PUTTALAM, 22 March 2010 (IRIN) - Resettlement efforts are under way for
thousands of displaced Muslims from Sri Lanka’s north who have been
languishing in refugee camps for nearly two decades, officials say.
The internally displaced people (IDPs) were forcibly evicted in
October 1990 from the northern districts of Jaffna, Mannar, Kilinochchi,
Mullaithivu and some parts of Vavuniya by the insurgent Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
About 75,000 Muslims are estimated to have fled, making their way
towards government-controlled areas in Vavuniya and Anuradhapura, as
well as to Puttalam District on the northwestern coast, according to the
International Crisis Group (ICG).
The Minister of Resettlement and Disaster Relief Services, Rishad
Bathiudeen, announced in December 2009 that the government would start
resettling more than 100,000 Muslim IDPs in camps in Puttalam to their places of origin.
“We are currently carrying out a survey for resettlement,”
Bathiudeen told IRIN, noting that resettlement areas still had to be
cleared of mines from the conflict.
“Once the demining is completed we will resettle them in their places of origin,” he said.
Overlooked
The minority Muslim community comprises about 8 percent of Sri
Lanka’s population of 20.2 million, according to the Department of
Census and Statistics.
Rights groups say their plight of the Muslim IDPs has been largely ignored throughout most of the conflict.
While international attention has focused recently on the thousands
of ethnic Tamil IDPs displaced near the end of Sri Lanka’s 26-year
conflict, analysts and aid workers have expressed concern that the
Muslim IDPs will continue to be overlooked.
“While we recognize the urgency for the resettlement of the IDPs,
northern Muslims are worried that there is hardly any acknowledgment of
their existence and needs, and they are left out of any planning of the
entire resettlement process,” said Shreen Saroor, a Muslim IDP and
activist.
In a January 2010 report,
the ICG urged the international community to consider the Muslim IDPs’
right to return to their land. It also called on the government to
clarify plans for the return and resettlement of the IDPs.
“Their right of return should be clearly established, while also
recognizing that some may not want to leave their current homes and
should not be forced,” it said.
Abdul Gaffor, who lives in an IDP camp, cannot afford to build a house for himself
Stay or go?
While some of the IDPs have constructed houses and others have been
living with host families, most are still in the camps, where conditions
are basic, although there is access to clean water and sanitation.
Many of the IDPs were fishermen, farmers or butchers before fleeing but they now mostly work as labourers or masons.
But even with the prospect of resettlement, the decision to return
home for Muslim IDPs - after 20 years in Puttalam - is not clear-cut.
At the Saltern Internal Displacement Camp in Puttalam, some IDPs
said they had visited their ancestral homes in Jaffna, Mannar and the
north of Vavuniya. They found their houses had been destroyed and their
belongings looted.
“I was born and lived in Jaffna. I owned a beef stall there. I was
very happy and healthy, but now I am sick and sad,” Mohamed Yusuf told
IRIN.
“Nevertheless, I want to go back to Jaffna and live. But I am not sure whether it will happen before I die,” he said.
While some said they had adapted to life in Puttalam, many said they
were willing to go back if the authorities provided them with basic
needs such as a house.
“I have worked in Saudi Arabia for 10 years as a housemaid, and
managed to build three houses in Jaffna, but all of them were
destroyed,” said Najeefa Mohamed Hussain.
Najeefa Mohamed Hussain's houses were destroyed in Jaffna. Thousands of Muslim IDPs have yet to return to their homes
“I want to build at least one house in Jaffna, but I am not financially able to make it a reality,” she said.
COURTESY: IRIN NEWS
(This article was first published by IRIN NEWS on 22nd of March 2010.
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