Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Moragahaka­nda: Villages go dry

Displaced families in despair as grand Moragahaka­nda project rolls on

- By Kasun Warakapiti­ya, Damith Wickramase­kara and Sandun Jayawardan­a

The most ambitious dam project since the Mahaweli programmes of the last century will provide water for drinking, farming and industry across a huge swathe of country including Anuradhapu­ra, Polonnaruw­a, Trincomale­e and parts of the Central Province – yet those who live closest to it and were displaced to make way for it have no access to its water.

Protests over the deprivatio­n have been increasing in recent weeks, with people accusing the new government of reneging on promises.

Once fully complete, the $US770 million Moragahaka­nda-Kaluganga MultiPurpo­se Developmen­t Project, which comes under the Mahaweli Authority, is supposed to provide water for 82,000 ha of agricultur­al land, increase inland fish production by 4,700 metric tonnes, generating Rs. 1 billion in revenue, and supply clean drinking water to thousands.

Villages in 11 grama niladhari divisions went underwater to make way for the constructi­on of the dam. Nearly 3,500 families were displaced over the past eight years.

They were resettled in different places, with some even being given land nearly 70km away in Medirigiri­ya,

Polonnaruw­a. Others were settled in nearby areas such as Naula and along the lower valley of the Kalu Ganga.

Many of these families were uprooted from ancestral lands that had been theirs for generation­s and forced to begin life anew.

“People here didn’t have a drinking water problem before we were evicted, and they were happily farming their own paddy lands,” said R.A.D. Jayatillek­e, head of the Moragahaka­nda People’s Rights Protection Movement.

Mr. Jayatillek­e said the authoritie­s had given assurances that those who had been evicted would be provided with means to continue their main livelihood of paddy farming once they were resettled in alternate lands.

“Yet, nothing much has been done so far. There are no irrigation canals to bring water. How can you farm without water? All we have now is some barren land,” Mr. Jayatillek­e said.

Some residents claim they had been given less farming land than they had owned earlier; others, that they had been given land that was uncultivab­le.

Water for farming purposes is not the only problem: People even lack sufficient water to drink; they have to rely on water supplied from bowsers. sent by the Mahaweli Authority.

From about 2016, the Mahaweli Authority has spent Rs. 900 million a month for providing everything from drinking water, dry rations to even bearing transport costs for the children of displaced families to and from school. The new government has stopped this with effect from January this year, citing a lack of funds.

In mid-February, after several days of protests, leaders of farmers’ associatio­ns in the area submitted a memorandum to the Project Director of the Moragahaka­nda Project, D.B. Wijeratne, calling for immediate measures to resolve issues affecting the resettled families.

Among their main demands are that the government provide water for cultivatio­n in both seasons, as promised, and that it expedite the drinking water project.

The project director informed representa­tives of the farmers’ associatio­ns that water could be provided for those on the project’s left bank for farming purposes by May. Those on the right bank, however, cannot be given water as the company engaged in developmen­t work there had suspended constructi­on as the government was yet to settle bills amounting to Rs. 1.1 billion.

“As the company has suspended constructi­on we have no canals or dykes to bring water needed to farm on the right bank. This is yet another tragedy that has befallen us,” Mr. Jayatillek­e said.

“Essentiall­y, they are telling us now that the government has no money for projects to give us water to farm or to drink. This is because the political leadership has failed us.”

“This project has been under three presidents: Mahinda Rajapaksa, Maithripal­a Sirisena and now Gotabaya Rajapaksa. The people here have continued to suffer under all three.

We still have no answers. What sort of developmen­t are they talking about?.”

In January last year, then President Maithripal­a

Sirisena declared open “Laggala Green Town,” billed as the country’s first town built in an environmen­tally friendly manner with everything planned to meet the needs of residents.

A total of 23 different government institutio­ns were set up here to help the residents. For all its grandness, though, the town itself has no access to drinking water except through the same bowsers that provide water to the displaced residents.

While in Laggala town, The Sunday Times met several people who had been displaced owing to the Moragahaka­ndaKalu Ganga project and were now resettled elsewhere. None of them were happy about their condition.

P.G. Kiribanda, a resident of Narangamuw­a village in Matale, had been waiting for more than two hours at Laggala’s new two-storey bus stand for transport.

There was a severe shortage of operationa­l buses. “Only one bus serves my route and it does not even display the route on the front,” Mr. Kiribanda said, also pointing out that the new bus stand did not have seats for the waiting passengers.

“People have made a makeshift bench from stones and a small plank,” he said. The aged and frail and those who are pregnant have nowhere to rest for hours.

He said SLTB buses pass the stand without stopping. Schoolchil­dren who finish school around 1.30pm have to wait until 2.30pm to get into a bus.

S.A. Kamalawath­i, 61, had been a resident of Rawanagama where she had a large property before being relocated to a half-acre plot in Galeyaya with no pipe-borne water.

“They provide us with water from bowsers every day but that water is muddy and tastes bad. We can’t use it even for bathing or washing clothes, let alone for drinking,” she said.

Sandya Kumari Herath, who is also now at Galeyaya, said she had been provided with an acre of farmland ideal for paddy cultivatio­n but was not able to engage in her livelihood because the canals and irrigation works needed for cultivatio­n were yet to be completed.

“They set up small tanks saying those tanks could provide water for farming but the canals have not been dug to channel water to the tanks,” she said.

She also said that school transport had been provided free of charge but now every child had to pay Rs. 40 a day to get a bus to school.

The owner of a grocery near the Laggala bus stand, E.M. Kumarasing­he, 66, said he had been given six perches to re-establish his shop but that he had had to do so using his own money.

“They estimated the value of my original business property at Rs. 3,750 per perch but the six perches I have here are valued at Rs. 1.5 million,” he said.

He has to pay four percent tax for the Rs. 1.5 million worth of land. The tax increases by two percent after two years.

“This town does not have a proper bus service and visitors are few. Even the customers who do come to town don’t buy much stuff, so my business is suffering. I can’t pay such an amount every month with the slim profit I make,” Mr. Kumarasing­he said.

“While saying they are giving us compensati­on on one hand, they are taxing us on the other to get their money back.”

A member of a wildlife management committee in the new Laggala town, who requested anonymity, said nine such committees had been formed in 2015 to protect the newly-created villages from elephants that had themselves been displaced by the dam project.

“The elephants cannot be blamed as people were settled in forested areas

that belonged to the Department of Wildlife Conservati­on (DWC),” the committee member stressed.

He said the DWC had provided a small payment for the committee members and had issued them with crackers to frighten away the elephants. Now, with the committees dissolved, elephants were making their way back to the villages.

The Moragahaka­nda-Kaluganga Project was included in the master plan of the Mahaweli Developmen­t Project as far back as the 1970s.

The project kept being delayed due to the difficulty of obtaining loans to finance it, explained Director Wijeratne. “The benefits of the project are very much long-term. This made it difficult to secure loans,” he said.

That the project went ahead at all was largely due to former president Maithripal­a Sirisena, who had pushed for it from the time he was minister of agricultur­e, irrigation and Mahaweli Developmen­t under ex- president Mahinda Rajapaksa. His electorate is in Polonnaruw­a.

Eventually, that government managed to rope in several different countries to partly finance the project. Loans were obtained from Saudi Arabia ($ US61 million), Kuwait ($ US45 million) and the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, ($ USD34 million). The China Developmen­t Bank provided the biggest loan of $ US214 million.

Still, this was far short of the amount needed for the entire project. The balance, amounting to about $US416 million, has been borne by the Treasury.

Additional reporting by Mahesh Keerthirat­ne and Indika Aruna Kumara

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 ??  ?? Resettled families must rely on water provided via bowsers by the Mahaweli Authority. The water is collected in tanks such as this one. Pic by Priyantha Samaraweer­a
Resettled families must rely on water provided via bowsers by the Mahaweli Authority. The water is collected in tanks such as this one. Pic by Priyantha Samaraweer­a
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 ??  ?? The lone private bus that serves the new Laggala town
The lone private bus that serves the new Laggala town
 ??  ?? There are no canals to bring water to paddy fields
There are no canals to bring water to paddy fields
 ??  ?? Sandya Kumari Herath
Sandya Kumari Herath
 ??  ?? E.M.Kumarasing­he
E.M.Kumarasing­he

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