Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Prospects for reconciliation and development in Sri Lanka (7 years after end of war) - Ruki Fernando

Prospects for reconciliation and development in Sri Lanka (7 years after end of war) - Ruki Fernando

Ruki Fernando-May 18, 2016

How far has the island nation come since the civil war ended seven years ago?
The seventh anniversary of the end of Sri Lanka's civil war falls on May 18, a date that is likely to once again polarize the island's society along ethnic lines.
Most Sinhalese are expected to see May 18 as a day for celebration. Many Tamils, especially in the North and East, are instead likely to see it as a day of mourning for their loved ones killed or disappeared and to recall the suffering they underwent during the decades-long war. Tamil politicians and Catholic priests in the North and East are planning commemorations despite the likelihood of government crackdowns, as we saw last year and before.
Last week, I visited a cemetery for former Tamil militants that was bulldozed by the government after the end of the war. An army camp has now been built over it. The loved ones of those whose remains were there have no place to grieve, lay flowers, light a candle or say a prayer.
The Tamil majority north is now dotted with monuments to the Sinhalese dominated military. The ability to remember loved ones without intimidation and reprisals, and remembering without glorifying abuses of human rights violations, is a major challenge, especially for Christians, who are both Sinhalese and Tamils.
Even after the President Maithripala Sirisena government came to power in early 2015, there have been restrictions, attacks and intimidation of activists and journalists. However, there has been more space for free expression and assembly now than under the previous government led by Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Divisions in society and civil society are also prevalent in the Catholic Church, along ethnic and ideological lines. A few church leaders, both Tamil and Sinhalese, have given leadership, support and protective presence to survivors, victim's families and activists. Their leadership and presence has been visible most recently in protests against the Port City project (a planned city located offshore in Colombo) and initiatives by families of disappeared persons and against militarization.
They have also been involved in remembrance services for those killed and engaging with the government, foreign governments and the UN on human rights issues. These efforts must continue, especially struggles that bring together Sinhalese and Tamil Christians.
But even the most activist clergy and lay Christians must be careful about compartmentalizing struggles for truth and justice.
Land and housing
After years of campaigning and legal action, some of the land illegally occupied by the military has been released. But the military continues to occupy many villages and large swathes of land in the North and East.
The government has made a commendable commitment to build 65,000 houses for the war affected. But it's planning to pay an unprecedented 2.1 million rupees ($US 14,500) per house to a foreign steel manufacturer with no housing experience. Most post war houses in the North and East of Sri Lanka have been built for less than one third of that price.
Housing experts, engineers, architects and activists have pointed out that steel houses will not last as long as traditional brick ones. Such structures are not well ventilated, nor are they easy to repair or to expand. They likewise lack facilities to engage in traditional cooking which uses low cost and easily available firewood. Steel housing will not help stimulate the local economy because there is no use of local resources or labor.
Prevention of Terrorism Act
The discovery of explosives and suicide jackets near Jaffna in March has led to intensified surveillance and questioning of Tamils in that region.
At least 30 people have been arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act. Some have been detained without being told why they are being held.
The Prevention of Terrorism Act is a draconian law that enables the minister of defense or the police to detain people without checks and balances. It has allowed widespread torture and disappearances to occur. Persons detained under this law are languishing in prisons without being judged either guilty or innocent.
An investigation against myself under this law by the Terrorism Investigation Division has continued for more than two years despite appeals by my lawyers. Others, who were detained under the law and subsequently released, are still being subjected to investigation and harassment such as being re-arrested, forced to regularly report to police stations and not being allowed to travel overseas.
A dreaded "white van" — a symbol of abductions of the previous regime — was used to abduct a Tamil man from Jaffna last month, and he was later found in police custody.
Several other disappearances were reported from the North and East last month, while the government was going about creating an Office of Missing Persons. Despite promises of consultations before it is set up, how this office will operate had been shrouded in secrecy for eight months. Its first outline was presented last week and it has been found lacking in many ways, especially in regards to provision of information to families of victims, reparations and issuance of certificates of absence. The right of families to pursue criminal accountability has been compromised because the office's tracing investigations have been isolated from prosecutorial investigations.
The government has also not shared it's ideas in relation to three other transitional justice mechanisms that it committed itself to establishing as a part of a UN Human Rights Council resolution that it co-sponsored last October.
Unfortunately President Maithripala Sirisena has publicly backtracked from a commitment to have foreign judges, prosecutors and lawyers in a special judicial mechanism for wartime abuses. Meanwhile some survivors, victims' families and human rights activists including Catholic clergy insist in foreign participation, citing a lack of confidence in the Sri Lankan justice system.
Although several military personnel have been convicted and some others arrested for human rights abuses, the lack of progress in thousands of other cases only reinforces calls for international involvement for justice.
Which way for Sri Lankan society?
A consultation process towards a new constitution drew a large number of public representations, but the next steps are not clear, particularly in finding political solutions to the grievances of the country's ethnic minorities.
The new government's economic and development policies are focusing on trade, investment and mega development projects, which privilege the rich and marginalize the poor. A high profile example is the controversial Port City project, which targets the super-rich.
Despite a public pre-election commitment to scrap the project by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe the project is ongoing, as are protests and pending court cases that highlight disastrous consequences for the livelihood of fisherfolk and for the environment.
Serious concerns have likewise been expressed about the Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement with India and the Megapolis development plan for the capital and surrounding areas.
Activists have also pointed out that very little attention is being given to economic justice during discourse about transitional justice. Attempts by the military and corporates to dominate the economy in the war-ravaged North have led to traditional livelihoods such as agriculture and fishing being sidelined and the non-stimulation of the local economy. There has been an increase in widespread debt, unemployment and poor working conditions, especially in the informal sectors.
The new government's more open approach to civil society has led to many international transitional justice experts coming to Sri Lanka and local activists becoming part of government initiatives. These have led to many workshops in expensive hotels during a time of serious economic crisis.
Some activists and intellectuals appear to be disconnected to ground realities and oblivious to, or seek to override people's voices. Some ignore day-to-day problems of the people; such as dealing with loved ones who disappeared, are detained, sexual abuse, military occupied land and economic hardships. They instead prioritize prosecutions for war crimes and crimes against humanity, which doesn't seem to be a priority for most survivors and families of victims.
Other activists seem to focus almost exclusively on economic and social issues and appear reluctant to recognize and even undermine the courageous and determined struggles of survivors and victim's families for truth and justice.
Pre-war rights issues such as landlessness, sexual and gender-based violence and discrimination, caste, rights of workers, including those working on tea estates, still need to be addressed.
Overall, the key challenges for the country's reconciliation and sustainable development are how we address civil and political rights and economic, social cultural rights in a holistic manner. And do so in a way that does not ignore war survivors, victims' families and the poor, who yearn for truth, reparations, criminal accountability and economic justice.
There should be no sweeping under the carpet the violence and abuses committed by state and non-state armed groups and within society.

Sri Lanka: Jumpstarting the Reform Process

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Sri Lanka's President Maithripala Sirisena (front) stands for the national anthem during a ceremony to swear in Ranil Wickremesinghe, leader of the United National Party, as Sri Lanka's new prime minister in Colombo, August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte International Crisis Group18 May 2016

The unexpected chance for lasting peace and reconciliation in Sri Lanka that followed President Maithripala Sirisena’s January 2015 election faces increasing turbulence. Initial moves by Sirisena’s government halted and began to reverse the slide into authoritarianism and family rule under Mahinda Rajapaksa. Its reform agenda is ambitious: restoring the rule-of-law and ending impunity for corruption and abuse of power; a new constitution; a complex package of post-war reconciliation and justice mechanisms agreed with the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC); and major policy changes to jump-start a beleaguered economy. Progress, however, has been slower than key constituencies expected and lacks the coherence and resources needed to sustain it. The “national unity” government expanded the political centre and isolated hard-line nationalists, but the window for change has begun to close. Seizing Sri Lanka’s unprecedented opportunity for reform requires bolder and better coordinated policies, backed by a public relations campaign to restore sagging popular support.

REBUILDING LIVES, AND HOMES, SHATTERED BY SRI LANKA’S CIVIL WAR




“I went back to the plot where we buried the five. Small trees were growing on top. And I just let it be,” Ms. Ramasamy said, lowering her gaze to the floor and falling silent.

Photo

She said the family member she and her husband tried hardest to protect throughout the war was their elder daughter, Mohanatharsini, the lanky, cheerful 23-year-old who showed us around the house, talking nonstop and dressed in a parrot-green shirt and dark skirt, her uniform at the clothing manufacturer where she works.
Her mother recalled that during the war, the militants showed up every few months to search the Ramasamys’ house as part of a continuous effort to recruit new people. Mohanatharsini was a teenager then, the ideal age for recruitment.
To prevent her from being conscripted, the family tried to flee Kilinochchi, Ms. Ramasamy said, but the militants stopped them at the border and sent them back.
Desperate, they dug a hole on their property, filled it with water and covered it with a plastic tarp and branches to create a makeshift hiding place for their daughter, Ms. Ramasamy said. When the family got word the militants were nearby, Mohanatharsini would descend into the watery hole and hide there for hours until they left.

The Ramasamy family’s former home, which was destroyed during Sri Lanka’s civil war. Credit Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Despite the family’s losses and deprivations, if it is possible to speak of lucky ones here, the Ramasamys might qualify. When they first returned, they lived under a roof made of coconut leaves, but now they have a new house and a comfortable life. In 2012, two years after they returned, Mohanatharsini secured a job at one of the first companies to move into Kilinochchi after the war, MAS Holdings, the largest clothing manufacturer in the country.
Starting in an entry-level job on the production floor, she earned $80 a month making activewear for Nike. In this area, where virtually the only employment at the time was in the rice paddies, her salary was a small fortune.
And it grew as she was promoted. Now she earns $150 per month as a data entry operator for inventory management, working on a laptop in an office off the factory floor.
“Because of this job opportunity, I earned money, and I had the ability to pay for a house,” she said as she stood with us outside her office, looking over the factory floor where more than 1,500 people worked, all dressed like her in green knit shirts, some inspecting shorts and attaching tiny stickers to them. Down the road, about 600 women at a second MAS factory were stitching underwear for Victoria’s Secret, for whom the factory produces one million pieces each month.

Mohanatharsini Ramasamy, center, riding home on a bus with her co-workers from her job at MAS Holdings. Her job allowed her to afford a new home for her family. Credit Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

A government subsidy of 350,000 Sri Lankan rupees, or about $2,500, helped get construction started on the Ramasamy family’s turquoise house, and Mohanatharsini Ramasamy’s salary helped finish the ranch-style home with a tin roof. The total cost: about 700,000 rupees, or $5,000.
Parked out front, between the house and the family’s paddy field, was a shiny red tractor that she helped her younger brother lease so he could start a business plowing fields for local farmers.
She said she was also able to cover the school expenses of her cousin, 15-year-old Tamilchelvi, who lives in the turquoise house, too. She is the only surviving member of Mohanatharsini’s uncle’s family; the rest died in the bunker. Their faces look out of the picture frame at the entrance to the house.
Dressed in a red tank top and skirt, her hair pulled back into a ponytail, Tamilchelvi stood in the doorway, smiling shyly. “She’s studying for her O levels, and hopes to do well enough to get a good job, like me,” Mohanatharsini told us, referring to the exam students take in the 10th grade.
On a shelf in the prayer room inside the house sits a picture of Amman, who the family worships as a wife of Lord Krishna, the god of mischief and dancing, and whose portrait slipped out of a frame when the old home was bombed. The family’s long journey since then has led it to expand the altar to include Murugan, the Hindu god of war, and Ganpati, the god who overcomes all obstacles.
Ash from burning incense formed a thick layer over the gods’ pictures in a room that doubles as the storehouse for another of the family’s most valued possessions: rice. A dozen bags from the family’s fields — food for the coming year — were piled high.
NYT
May 18 remembered in Trinco
18 May 2016
Tamils in Trincomalee commemorated May 18 on Wednesday.


The event brought together religious leaders and civil society members across Trinco.
 
NPC commemorates civilians in Wellamulli Waikkal




2016-05-18
The seventh death anniversary of the civilians who died during the war was held at Wellamulli Waikkal in Mullaitivu today with the participation of Northern Provincial Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran. 

Addressing the ceremony, the Chief Minister said those in the South of the country had interpreted the commemoration ceremony as a tribute to the terrorists who were killed during the war.

 “Not everyone who died during the war was a terrorist. We are here to commemorate the civilians. It is necessary to seek out what happened to these people since a lot of civilians lost their lives due to the war,” he said. 

A five-minute silence was observed in memory of the victims as well as religious observances. Parliamentarians and provincial councilors of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) were present at the ceremony held close to the civilian memorial at Wellamulli Waikkal this morning. (Romesh Madushanka) 
Hundreds gather at Jaffna University for May 18 remembrance
18 May 2016
Students and staff gathered in their hundreds at the University of Jaffna for the institution's event to mark the 7th anniversary of the end of the armed conflict.

The event, which began at 10:30 local time, was observed by CID officers, dressed in civil, who mingled with the crowds.


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Cancellation of Victory Day Parade will help national reconciliation - TNA Canada commends govt move

article_image
Champika organises war heroes’ commemoration at Panagoda

by Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Against the backdrop of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government calling off Victory Day Parade held annually to celebrate Sri Lanka’s triumph over the LTTE, Megapolis and Western Province Development Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka has organised a war heroes’ commemoration at Panagoda Army Cantonment tomorrow (May 19) at 3.15 pm.

Minister Ranawaka will make a special statement at the Bodhirajarama temple in the cantonment. The JHU heavyweight will explain the circumstances leading to the cancellation of the Victory Day Parade to pave the way for religious observances and cultural events.

The military brought the war to a successful conclusion on the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon on the morning of May 18, 2009.

The main government sponsored event will be held at the war memorial parliamentary grounds with President Maithripala Sirisena’s participation at 4 pm today (May 18).

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa inaugurated Victory Day Parade in the wake of the annihilation of the LTTE seven years ago. The last Victory Day Parade was held in Matara last May under the auspices of the President Sirisena and Premier Wickremesinghe.

The Army alone lost about 23, 600 officers and men during the conflict. Of them, about 5,500 died during eelam war IV.

Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Jaffna District MP M.A. Sumanthiran yesterday told The Island that the cancellation of Victory Day Parade would certainly help post-war national reconciliation process. The attorney-at-law said that as all communities had suffered gravely during the conflict, it would be unfair on the part of the government to celebrate the LTTE’s defeat. "Let us mourn the deaths of all those who had perished during the conflict," MP Sumanthiran said, adding that the cancellation of the scheduled Victory Day Parade would help heal wounds of war.

Northern Province Governor Reginald Cooray participated at a commemoration ceremony at the War Heroes’ monument in Kokavil, Kilinochchi on May 10. Addressing a gathering after paying floral tribute at the monument built in memory of fallen officers and men, Governor Cooray expressed gratitude to the military.

Mrs Saraswathi Mohanadan, Assistant Chief Secretary of the Northern Provincial Council, together with Major General Amal Karunasekara, Commander, Security Forces – Kilinochchi welcomed Governor Cooray on his arrival at the venue before a two-minute silence in honour of their memory was observed.

Canada strongly pushed for the cancellation of Victory Day Parade since May 2014. Although, many countries privately requested the previous government, only Canada publicly called for an immediate end to military celebrations. Canadian High Commissioner Shelley Whiting announced that her country wouldn’t be represented at the Victory Day parade in Matara.

The Canadian envoy said the annual military parade wouldn’t help post-war national reconciliation, therefore she wouldn’t accept the government invitation for May 2014 event.

Canadian High Commissioner Whiting yesterday commended the government move.

The following is the text of a statement issued by High Commissioner Whiting to The Island yesterday : " In May 2014, I expressed concerns with the celebration of "Victory Day" noting that it was counterproductive to meaningful and lasting peace and reconciliation.   It was time to mend relations among communities so that all Sri Lankans could live in peace and dignity, free from discrimination based on ethnic, religious or linguistic identities.  I noted that Sri Lanka’s own LLRC had also recommended a day of solemn remembrance for all victims of the war.

·         Canada welcomed the current Administration’s efforts last year to shift from a celebration of Victory Day to a Day of Remembrance. This marked  an important departure from previous years and was in keeping with the Government of Sri Lanka’s commitments on reconciliation, peace, security and stability for all Sri Lankans.

·         Canada notes that the Government’s commemoration will continue this shift and will focus on reconciliation. 

·         I welcome and commend this focus on reconciliation on May 18 as one of many important steps that the Government of Sri Lanka has taken, continues to take, and will need to undertake in the future as the country moves forward on a path of reconciliation after a devastating 26 year conflict to ensure a secure, safe, peaceful Sri Lanka where all her citizens are afforded equal rights and opportunities.

·         Canada remains committed to working with the Government of Sri Lanka toward lasting peace, reconciliation and prosperity in Sri Lanka."

Eastern ministers remember May 18

18 May 2016

A remembrance service for May 18 was observed by Tamil political leaders in Trincomalee on Wednesday morning.

The event was organised by TNA members of the Eastern Provincial Council and led by the ministers for education and agriculture.

Impunity Of The CB Governor Is Inconceivable Mr. President, It’s Time To Reflect Before Re-Appointment?


Colombo Telegraph
By Chandra Jayaratne –May 18, 2016
Chandra Jayaratne
Chandra Jayaratne
Civil Society breathed a sigh of relief post “January 8th 2015 Change” and looked forward to commitments of Transparency, Good Governance, Rule of Law and Ethical Conduct of Leaders, returning, being respected and strictly complied with in governance.
The resignation midterm of the last Governor was indeed good news. The expectations were high upon the new appointee to serve the balance term being an ex- Central Banker, with requisite experience to give leadership to this important public institution. This view prevailed, despite Civil Society urging the consideration of a more recently retired Central Banker to be the choice. In any event, the civil society expected greater transparency, focus on delivering core accountabilities, assurance of effective macroeconomic governance, financial stability, effective disclosure, independent and integrity driven decision making and policy directives, coupled with giving independent advice to the government to be the core values driving the Central Bank. These expectations were to supplement assuring an end to the use of the Central Bank and its resources and policy making powers, to further political and personal objectives and seeing an end to conflicts of interest driven pump and dump style management of public resources of the EPF and suspect practices in long term bond issues.
ArjunaCivil society, reflecting on the outcomes of Central Bank governance over the past 15 months can only conclude that their hopes have been dashed and that the governance platform and results realized are no better than under the previous regime. The new Governor must take total responsibility for this situation, as he has failed to live up to expectations of society.     

Hundreds buried under Sri Lanka mudslides

At least 37 people killed and over 350,000 displaced in at least three villages after torrential rains in central hills.


18 May 2016

At least 37 people have been killed and nearly 220,000 displaced by landslides which crashed into at least three villages in Aranayaka, in the central hills of Sri Lanka, following torrential rains.

A government official who is part of the rescue efforts told Al Jazeera on Wednesday from Kegalle district, about 72km from the capital Colombo, that one village, Siripura, was buried 40ft under the mud.

Villagers recalled hearing and seeing the torrents of muddy water, tree branches, and debris crashing down around their homes late on Tuesday.

"I heard a huge sound like a plane crashing into the Earth," AG Kamala, 52, who had just returned to her house in Siripura when the landslides hit the area.

"I opened my door. I could not believe my eyes, as I saw something like a huge fireball rolling down the mountain and again a huge sound," she told the Associated Press news agency.

About 220 families were reported missing after Wednesday's landslides, according to Red Cross [EPA]
The Disaster Management Centre reported over 350,000 people were affected by the landslides. About 220 families were reported missing, the Sri Lankan Red Cross said in a statement.

The army was called out to help with the rescue effort.

Officials could not give the village populations, but each typically includes about 1,000-1,500 residents.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Rikaz Hussain, the government official, said: "It's absolutely mind-boggling what sort of disaster this has turned out to be.

"It seems like someone cut off a mountain and planted it on top of the village. There are absolutely no signs of a village ever existing here. There's no sign of Siripura. The rescue efforts here are futile."

Hampered by rain

Hussain said sporadic rain was hampering the work of the rescue squad, which had unearthed 18 bodies so far.

"But there are so many other sites and villages affected," he said.

"Some of the roads are also inundated, so we can't even get through to those affected. Some places are not even accessible by helicopter."
Over 350,000 people have been affected by the disaster, according to the DMC [Rikaz Hussain]
One woman, AG Alice, said all nine of her children were unaccounted for.

"I don't know what happened to me after" the landslides hit with "a thundering sound I have never heard in my life," she said.

More than 1,000 people who escaped the disaster were provided shelter and medical treatment for minor injuries at a nearby school and a Buddhist temple, according to Mahendra Jagath, a government official.

Temporary shelters

Troops using boats and helicopters elsewhere pulled to safety more than 200 people trapped in the northwestern coastal district of Puttalam, Jayanath Jayaweera, military spokesperson, said.

The displaced people are being housed in temporary shelters including schools and temples.

Officials gave warning that more landslides and lightning strikes could occur in the countryside, as more rain was forecast in addition to rough seas along the coasts.

Mudslides are common in Sri Lanka during the monsoon season, with heavy deforestation to clear land for agriculture leaving the countryside exposed.
The landslides have affected at least three villages in the Aranayaka area [Rikaz Hussain]
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

Unusual heat bakes Sri Lanka's chicken industry

A man locks a cage of chickens at a slaughterhouse before they are distributed to the market in Colombo September 16, 2009. REUTERS/Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/FilesA man locks a cage of chickens at a slaughterhouse before they are distributed to the market in Colombo September 16, 2009-REUTERS/ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/FILES
BY AMANTHA PERERA-Wed May 18, 2016

COLOMBO (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - As noon-time temperatures began soaring in late March, Mohamed Nizam, a small-scale chicken seller, knew he was headed for trouble.

Soon the mid-day heat was touching 40 degrees Celsius, and Nizam told his workers to pour water on to the pavement in front of his shop in the Colombo suburb of Wattala in an effort to ward off the heat.

"But nothing can keep that kind of heat from getting to the chickens. It roasts them alive," Nizam said.

Across Sri Lanka, small- and medium-scale chicken producers – often with between 1,000 and 25,000 birds – are struggling to keep their birds alive in the face of temperatures 2 degrees to 5 degrees Celsius above normal over the last two months.

Many of the birds live in tightly packed pens, where the heat makes them dehydrated. Larger industrial operations use fans and spray water on them, but smaller operations cannot afford such investments.
“Usually when the heat is high, we use ice or water to keep the pens cool. This time they were no match for the heat. I lost half of my stock,” said Rumi Jamaldean, who runs a farm with around 8,000 birds in the Kurunegala District, about 120 kilometres from Colombo.

RISING PRICES

The losses have translated into big hikes in chicken prices. In Colombo and its suburbs a kilo of fresh chicken was selling for 620 rupees (around $5.50) during the first week of May. Two months earlier it was Rs 450 and a year ago Rs 400.

“My sales have dropped,” Nizam said, estimating they had fallen by 40 percent. “People can’t afford it. The prices are way too much,” he said.

With chicken by far the most popular meat in this largely Buddhist nation that shuns many other types of meat, the price hike is likely to have an impact on nutrition. On average a Sri Lankan eats seven times as much chicken per year as beef, according to the Department of Animal Production and Health.
The nation’s poultry industry produces about 165,000 metric tons of meat a year, according to the Department of Animal Production and Health.

Sri Lankan chicken farmers have long experience with warm months and often use homegrown methods to keep their birds cool, including ice, water, fans or sometimes feeding the birds sodium-bicarbonate, which growers say can help prevent dehydration.

But “this time the heat was too much and nothing could have prevented such losses”, said Nimal Jayaratne, head of the Department of Animal Production and Health.

According to the Meteorological Department, during the fourth week of April the Northern Vavuniya District recorded an average daily temperature of 37 degrees Celsius. During the same time period, rain fall was below average.

“It has been extremely warm, warmer than any other time in the past five years,” said Lal Chandrapala, director general of the Meteorological Department.

Experts and farmers agree that Sri Lanka’s small-scale chicken farmers are not ready to deal with such extreme heat.

“If you look at the pens, they are just brick sheds with corrugated tin sheets on the roof. During times when the weather is okay, they can work. But when the heat comes, there is hardly any room for ventilation and there is no money to invest to save the stock,” Jayaratne said.

Chicken farmer Jamaldean said he will absorb the losses as much as he can, pass some portion of it to his customers, and just wait until the heat passes, with cooler monsoon weather due late this month or in early June.

But “chicken prices will not come down soon. It will take at least two months,” warned Nizam.

(Reporting by Amantha Perera; editing by Laurie Goering :; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visitnews.trust.org/climate)