with them is more sustainable, and can lead to better
outcomes, than shutting them out.”
The Colombo-based NGO Sri Lanka Unites, has also brought together youths from both communities, most recently for a conference in Jaffna this past August.
Prashan de Visser, the president of Sri Lanka Unites, counts some 10,000
members in Sri Lanka, 30 percent of whom come from the north. “We live
in a very segregated society. Our focus is to allow the youth to break
out [from] segregation,” he said.
De Visser said every year his organization takes 25 youth leaders from
around the country on a month-long national tour. During this
experience, he said, Sinhalese youths “finally” realize the enormousness
of the destruction in the Vanni. “The three representatives from
Hambantota, [the country’s southern-most district] in fact, pledged to
raise Rs 300,000 [about US$2,300] for our work in the [northern] region.
There is a lot of misinformation out there.”
Sivchandran, the women’s advocate, welcomed these initiatives. But she
warned that without government support, such efforts will have limited
results. “Agencies and activists who work on advocacy issues still
sometimes find it hard to work effectively in the region.”
Where to start?
Bedevilling both activists and authorities is just where to begin to
restore the community ties that existed before LTTE rebels killed 13
government soldiers in 1983, triggering widespread anti-Tamil riots in
other parts of the country.
After 18 months of investigation, the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission,
set up by the government in May 2010, concluded “human rights issues
are critically relevant to the process of reconciliation.”
Between January and May 2009, the government reported 2,635 missing
persons were “untraceable” in Northern Province. Between December 2009
and mid-2012, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) office in Sri Lanka
reported 747 cases of missing children.
“You have to answer the questions on the missing, deaths and alleged
abuse truthfully, once and for all,” said human rights activist
Fernando.
He also criticized the country’s main Tamil political party, Tamil
National Alliance, for making power devolution a prerequisite for
reconciliation. Tamil political leaders have pushed for power
decentralization to address the discrimination that they say led to the
conflict. But an influential group within the government is campaigning
to scrap a constitutional amendment that, in 1987, set up power-sharing
provincial councils, which are now widely regarded as ineffective.
“It is all good if effective power devolution takes place, but by
focusing exclusively on that, we take away the importance of other
underlying issues,” Fernando said.
Though a complicated issue, ethnic reconciliation is possible, said Sri
Lanka Unites president de Visser. “We have inherited a mess, but this is
also an opportunity for us to build strength among youth and foster
unity.”