Displaced Jaffna Muslims hear good news after three decades

Tuesday, 19 February 2019 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Minister of Industry and Commerce, Resettlement of Protracted Displaced Persons and Cooperative Development Rishad Bathiudeen are joined by northern MPs during the PM’s tour of the Northern Province.

 

 

  • Prime Minister Wickremesinghe directs officials for speedier resettlement of Jaffna Muslim IDPs after Rishad’s strong plea
  • Muslim IDPs who returned to Jaffna went back again due to lack of housing: Rishad to PM
  • 2,800 Muslim IDP families from Jaffna: Resettlement Coordinator

 

 

After three decades since their initial displacement, Muslim IDPs from Jaffna now scattered across the country will finally be able to resettle thanks to a timely appeal by Minister for Resettlement of Protracted Displaced Persons.

“Muslim IDPs who were resettled in Jaffna after the war complain about the space of land available to them. They say the land is not enough for their growing population. Therefore some of them have even returned from the resettled locations back to their camps. I call Prime Minister Wickremesinghe’s attention to this issue. Some housing of condominium (flats) style would help them greatly,” said Minister of Industry and Commerce, Resettlement of Protracted Displaced Persons and Cooperative Development Rishad Bathiudeen on 14 February in Jaffna. 

Bathiudeen was addressing Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe during a meeting held in the Jaffna Divisional Secretariat Office, joined by many regional and parliamentary MPs from Jaffna.

During the war, on 30 October 1990 to be exact, Muslims living in some parts of northern regions were expelled by the LTTE to other parts of the country in an ethnic cleansing act. According to Minister Bathiudeen’s Coordinator of Jaffna Displaced Muslims V.A.S. Sufyan, around 2,800 such displaced Muslim families from Jaffna later registered with the authorities as “displaced”. 

“Some of the 1,990 displaced families are now living in Puttalam, Colombo, Gampaha and Panadura areas under very difficult circumstances while 700 other families of these returned to live in Jaffna –though not in their own, original lands, but just here and there in Jaffna vicinity. The Resettlement Ministry has started work to give half of them – around 365 families – better housing, which is a great relief but another 335 families are struggling. Minister Bathiudeen’s request to the Prime Minister on 14 February will bring relief to help this group,” explained Sufyan.

Following Bathiudeen’s appeal, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe promptly directed authorities in Resettlement Ministry and Divisional Secretariat to make arrangements to speed up the resettlement process of displaced Muslim families of Jaffna.

This is the first time in three decades that the Jaffna’s displaced Muslims, since their plight of expulsion in 1990, are hearing good news on their future.

Among the northern Muslim families expelled overnight from their traditional homes in the north on 30 October 1990 was Bathiudeen’s eight-member family.

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