By Shanika Sriyananda
‘No matter how much time you have wasted in the past, you still have an entire tomorrow’ – the thought of the week is written on the green notice board at the Rehabilitation Commissioner General’s Head Office at Nawala.
The officials of this office have been able to seal off the past of over 12,000 former fighters of the LTTE who had wasted their time in the past and rehabilitate them to be peaceful souls who are now aspiring for a better tomorrow.
But back at home after undergoing a year-long rehabilitation which helped them to brush up their hidden talents and skills, for many the road of life is still bumpy with many socio- economic hardships.
With a high unemployment rate, social stigma, disabilities due to battle field injuries, poor educational qualifications and poor mental stability, they struggle to earn a decent living six years after the end of the 30-year-long war on terrorism. Finding a job has become their main problem.
Gopika Raviraj
Gopika Raviraj (not her real name), 22, is unemployed and depressed as she and her two young children have to depend on the earnings of her disabled husband, who works as a casual labourer.
Gopika, a former child soldier married to a former combatant whom she met at the rehabilitation centre, has two young children aged three and five. Conscripted at the age of 15, she was dropped on the battlefield after a few weeks of weapon training. She says she fought not to kill anyone but for her own defence in fear of death.
“I have no proper education. I didn’t want to sit for my Ordinary Level exam at the rehabilitation centre. I followed a beauty culture course and like to start a small salon but have no money to invest. I applied for a bank loan but it was rejected,” she says.
Gopika is grateful to her husband for marrying her without a dowry. “Some of my friends who were with me at the rehabilitation centre are still single as their parents don’t have money or property to give as dowries. My husband didn’t ask for a cent. He feeds us and looks after us well, but I can’t be a burden to him any more as he is disabled due to a gunshot injury on the battlefield,” Gopika says.
According to a recent survey by the Bureau of the Commissioner General of Rehabilitation (BCGR), out of the total ex-combatants who have been reintegrated, over 22% are unemployed due to various reasons.
Over 11,000 ex-combatants were forcibly conscripted by the LTTE. Most of them were in their teens and had missed formal education. During the one-year rehabilitation, they were given vocational training and psychological rehabilitation.
T. Malathi
T. Malathi (name changed) is a well-trained suicide cadre of the LTTE’s Black Tiger Unit. Trained for years and having carried out two spy missions in Colombo, today she is a mother of two cute little girls.
“I failed in both attempts as security was too tight in Colombo those days. I was in Kotahena. When the two missions were failed, the regional leader of the Black Tigers called me to Vavuniya. It was during the final months of the fighting in the north. While I was in Vavuniya I met my husband who is a three-wheeler driver,” she recalled.
After the war ended in 2009, she voluntarily surrendered to the authorities. As she had identified herself as a Black Tiger, she had to spend two years in Boosa prison before entering the rehabilitation process.
“I didn’t know the whereabouts of my parents, the only one I knew was that three-wheeler driver, so I told the rehabilitation officers that I wanted to talk to him. They found him and he started coming to the rehabilitation centre. We fell in love and he married me after I was released from the centre. I leant sewing when I was in rehabilitation, now I earn a small income by undertaking some orders to support my husband,” says Malathi, adding that she hopes to have a house of her own one day.
Her husband’s parents opposed him marrying Malathi as they came to know that she was a suicide cadre. “They asked me how a woman committed to die would become a good housewife and a mother, but the rehabilitation officials had convinced them, inviting them to some public awareness programs, to accept us when we are released. I realised the value of a human life and started loving myself and people around me when I was taking part in leadership programs,” Malathi said, embracing her two girls.
“The LTTE taught me to hate people but during rehabilitation I learnt to love people. This gave me hope for future,” Malathi added.
The ex-combatants were given vocational skills training – mechanical skills, information technology, agriculture, animal husbandry, food processing, handicrafts, carpentry and construction under the rehabilitation program while they are psychosocially supported through counselling and mentorship system to improve emotional resilience.
Ravi Kumar
Ravi Kumar (54) got an appointment as a sworn translator in Kilinochchi on January this year. He served as a Sinhala teacher at the Sinhala Maha Vidyalaya Kilinochchi, the former administrative capital of the LTTE, and now teaches Sinhala at a private education institute.
“I was not directly involved with the LTTE but I was compelled to do Sinhala translations for them. When the war was over I volunteered to get rehabilitated to clear my name. At the rehabilitation centre, I worked as a clerk and also taught Sinhala to ex-combatants,” Kumar, who is a father of three sons, says.
He said as a teacher he has lots of connections with the rehabilitated ex-combatants and none of them want to get involved in politics or support any of the politicians but they need jobs to live peacefully. “They only look for jobs. Whoever offers them jobs anywhere in the country, they are ready to work to earn a living,” he said, adding that some who have battle scars still face problems as they could be easily identified as ex-combatants.
“Some Sinhalese and Tamil people who still have fears about the LTTE are reluctant to offer them jobs. Earlier the female ex-combatants faced a problem of getting married as people had a perception that girls who were LTTE cadres were tough and couldn’t be controlled when they were married. But now how people look at them has changed a lot and most of the female ex-combatants are married, having children and leading a good family life. Time will heal all wounds,” he said.
Counselling to cure
Working as a school counsellor for over 10-years, S. Pavanitharan has two years of experience as counsellor at the rehabilitation centre at Poonthottam, Vavuniya.
He said counselling coupled with religious activities in the rehabilitation helped immensely to develop positive mentality among ex-combatants. “They have seen death from tender ages. Once they were taken into the LTTE, they had been constantly taught about the value of dying for the LTTE’s cause. They have not seen and heard stories of living,” he said.
Pavanitharan said at the beginning it was a difficult task for the counsellors to tap their minds as they were not speaking due to shock. “These young girls and boys never thought that they would get a chance to live when fighting in fierce battle fields. We talked to them daily to help them develop positive thinking. We talked about family, values, ethics and their rights, but we never talked about their past. We did individual and group counselling throughout the year,” he said.
According to Pavanitharan, the counsellors faced challenges as most of them were ignorant about the world outside the north. “They were taught forcefully to think within the LTTE framework for nearly 30 years. They have seen only the LTTE, war and blood. But during counselling we taught them how to love their lives and dreaming for better future. We help them to set their own targets,” he said.
Citing the story of one of the ex-combatants, he said allowing them to talk during counselling sessions helped to cure their inner wounds.
“I met an ex-combatant from Batticaloa who is married and having a son. He is partly paralysed due to a mortar attack during the battle and had no hopes for future. During the first session he unfolded his story from A to Z and started crying loud. He told me that it was the first time he had a chance to come out with his story and he felt there was someone to listen to his story. He said he didn’t have hope for the future as he always knew that he would die in a battlefield soon,” Pavanitharan said, adding that the ex-combatants with PTSD were exposed more to religious programs to heal their inner wounds.
“We also taught them, in group counselling, how it is important to live facing challenges rather than dying in a war,” he said.
He said it was difficult to banish negative thoughts among the suicide cadres who were heavily brainwashed to take their own lives. “But continued counselling based on positive approaches helped to change their minds. Today, they never think about death. They want to live for themselves, their families and their children,” Pavanitharan said.
Many problems
Nimal Weerasekara, the Rehabilitation Officer of the Economic, Social and Welfare Coordinating Centre, Kilinochchi, said there were more than 3,000 rehabilitated ex-combatants in Kilinochchi and they still faced problems relating to land, employment, housing, obtaining birth certificates and social stigma.
“Among all these issues, unemployment is the major problem for them. We helped some of them to get jobs. Most of them didn’t have National Identity Cards as they don’t have the required information like birthday, residential address and family details. We helped them to get NICs. We help them in providing legal aid and also to start self-employment,” he said.
Weerasekara said that the majority of ex-combatants hoped that the Government would look after them for another two to three years until their lives are more stable.
“I can give a 1,000% assurance that none of these girls and boys will take up arms again. They are living very peaceful happy lives as there is no war for them to die. If someone is trying to disrupt the peace, they will be the first to inform the Army. They just want jobs to earn a living,” he said.
Courtesy:Daily FT

