Regimented
Wanni wants help- not helpers
Tyronne Devotta, Deputy Editor with The Sunday Times,
was the first journalist from the South to visit the tsunami-battered
Wanni
dominated by the LTTE. Here is his on-the-spot report:
Nature’s fury has kept the Tiger guerrillas
much busier than the times during the near two decades of war they
fought with the Sri Lankan security forces. I was greeted by heartrending
scenes as I entered the heartland of the Tamil guerrilla controlled
terrain – Mullaitivu - Friday (December 31) morning. Along
the coast lay a vast swathe of destruction extending for miles.
Guerrilla
cadres and relief workers pull out bodies from the debris –
collapsed buildings, broken-down structures and fallen trees. The
last rites are performed with an odd combination – kerosene
and sugar. Makeshift pyres burn all round.
I walk
around them. A few hundred yards away, a guerrilla cadre armed with
an assault rifle is on a killing spree. He is shooting dead all
the stray dogs he could see. He says they want to avoid the spread
of disease. Worse enough, there have also been dogs feeding on human
carcasses.
I
had to obtain permission from the LTTE to enter the area. Civilians
are required to obtain permission. They are selective. Those who
get the clearance are inoculated and issued with face masks.
I
walk past a collapsed building. My Tiger guide tells me that this
was a home for children. Thirty-two had died on that day. Most of
them were under three years.
The
pyres exude a smell of burning flesh all around. My guide says he
feels eerie. That was too much even for the battle-hardened one,
a medic of all things. It was bizarre indeed. Night was engulfing
the area. On the New Year’s eve, the only light to guide us
came from the burning pyres. What a contrast to those glittering
decorations of the years past.
As
we move around, word is out that the Sea Tiger “Special Commander”
Soosai is in the area. The presence of uniformed military cadres
in the area proves it. Uniformed cadres are conspicuous by their
absence. Most are in civvies. Soosai has been given the job of clearing
the area fast. His men tell me that he has not slept for days now.
He is personally supervising. Seeing Soosai was clear proof that
reports of his parting ways with leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran,
was again disinformation. Here he was, carrying out his leader’s
orders. We were on our way back to Kilinochchi. As the headlight
of our vehicle pierces the night air, we saw a stout figure in military
fatigues. My guide excitedly whispers Soosai. That was how we spotted
Soosai.
The
worst problem it seems is the identification of bodies now bloated
after being in the water for days. The next day, in another area,
I found the dead were being dumped in mass graves. The stench was
unbearable but the relief workers prodded on.
The
injured had been moved to hospitals and even houses or open ground.
Some of the serious cases have later been transferred to Vavuniya
hospital after clearance was granted at the Army check-point. The
Tigers have placed the death toll in their areas at over 20,000
with well over 12,000 missing.
It’s
now two weeks since the tsunami struck the island; the shock and
surprise caused by this enormous force from the sea have sunk in.
The death toll and the damage it caused to property no longer make
headlines.
Relief
work is gradually turning into reconstruction – to build the
shattered lives of the thousands living on the coastal belt of our
country. A common disaster to the whole island, it struck in the
so-called cleared and uncleared areas with no discrimination. But
what was common in this disaster has not brought any common ground
in the handling of relief work and plans for reconstruction. North-South
mistrust still exists with the LTTE and the Government pointing
fingers at each other.
The
Tigers say the Government does not help them because of its alliance
with the JVP. They say that 80% of the coast of the North and East
is administered by the LTTE. They say that they have no hope for
the rehabilitation of their fishermen because the Fisheries Ministry
comes under the JVP.
The
LTTE wants southern aid but wants control of it when it crosses
the border. They are willing to be a part of the national disaster
management programme but on their terms. LTTE's political wing leader
S. P. Thamilselvan says “the hand of friendship extended by
the South will be appreciated over time and will be viewed positively
in the peace process”.
Even
in disaster, politics seems to be taking the upper hand over relief
or reconstruction. Politics of this tsunami even extends to the
orphaned children – as to who would take charge of them. Just
a few days after the disaster Sarvodaya Chief A.T. Ariyaratne visits
the LTTE-controlled Wanni. His luxury Intercooler takes him to the
media unit of the LTTE where he greets the head of the unit, Daya
Master, with a loud “Vannakkam” and his first few sentences
are in faltering Tamil. He has a plan for the orphaned children
– the setting up of a centre in Mullaitivu to look after them.
The plan, he says will extend until the children become majors and
the funds for this project “no problem” he says. Daya
Master is very polite. Dr. Ariyartne and his team are plied with
cool Necto and at the end of the meeting Daya Master promises a
meeting with Mr. Thamilselvan. The head of the Sarvodaya departs
not knowing whether he has struck gold.
The
aid is slowly coming in and it is centrally controlled by the Tamil
Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO). All items that come in are documented
carefully and stored in warehouses. As it is usual now key administration
points for this disaster management is supervised by expat Tamils.
Computer scientists, doctors, engineers are all actively involved
in the processing and distribution of relief items. “There
must be accountability in aid collection. Not a drop will go waste,”
they say.
At
the Tamil Health Organisation (THO), there are careful needs assessments
being made for drugs and the right amounts are being bought and
shipped to Sri Lanka by the Tamil Diaspora. There is aid coming
from the South and there are complaints from officials of the Tamil
Health Organisation that some of the items have passed the ‘best
use before’ date. These items are separated and burnt. Slowly
the presence of the international community and the world media
is taking focus.
An
Italian delegation who visited Mr. Thamilselvan with an aid package
had only praise for the efficiency for this organization. The warehousing
techniques are excellent, they said and “we are sure that
these supplies will be used efficiently”. The disaster has
not in anyway hampered the hospitality of the LTTE. Their ‘Tank
View’ Guest house is packed to capacity with diplomats, international
media and members of the Tamil Diaspora.
In
the LTTE Peace Secretariat, Tamil expatriates gather data on the
dead, injured and displaced in the eight districts of the North
and East and compare them with the Government Agents' figures. They
say they are evaluating needs at a ground level.
Ana
Pararajasingham, Chairman of the Australian Federation of Tamil
Associations says, “We are on ground zero. What they need
is to be compensated, not to go to the pre-tsunami position. They
should be given what had been denied to them due to the war. Aid
should be equitably distributed in the North and South. If the Sri
Lanka Government continues to ignore the North-East, it will only
demonstrate that it is not interested in the well-being of the people
of the North and East and I hope it does not stay that away and
I hope the Sri Lanka Government rises above politics and helps in
a humanitarian way.”
The
Government has offered help to the LTTE. The guerillas, however,
say they do not need helpers but only the help. The debate continues
14 days after the catastrophe. |