Weli Oya

Weli Oya
Village
Weli Oya
Coordinates: 9°07′0″N 80°48′0″E / 9.11667°N 80.80000°E / 9.11667; 80.80000
Country Sri Lanka
Province Northern
District Mullaithivu District
DS Division Weli Oya

Weli Oya,[1] is a sinhalese settlement area in Mullaithivu District in Northern province in Sri Lanka. Weli Oya has been affected by the Sri Lankan civil war and government colonization programs.

Weli Oya was known as (Tamil: Manal Aru) traditionally before the launch of government colonization programs.[2] A body of running water moving to a lower level in a channel on land is called Manal Aru in Tamil. It is hemmed between Anuradhapura, Mullaitivu, Trincomalee and Vavunia Districts. It is called the "border village" (s) since the territory north of Weli Oya was previously under the control of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

Today 18 villages in Weli Oya. 3,336 families and 11,189 people living in this settlement division.[3] Majority of them are Sinhalese.

History

Manal Aru

A typo on the map has Manal Aru written as Manu Aru in 1989

This area was knows as Manal Aru. Manal in Tamil means sand, Aru in Tamil means river. A body of running water moving to a lower level in a channel on land is called Manal Aru in Tamil.

A total of 13,288 Tamil families living in 42 villages for generations including Kokkulai Grama Sevakar Division (1516 Tamil families), Kokku –Thoduvai Grama Sevakar Division (3306 Tamil families), Vavunia North Grama Sevakar Division (1342 Tamil families), Other Divisions of Mullaitivu District including Naiyaru and Kumulamunai ( 2011 Tamil families). These Traditional Tamil farming villages interspersed with small and large farms owned by Tamils or held on long lease by Tamil-owned business enterprises. The lease for 99 years was granted by the government in 1965. The extent of individual holdings varied from ten to fifty acres. Business concerns held large farms and 16 of them were a thousand acres and more. Among the large farms were: Navalar farm, Ceylon Theatres farm, Kent farm, Railway Group Farm, Postmaster Group Farm and Dollar Farm.[4]

Colonization in 1984

Tamil families were living in 42 villages for generations were asked to vacate their homes and farmlands within 48 hours on pain of eviction by force in case of default. The Military went around these villages in armored trucked and made loud announcement over public address systems mounted on the trucks. The Military also announced the government has cancelled the 99 years lease in respect of the lands given to 14 Tamil entrepreneurs.[2][4][5]

Tamil opposition to settlement in the area by Sinhalese led to violence through the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam which attacked the Kent and Dollar Farm settlement at Weli Oya, killing 62.

The present government’s scheme is to settle those Sinhalese who were ejected from Vadamunai in the eastern province (i.e. Maduru Oya basin) after their encroachment on state land became a ray of controversy last year, along the Padaviya border and eventually form a line of Sinhala defence from Padaviya to Nedunkerni in the north, in the Mullaitivu district.

Jungle areas are being cleared close to Ariyakundam, Dollar Farm and other places. Four roads have been opened up from Padaviya to the Dollar Farm, Kumbakarnan Malai, Ariyakundam, Kokkuchchankulam, Kokkuttoduwai and Veddukkan malai. Jeeps and vehicles belonging to the Army, Agrarian Services, Illmenite Corporation, Tobacco Corporation and Petroleum Corporation are being used for various purposes connected with this project. Some Sinhalese families have already been installed near the Dollar Farms.

Neither the Government Agents of Vavuniya or Mullaitivu, nor AGAs nor Land Officers who are Tamils know anything about what is being planned. The area is well protected by the army and an air of secrecy surrounds the district. Sounds of bulldozers working in the night are heard by the villagers along the Mullaitivu border. Huge pipes were being transported.

Don Mithuna, Weekend English Newspaper, 2 December 1984 issue
The convicts, in fact, had been used to stealing from Tamil villages from the area and incidents of rape too had been attributed to the convicts.
Amantha Perera, Sunday Leader, Spot Report, published 19 May 2002

Manal Aru becomes Weli Oya in 1988 - Extra ordinary Gazette notification

The traditional Tamil region known as Manal Aru named as Weli Oya (Manal in Tamil translated into Sinhalese becomes Weli; Aru in Tamil translated into Sinhalese Oya) in Sinhala by an extra ordinary gazette notification dated 16 April 1988. Weli Oya was proclaimed the 26th District of Sri Lanka. Manal Aru was lies north of the Sinhala colonization scheme of Padavia and from 1987, this administrative division was part of Pathaviya and was brought under the Anuradhapura administrative district.

Settlements in the Manal Aru began in 1984 as a dry zone farmer colony under the land Commission, but it was later acquired by the Sri Lanka Mahaweli Economic Agency in 1988 and declared as the Mahaweli ‘L’ zone.[2] The land was officially renamed Weli Oya on April 16, 1988.

Colonization after 2009

After the defeat of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, Sri Lanka Mahaweli Authority started to create a colonization again in Manal Aru area in Weli oya project of the Mahaweli L-zone,[6] which covered the districts of Mullaitivu, Trincomalee, Vavuniya and Anuradhapura.[7] Sinhalese were settled in traditionally Tamil land, given land, money to build homes and security provided by the Special Task Force.[8] Although the scheme covered four districts, administration was handled from the Sinhalese dominated Anuradhapura district. The scheme aroused much anger amongst the Tamils.[9]

Today the majority of the population in the area is Sinhalese.

See also

References

  1. World Food Program. "Rapid assessment in Welioya, Anuradhapura" (PDF). World Food Program.
  2. 1 2 3 By V.Thangavelu. "At Manal Aru ( Weli Oya ) Sinhalese State Ethnically Cleansed Tamils". NamNadu-2000.
  3. "Statistical Information". Department of Census and Statistics, Sri Lanka. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  4. 1 2 By T. Sabaratnam. "Pirapaharan, Chapter 23 (Volume 2)".
  5. Heynes, Stephen (2016). The Bleeding Island: Scars and Wounds. ISBN 978-1-4828-7479-2.
  6. Sensitive colonization in Manal Aru area in Mullaithivu district. The Director General of Sri Lanka Mahaweli Authority Dharmasiri de Alwis has told the state-owned Dinamina newspaper Wednesday that 2500 families will be settled in Nedunkarni in Mullaithivu district under the Welioya project of the Mahaweli L-zone. Each family will be granted one acre for paddy cultivation, half an acre for coconut growing and one acre for the home garden.
  7. T. Sabaratnam. "Chapter 23: Manal Aru becomes Weli Oya". Pirapaharan. Ilankai Tamil Sangam. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  8. The war - one year on
  9. T. Sabaratnam. "Chapter 40: Operation Green Arrow". Pirapaharan. Ilankai Tamil Sangam. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
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