Suicide Rate Up in Jaffna Post-war: Univ Professor
Published: 17th August 2014
COLOMBO: Peace returned to Jaffna after a 30-year brutal war in May 2009. But paradoxically, the suicide rate has gone up there since the end of the war.

After the war, the suicide rate rose sharply, to cross 25 in 2011. It fell slightly below 25 in 2012, but only to rise in 2013 to the 2011 level. During the 2002-2004 peace process also, the suicide rate had increased as compared to the earlier period when military operations were on.
Explaining the phenomenon, Somasundaram told Express that during the war, frustrations were better managed because there was a strong social support system cushioning the impact of various kinds of traumas and stresses. Under the Lankan military siege, civilians clung together. But after the war, social cohesion and social support systems began to wear thin as families got splintered. Economic deprivation, which continues to this day thanks to unimaginative government rehabilitation policies, created family splits and interpersonal issues. After the war, an individual’s “social capital” dwindled, and was no longer a fall back option during stressful situations.
Somasundaram recommends that the government should help increase the “social capital” of war-affected people by restoring pre-existing social and familial networks, and making these groups the vehicle of rehabilitation schemes.
Since the traumas experienced during the war had been collective, rehabilitation should also be collective, he said. Against this background, even mourning has to be collective, he insists.
But government considers collective mourning by the Tamils of their war-dead as a grave “security threat”.