Socialist Party

 |  Mobile  |  19 June 2013 | 

Archive article from The Socialist Issue 423


Print this articlePrint this article

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Home   |   The Socialist 19 - 25 Jan 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Sri Lanka: The tsunami legacy

One year on... where is the relief?

WORKING PEOPLE around the world gave generously in order to support the victims of the 2004 tsunami - well before their respective governments began to release their statements of sympathy.

Senan, CWI, London

Oxfam, for example, raised more than £160 million of which more than 90% of the donations came from ordinary people. Within one week, 35,000 people logged into the website of CAFOD (Catholic Agencies for Overseas Development) to donate money. More than £300 million was raised in the UK alone.

Overall, $2.95 billion of relief was promised to Sri Lankan tsunami victims. But still tsunami victims are on the streets begging. Where has this money gone? Why have only just under 1,000 houses been built in Sri Lanka out of more than 50,000 houses damaged by the wave? What happened to more than 2,000 containers out of 5,000 that arrived at Sri Lankan ports? This riddle is not a difficult one to solve.

Soon after the tsunami there were about 500 NGOs (Non-Governmental Organisations) that landed in Sri Lanka. With their share of tsunami money, each organisation claimed to be doing relief work. It is enough to look at some NGOs' operations to get an overall picture of what was happening to the tsunami money and why the victims are still suffering.

They began work by buying brand new vehicles, mainly imported from India. Not only did they have to pay large sums for these brand new vehicles but also they had to pay import tax on them. For example Oxfam paid more than one million rupees in import tax to the Sri Lankan government.

The administration costs of these NGOs sometimes exceed what is spent on their aid work. For example, the cost of sending a bottle of water to Sri Lanka exceeds the cost of a bottle of water itself.

The CCF (Christian Charity Fund) on the other hand has been giving loans to certain chosen small businessmen and established middle class people. In order to secure the repayment of the loan with interest they chose their 'customers' from 'reliable' individuals and organisations, and they were not always tsunami victims.

Citigroup, also operating in the country, has actively increased its customer base among small businesses and wealthy individuals. Their programmes of 'microfinance' and 'microcredit' are expanding at high speed.

Many tsunami victims who have lost all their belongings will not qualify for these loans which bear a market interest rate. Citigroup published reports listing the number of farmers and fisherman who can qualify for the loans, of which the majority are not tsunami victims but locals with existing business interests.

The United Nations lists Citigroup along with the World Bank and Deutsche Bank as an organisation that provides relief. However, it also points out that: "Microcredit programmes are not always the answer. If individuals lack the means to repay loans, they can be left in a situation that is worse than before. For those lacking income or the means to repay a loan, other types of assistance, such as grants, employment, training programmes and shelter may be more suitable."

The United Nations (UN) has recently accepted George Bush's appointment of former US presidents, Bill Clinton and Bush senior, as Tsunami envoys. Immediately after the appointment, Clinton started to employ his former colleagues. To the horror of UN secretary general Kofi Annan, Clinton has started to create his own power base in the United Nations.

Ditched promises

In total, out of the allocation of $2.95 billion, funds from NGOs stand at about $853 million. So what happened to the rest of the pledge?

In the UK, the Disaster Emergencies Committee (DEC) - an umbrella group representing major charities - has raised about £300 million. Prime minister, Tony Blair, promised the British public that his government would match the generosity of the public. On a BBC radio programme at the time, Blair boasted: "My estimate is that we will need to spend from government funds several hundred million pounds. So we will far and away more than match the generosity of the British people."

On 12 December 2005 The Times reported that the prime minister had ditched his promise. There was a new government announcement that the payment was only £250 million. On breaking down the figures, The Times report also revealed that only £75 million of that actually went on humanitarian relief efforts.

It is the same story with other so-called donor countries, provoking Oxfam to publish a 'name and shame' table of countries that are failing to meet their pledges. But not delivering their pledges is not stopping these countries controlling and deciding where and when this tsunami money is going. For example, the US withheld its funds from Sri Lanka straight after a court in the country ruled against the government's P-TOMS (Post Tsunami Operational Management Structure) agreement with the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam).

They also try to manipulate the fund-receiving countries to implement neo-liberal capitalist policies and carry out privatisation. Millions of workers donated this money unconditionally to better the victims' lives. Their generosity has been misused and their interests misrepresented by their respective governments.

Part of the funds raised for tsunami victims in Sri Lanka have reached the country but never got any further than the pockets of the politicians and their cronies. The Sri Lankan executive director of 'Transparency International', J.C Weliamuna, announced publicly that: "Tsunami funds have been used for party political purposes and new houses given to people with political affiliations who were not affected by the Tsunami."

The ruling United People's Front Alliance (UPFA) government and its some time ally, the Sinhala chauvinist JVP (People's Liberation Front) have been releasing relief only in those areas where they have political support.

The JVP wants to exclude the minority Tamils from tsunami relief. The new president Mahinda Rajapaksa made a pact with the JVP that they will not deliver tsunami relief to those victims who live in the areas controlled by the LTTE.

Corruption

The distribution of aid is the secret of their victory in the recent presidential election. In Matara, in particular, in contrast to the very close final result nationally, the UPFA candidate, supported by the JVP, got nearly 62% of the votes and the opposition United National Party got less than 37%.

In the election, the USP (United Socialist Party, CWI Sri Lanka) came third in almost all the areas but Matara was an exception. The USP came fourth there! In that district widespread corruption is reported in the recent Sri Lankan Auditor General's report. It is the same story in Kalmunai and Tangalai in the Ampara district on the east coast.

In Negombo, on the West coast, there were 600 victims of the tsunami yet nearly 7.6 million rupees were distributed to 15,843 families! The Auditor General's report lists widespread mismanagement of tsunami funds by the government and NGO authorities. It also points out that locally raised money is in a fixed-rate deposit account of a handful of organisations just accruing interest.

This is what is happening to the tsunami money. While tsunami money is being played with in the hands of a few, the real victims are left with the horror and devastation of the tsunami. More than 100,000 people affected by the tsunami may have been able to drive the memories of the big wave out of their brains, but they are still being tormented by the tsunami of their corrupt government's neglect of their needs and the hypocrisy and economic exploitation of imperialism.

Organised international working class struggle is the only way to fight such oppression on a mass scale.


Translation of article written in Tamil for the CWI website www.socialistworld.net


Campaign Sri Lanka

'Campaign Sri Lanka' raised thousands of pounds internationally from CWI sections, trade unions and individual supporters.

Some of this money was used to directly assist the tsunami victims, e.g. providing school books, bags, shoes, kitchen utensils, medical supplies and bicycles.

But the main role was to help to re-establish trade unions and to assist the tsunami victims in their protests and struggles to get justice from the government. Many see the corruption and hypocrisy of capitalism and imperialism.

A number of issues of a special tsunami paper - Tsunami People's Voice - have been printed in both Sinhala and Tamil languages. Many people have told CWI members in Sri Lanka (United Socialist Party) that the CWI is the only organisation campaigning for them.


Huddersfield


conference

Your comments: Big Brother, Galloway...


Build for action

ballot



 

 

Home   |   The Socialist 19 - 25 Jan 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

In this issue

Unite to save our NHS

1,500 March in Huddersfield

Growing anger at academies

Crime and anti-social behaviour

Build a political alternative to New Labour

Time for a new mass workers' party

Time for a political alternative

Are 'super unions' the solution?

Build for action

Visteon workers braced for attacks

Walk out prompts ASLEF ballot

Iran: Nuclear row raises fears internationally

One year on... where is the relief?


 

More...

Links

Socialist Party and CWI

Committee for a Workers' InternationalThe Socialist Party is part of the Committee for a Workers‘ International (CWI) which fights for socialism world wide. www.socialistworld.net.


Come to Socialism 2013

Come to Socialism 2013


National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN)

National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN)


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC)

Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC)


Socialism Today

Socialism Today 169 - June 2013

Socialism Today is the monthly magazine of the Socialist Party
Click here to subscribe

- In this month's issue:

TUSC and the road to a new workers’ party

Boycotting Israel: the socialist view

GPs: taking care of budgets


Youth and student

Youth Fight for Jobs

Click here for our youth and student pages

- See also:

Youth Fight For Jobs website

Socialist Students website


More...

Share on Facebook

Contact us

 

Phone our national office on 020 8988 8777

Email: info@socialistparty.org.uk


Locate your nearest Socialist Party branch Text your name and postcode to 07761 818 206


Regional Socialist Party organisers:

Eastern: 0790 516 7703

East Mids: 0116 223 0534

London: 020 8988 8786

North East: 0191 421 6230

North West 07769 611 320

South East: 07894 716 095

South West: 07759 796 478

Southern: 07833 681910

Wales: 07891 547900

West Mids: 02476 555 620

Yorkshire: 0114 264 6551

About Us

What we Stand For

About the Socialist Party

Our 2012 manifesto

Joining the Socialist Party - what will it mean for you

Members’ resources

Pay in The Socialist sales

Pay in Fighting Fund

Leaflets and petitions

Miscellaneous book orders

Marxism

Marxist guides

Karl Marx Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels

Communism, grotesque caricature: see Soviet Union. See also What About Russia?

Cuba

Dialectical materialism

Genuine communism: see Marxism, What is it?

Historical materialism


How would a socialist economy work?

Lenin Lenin: On Marxism

Marxism: What is it?

Philosophy, Marxism

Russian Revolution

The State and Revolution


Socialism: What is it?

Socialist Countries?

Socialist Party manifesto

Soviet Union

State, The

Terrorism: Marxism Opposes Terrorism

Trotsky Trotsky: On the Russian Revolution

What about Russia?

What is Marxism?

What is Socialism?

Books and Videos

Socialist Party videos

Click here for our video pages

Left Books

Click here for our online publications

Click here to go to Left Books (opens in new window) for new and secondhand books

Archive

Categories

1-9 

1-9 


Select articles from month:

June 2013

May 2013

April 2013

March 2013

February 2013

January 2013

December 2012

November 2012

October 2012

September 2012

August 2012

July 2012

June 2012

May 2012

April 2012

March 2012

February 2012

January 2012

December 2011

November 2011

October 2011

September 2011

August 2011

July 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

March 2011

February 2011

January 2011

December 2010

November 2010

October 2010

September 2010

August 2010

July 2010

June 2010

May 2010

April 2010

March 2010

February 2010

January 2010

December 2009

November 2009

October 2009

September 2009

August 2009

July 2009

June 2009

May 2009

April 2009

March 2009

February 2009

January 2009

December 2008

November 2008

October 2008

September 2008

August 2008

July 2008

June 2008

May 2008

April 2008

March 2008

February 2008

January 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

September 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007

March 2007

February 2007

January 2007

December 2006

November 2006

October 2006

September 2006

August 2006

July 2006

June 2006

May 2006

April 2006

March 2006

February 2006

January 2006

December 2005

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

July 2005

June 2005

May 2005

April 2005

March 2005

February 2005

January 2005

December 2004

November 2004

October 2004

September 2004

August 2004

July 2004

June 2004

May 2004

April 2004

March 2004

February 2004

January 2004

December 2003

November 2003

October 2003

September 2003

August 2003

July 2003

June 2003

May 2003

April 2003

March 2003

December 2001

November 2001

October 2001

September 2001

August 2001

July 2001

June 2001

May 2001

April 2001

March 2001

February 2001

January 2001

December 2000

November 2000

October 2000

September 2000

August 2000

July 2000

June 2000

May 2000

April 2000

March 2000

February 2000

January 2000

December 1999

Legal   |   RSS feed RSS

Platform setting: = No platform choice