Provincial elections could trigger widespread redevelopment

After provincial elections in Sri Lanka’s Eastern region concluded on 10 May, some economic recovery and increased assistance from the humanitarian community is likely, according to UN and other officials.

Much of the Eastern Province, which includes Batticaloa, Ampara and Trincomalee districts, was devastated by fighting in 2006-2007 between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the government, with hundreds of thousands of people displaced and homes and livelihoods destroyed. Most of the displaced have returned to their villages in the past year.

[Sri Lankans exercised their right to vote for the first time in 15 years in the March and May elections in eastern Sri Lanka]

The ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), running against the main opposition parties, the United National Party, the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress, and the People’s Liberation Front, secured the Provincial Council by winning 20 of the 37 seats, although some observers and opposition parties claim the election was marred by irregularities and intimidation.

“The new civil administration structure now in place could provide the stage for programmes that would allow the people to return to their normal lives and regain lost livelihoods,” Zola Dowell, head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Sri Lanka, told IRIN.

“The elections could also become the start for the return of more stability in the region,” she said.

Confidence

A functional, regional administrative structure, the first of its kind in more than 15 years, would also see a shift from the focus on humanitarian work to large-scale, long-term development work, if it can win the confidence of donors and financial institutions, aid officials said.

“Despite the criticism of its conduct, the poll is now over and we could see large development banks and others like UN agencies committing to development projects now that there is a proper system and probably more security,” Joergen Kristensen, country director of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), an NGO working in the province, told IRIN.

[Despite the elections, security is still very tight throughout the Eastern Province]

President Mahinda Rajapakse termed the electoral victory an endorsement of government policies and pledged to press ahead with development work.

“I look forward to their [the elected members'] cooperation in the country’s march to strengthen and widen democracy throughout our country, and to assisting in the tasks already initiated and ahead to develop the Eastern Province,” he said in a statement soon after the election results were announced.

The government gained full control of the province in July 2007 and first held elections for local government bodies in Batticaloa District in March 2008, followed by the weekend poll.

Returnees at risk

More than 124,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) in Eastern Province (see map in PDF format) have returned to their villages as of April 2008, according to OCHA. It said 108,000 of the returnees were in Batticaloa District alone, although some 30,000 still remained in the province.

NRC’s Kristensen cautioned that before moving into large development work, the return of all IDPs in the province should be completed.

“Some of these people have been displaced since 2006,” Kristensen told IRIN. “They have been unable to return home due to a variety of reasons, including the setting-up of high security zones in their former villages … we hope that the authorities take their cases on a priority basis now that there is hope for more stability.”

[Some 30,000 displaced people have yet to be resettled in the Eastern Province of Sri Lanka. They live in poor conditions in welfare camps and with host families-photos by Amantha Perera]

In addition, the World Food Programme (WFP) found that 62 percent of returnees in Trincomalee District had limited income opportunities, raising concern about their food security.

“Sixty-four percent [in the district] are food insecure . . . and 62 percent are at risk to livelihoods due to food insecurity combined with livelihood affecting coping mechanisms,” WFP stated in a report, Emergency Food Security Assessment Trincomalee, Sri Lanka, released in March 2008.

In a similar study of Batticaloa District in November 2007, WFP found that 36 percent of the surveyed returnees faced such problems.

Some people who witnessed the elections suggest a climate for redevelopment exists but the population needs to wait to see just how the new Provincial Council will proceed.

“There is an opportunity to work for the benefit of the people who have gone through hell, but a lot will depend on how the government and the elected members, especially those in control of the provincial government, handle their new-found power,” Sunanda Deshapriya, an election monitor in Batticaloa for the Colombo-based Centre for Monitoring Election Violence, told IRIN.

[Report by United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs - Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN)]

2 Comments »

  1. nathan said,

    May 14, 2008 @ 7:35 pm

    The JHU opposes the giving of land and police powers to the Eastern Province Council.
    Without these, no development can happen.
    If these are given, the other Councils too will demand same.
    The Ministers will oppose this, as their powers will be diminished, as too will be the powers of the President.
    President Premadasa had the same problem.
    He refused, and Varadarajapperumal made a Unilateral Declaration of Independence.
    The rest is history.

  2. Ratnam Ganesh said,

    May 15, 2008 @ 11:10 pm

    I think it is better not to talk about redevelopment at this juncture.Redevelopment for the government does not mean economic development or how to to bring the people in the east to prosper.It only means how the multinationals can dig deep and how many Sri Lankan elites benifit out of it.Another point of concern is to satisfy the Sinhalse voters ,some form of colonisation introduced into it and keep the the ethnic slur keep boiling to keep- voters towards their party.
    There are so many other factors to be considered before Redevelopment:
    1.Is there democracy in the east?
    2.Are there Military presence.Or are there armed groups.
    3.Was there a democratic election?
    Etc.
    Hence it is better to wait for sometime and see how things develop.

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