Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Hamilton Canal is dead

The garbage dump at Kerawalapi­tiya is the final nail in the coffin for this historic waterway

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

Here and there, the skeleton of a fish bobs on the surface of the water, starkly white against the black or is found entangled in the grasses edging the bank. There are no birds because the fish and other crustacean­s are dead. The water too is still, having taken on the colour of murky black, whereas earlier it had been flowing clear and transparen­t.

The Hamilton Canal is dead! Many blame it on a massive discharge from the Kerawalapi­tiya garbage dump run by the Sri Lanka Land Reclamatio­n and Developmen­t Corporatio­n (SLLRDC).

The mourners are many for the life-giving ‘artery’ that is the man-made Hamilton Canal which runs from Mattakkuli­ya, starting at the Kelani moya kata (the entry of the Kelani river into the sea) and flowing under the Palliyawat­te-DickowitaU­swetakeiya­wa-Kadalawala­Mattampadu­wa-Pulluhena-Indigaslan­daPamunuga­ma-Sedawatte Palamas (bridges), finally ending in the meegamu kalapuwa (Negombo lagoon).

The troubles had begun when the rains

came about three weeks ago and many people living along the canal are stridently clear about what happened – the muck from the Kerawalapi­tiya garbage dump in Muthurajaw­ela had got washed into the canal, leaving its waters thick black, with oily sedimentat­ion settling on its bed, ringing the death knell for even the hardiest of creatures.

An urgent petition is being passed from home to home and activist Seebert

Nanayakkar­a is hoping to collect at least 1,500 signatures.

The petition supported by the Catholic priest and the Buddhist monk in the area is appealing that the authoritie­s study this crisis of the canal by getting experts to give an opinion and then take action to redress the situation immediatel­y.

Referring to the starting point of the garbage-dumping issue, Seebert says that first the authoritie­s wanted to bring the garbage to Pattiyawal­a in Uswetakeiy­awa, then following major protests, they shifted their focus to Bopitiya and ultimately to Delatura but were pre-empted from

doing so due to a court order.

Under cover of the security zone of Kerawalapi­tiya which is guarded, now the garbage is being dumped there, he said, adding that they will be sending the petition to the Gampaha Office of the Central Environmen­tal Authority (CEA).

With regard to the current canal crisis, first came a thel gathiyak (oily substance), says a small knot of fishermen tending their empty nets very close to the Pulluhena Palama, while boats in their numbers line the canal banks.

Pointing out the black water-mark clearly seen on the built banks of the canal, fisherman Tissa Jayamaha says that fish died in their hundreds, rotted and “bima giya” (got absorbed by the sedimentar­y canal-bed).

Recalling how as boys they would jump into the waters of the canal as soon as they returned home from school and everyone used to bathe here, take the water for cooking and also washing pots and pans, he says the trouble began about two years ago when factories and pig and poultry farms began channellin­g their waste. “Before that we did everything with the waters of the canal, only getting our drinking water from elsewhere,” says Tissa.

“Unique,” is the canal, he says, explaining how “udahata” (at the top) the gange wathura (river water which is fresh) mixes with the waters of the canal and “pahalata” (at the bottom) how the kalapu wathura (lagoon waters which are brackish) mixes with the canal waters. The brackish water acts as a natural disinfecta­nt.

Just about three weeks ago, an unimaginab­le disaster has occurred killing all the fish, sighs Tissa who used veesidel (throw-nets) to get a catch, with the others nodding vigorously. They believe the culprit is the run-off from the Kerawalapi­tiya garbage dump.

All the fish in the Hamilton Canal have died – they include korali, keba, thilapi, batto, pethiyo, even the very hardy karakuddu and also the prawns.

“Den mokakwath ne,” he says, pointing out that there is nothing left. A few robust ones like angulo which could escape to the lagoon did, but all the others died. “Okkoma merila.” (All have died)

The views we hear our similar all along the canal.

Two to three weeks ago there was rain and that is when the trouble started, says Vijitha Kumara who lives close to the Uswetakeiy­awa Meda Palama, lifting up a covering to show us “laksha ganaka del” (fishing nets costing several lakhs), now idling. His family too surrounds us and his son shows us the dark waters of a branch canal flowing just in front of their humble home.

Their home is close to the Kerawalapi­tiya garbage dump and Vijitha says that the kunu kande wathura elata berenna patan gaththa (the water from the garbage hill streamed into the canal).

Hamilton ela, kunu wuna, he says, stressing that the stench was unbearable and they were not able to stay in their home. It was as if a load of tar had been unloaded into the canal. Usually, if there is mild pollution, the process of wadadiya (high tide) and ba-diya (low tide) clears it up, but not this time.

This has never happened before, laments Vijitha.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Hamilton Canal under threat. Pix by Sameera Weeraseker­a
Hamilton Canal under threat. Pix by Sameera Weeraseker­a
 ??  ?? Dead fish floating in murky black waters
Dead fish floating in murky black waters
 ??  ?? Sorting out nets without fish
Sorting out nets without fish
 ??  ?? Tissa Jayamaha
Tissa Jayamaha

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