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SRI LANKA: Families return home after bomb-making factory is cleared

Some of the items found in the nearby bomb-making factory located by MAG

Tharmalingam Sountharrajan had little knowledge of the bomb-making factory 700 metres from the family home in the heart of his village.

Containing hundreds of mines, explosives, mortars and other items, the site was a deadly cocktail of badly stored weapons.

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“Even a spark from someone burning something nearby could have set off a huge explosion over 200 metres radius, or even more,” said MAG Sri Lanka’s Technical Field Manager Frank Masche, who assessed the site.

Fifty-five year-old Tharmalingam, his wife Saraswathi, and teenage children Kajerdini and Sajeekaran had left the village of Mulliyavalai Central GN Division, Mullaitivu District in December 2008 due to the conflict. Their 21-year-old daughter had been forcibly recruited to the LTTE (Tamil Tigers) earlier that year.

The shop the family have built in front of their house

The shop the family has built in front of their house.

Kajerdini in the shop with her mother

Fifteen-year-old Kajerdini in the shop with her mother.

Top: Some of the items found in the nearby bomb-making factory located by MAG.

[Photos: MAG Sri Lanka]

Though the civil war ended in May 2009, the family was unable to return until the area had been cleared of the many lethal remnants of  conflict, including those discovered at the bomb-making factory.

“The way the items were arranged was very dangerous, with switches and explosives all over the place,” says Frank. “This was a highly hazardous area which needed to be cleared before any resettlement could take place.”

MAG arranged for the bomb factory to be cleared by the Sri Lankan Army and, following this, resettlement of the area began last month. A total of 49 families (159 people) have now returned safely, with more expected to arrive in the coming months.

After fleeing north to Pokkanai and then spending 12 months living in IDP1 camps in Vavuniya, Tharmalingam and his family returned home on 24 April. Unfortunately, they discovered their shop had been bulldozed during the conflict and their house badly damaged. But the family has built a smaller shop, which is  providing basic household items to the returned population.

 

Approximate location of Mulliyavalai Central

 

Their earnings are now 500 rupees per day (approximately £3), compared to 2,500 rupees (£15) before they fled. They hope to develop their shop further and rebuild the house.

“When I heard about the landmines and UXO2, I was afraid to come home because we didn’t know where they might be,” Tharmalingam told MAG.

“However, now that MAG has done their survey and the dangerous areas have been cleared, we are able to come home and rebuild our lives.”

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Related article:

Palliakuli village, a year on
Twelve months after the end of the civil war, 74-year-old Rasaiya Ragasingham and his family are rebuilding their lives on land cleared of landmines and unexploded ordnance by MAG.

 
     

Notes:

1IDP = internally displaced person(s): people who've been forced to move to other areas of their own country due to conflict.

2 UXO = unexploded ordnance: explosive weapons – such as bombs, rockets, missiles, mortars and grenades –  that did not explode when they were used and still pose a risk of detonation.

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18 May 2010


MAG thanks the following donors to the Sri Lanka programme: AusAID; Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA); Stichting Vluchteling; Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement, US Department of State. Click on Tags below for related articles.

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By freeing up safe land, MAG is enabling people displaced by the civil war in northern Sri Lanka to return to their homes.

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