Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Prime State land changes hands with livelihood loss to stakeholde­rs

Army insists on part of plantation rich in mineral deposits despite being offered alternate block

- By Leon Berenger

The management and the authoritie­s on a Stateowned estate in Matale are in a heated stand-off, after some 100 acres of prime land from the plantation was handed over to a nearby Army cantonment, made possible through a gazette notificati­on.

Elkaduwa Plantation­s Chairman Yasantha Wadugodapi­tiya told the Sunday Times that the land was acquired from Nalanda Estate located at Naula in Pekkepola, which has rich mineral deposits such as granite and dolomite, apart from profitable crops of cocoa, pepper, rubber, coco- nut and cadju, and also a popular restaurant serving traditiona­l food.

He said with the acquisitio­n of this land by the army, it will dwarf production­s on the estate, with hundreds of hands laid off.

“We offered the authoritie­s an alternativ­e piece of land that could be used by the army, but they disagreed, and insisted on this particular location. There were plans to develop this particular land using the rich mineral deposits that will eventually upgrade the living standards of the local villagers, in keeping with the ‘Mahinda Chintana’ programme, but now all this will have to be stopped,”Mr. Wadugodapi­tiya said.

He said the matter he would be taken up with the highest authoritie­s. Meanwhile, Matale Government Agent (GA) Ms K. H. A. Meegasmull­a said, “This is a normal procedure taken under the Land Acquisitio­n Act, and the management will have to understand this issue. This cannot be stopped, as it has also been gazetted.”

She added that the army urgently needed the land to expand its present complex, and scoffed at allegation­s of a move to take over the mineral deposits in that area. “This is Stateowned land, and the military has every right to acquire it for whatever purposes,” she said.

“My office is helpless on this issue, and it is up to the relevant ministries looking after lands and plantation­s to sort out the matter,” Ms. Meegasmull­a further said.

Lands Ministry Secretary Asoka Peiris said he was not aware of such a developmen­t in Matale, and said, he would look into the matter, while the Plantation­s Ministry Secretary Sudharma Karunaratn­e could not be reached for comment.

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