Another massacre in Kokkilai
Many would think about Kokkilai
or Kokilai as a place of torment and horror. As with the Kokilai
massacre which happened on December 1, 1984 where the LTTE cadres
massacred 11 Sinhalese civilians, it was the beginning of another
destruction and particularly, Mother Nature. The village of Kokilai is
located in the Mullaitivu District located about 40 km south-east of the
District capital Mullaitivu. It is a coastal town, located next to
Kokkilai lagoon, it is also close to Trincomalee District border.
Today, a different massacre takes place right under the moses of the
authorities with the booming tourism taking place around the area,
opening up after peace.
The Kokilai Bird Sanctuary near the Kokilai Lagoon has now gone under
the steel axe, being cleared for supposed agricultural purposes which
are threatening the habitats of many animals in turn threatening the
very existence of our wildlife.
Under the National Environmental Act (NEA) if any development
projects were to take place within 100m within the periphery of a
sanctuary, an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) should be conducted
prior to obtaining permission from the Ministry of Environment and
Natural Resources. The NEA prohibits the clearing of an area of forest
of over one hectare in the island without an EIA. Regardless of these
legal restrictions, there have been several individuals in a Muslim
community in Pulmude who have been ruthlessly hacking the Kokilai
Sanctuary to death.
The sanctuary, declared a protected site in 1952 has a land extent of
1995 hectares and accounts for about 40 elephants and about 200 bird
species which is fast diminishing. The cleared land is in Kuchchaweli
under the purview of the Thenamaranwadiya Divisional Secretariat in the
Trincomalee district. Black-necked stork birds, which are included in
IUCN 2007 data book as critically endangered bird species, are also
found in this sanctuary.
It has also been reported that over 1000 acres of land has been
cleared over a span of just a month.
While the blame has been passed from the residents to the
environmental authorities, tourists and domestic travellers alike are
pouring there in throngs to disrupting the calmness of the the peaceful
solitude birds have basked in and many locals are indeed thinking of
monetary terms without the thought that ‘Extinction means forever.’
In the true words of a nature lover and Wildlife Nature Protection
Society member, “Why can’t our armed forces, who have so gallantly
fought the war and brought peace to our nation, protect our nation’s
only treasures - our wildlife sanctuaries and national parks?”
|