Poll outcome @ Menik Farm: "We want an opportunity to rebuild our shattered lives"
IDPs divided over election outcome
by IRIN News
As the results of Sri Lanka's first post-war presidential election poured in, the mood at Menik Farm, in the main government-run camp for the ethnic Tamil internally displaced (IDPs), in the northern town of Vavuniya, was sober.
Only 6,000 residents of the camp, home to some 118,000 IDPs, sought to register for the 27 January polls.

Released from Menik Farm into a settlement in Valanai, these displaced civilians do not even get three square meals a day
"We want an opportunity to rebuild our shattered lives," said a resident, Sellamma Vallimuttu. She recalled a time when the north was flourishing, with lush paddy fields, hectares of onion fields and unrestricted fishing.
Vallimuttu just wanted to gather her family around one hearth and lead a normal life. "Is that too much to ask for?"
"I see no reason to celebrate the victory of a president whose military drive drove us into these camps and made us war-displaced," said Selvathurai Arasaratnam, from the northern town of Settikulam, not far from Menik Farm.
But others saw a glimmer of hope that their concerns were being "politically prioritized" by the government.
Even Arasaratnam saw an opportunity to restore normality and economic development to the once prosperous region.
But with concerns far beyond electing a new president, the displaced want nothing more than to return home. The camps remain unhygienic and supplies irregular, they claim.
Kanagaratnam Kanagasabai, 22, told IRIN there were still sparks of militancy, which could resurface unless and until the political needs of the Tamil people were addressed.
Others hoped for a massive reconstruction effort and an economic drive that would raise the economic status of the north.
"Our children have been denied education for over six months. They have some ad hoc lessons within camps but is that education?" demanded an IDP, who refused to be named.
Hoping for change
"We had homes, employment, flourishing fields, and education for children, roads, electricity, transport, health and a political voice. We lost all that over the past years," said Arasaratnam.
Though clamouring to leave the camps, most of them do not have homes to return to - or the means to support family members, many of whom are now scattered.
Some displaced felt further deprived by the government's refusal to engage them in the development work taking place under the government's main northern rehabilitation programme, "Vadakkin Wasantham" or the Flourishing North.
Rishard Bathiudeen, Minister of Resettlement and Disaster Relief Services, agreed that the restrictions placed on IDPs' movement denied them an opportunity to be gainfully employed.
"But things will change soon," he told IRIN.
"We want to witness economic development. That's our primary need," said Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian, Mavai Senathiraja, noting that the richly endowed northeast should now experience rapid economic progress.
Low turnout
In Jaffna District - one of four districts in Sri Lanka’s Northern Province and politically the most important in the Tamil-majority north - only 18 percent of the displaced voted, a source from the Election Commissioner's Department told IRIN, despite special facilities being provided, including transport to voting centres.
What IDPs hope for is not just priority attention but a participatory process in rebuilding their homes and their lives, shattered by protracted military engagements and political neglect.
"For too long, we were bargaining chips, guinea pigs and marginalized. We would like to recommence living," IDP Subramaniyam said.
According to the Sri Lankan Election Commission Rajapaksa won 57 percent of the vote, while Sarath Fonseka, his main rival and former army commander, won 40 percent.
Some 70 percent of the country's 14 million eligible voters turned out to vote; however, turnout in Tamil areas in the north was less than 30 percent, the Independent Centre for Monitoring Election Violence, reported.
IRIN (Integrated Regional Information Networks) is part of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, but its services are editorially independent.
2 Comments
Tamils are hard working community. They feel that getting free gifts and grants from government is a humiliation. However the 30 years of war has changed their attitude, behavior, moral, and values drastically. Those, who have expressed their views, are showing that the lost community trying to get their grip back. I wish they should gain their power back.
Those who voted probably voted in fear; less than 5% of the 118,000 voters.
They are the people who witnessed massacre and faced it wholesale. None of them would have wanted anything to do with the oppressive Sinhala regimes.
They probably saw "channel 4 video clip" alive. They know that the Sinhala video "experts" by deliberately contradicting the video evidence, have become "experts", using their expertise to cover up war crimes. By such an act the "experts" have become criminals themselves.
In Sri Lanka any expertise is subjugated to Sinhala Buddhist racism. Therfore expertise is not really expertise. This happened in Nazi rule in Germany.
What we see is an evidence supporting that truth.
It is time for GOSL to accept the truth of war crimes evidenced by Channel 4 video clip, ask for apology from Tamils and bring the criminals to justice before they are warraanted and disgraced by an International Court.
Tamils Against Genocide(TAG), should pursue relentlessly to bring all the war criminals in Sri Lanka to justice.