Lack of coral intensified destruction
The destruction wrought by the tsunami of December 26, 2004 on the
southwestern coast of Sri Lanka would have been much less if successive
governments had heeded Sir Arthur Clarke's persistent call to stop the
mining of corals.
The British-born science writer and diving enthusiast, who had been
living in Sri Lanka since 1956, was campaigning for coral reef
protection and other matters relating to coastal preservation for long.
But few in the island listened.
He did create an awareness at the international level, but the
message never percolated to the local level here in Sri Lanka,' said
Vinod Moonesinghe, an environmental activist who had worked with the NGO
'Friends of the Earth.'
'The coral reefs from Akurela to Hikkaduwa were being mined for years
to make lime which is used in the construction of buildings.
The area had, in fact, become very famous for its lime. But the
depletion of the corals had resulted in the killer waves lashing the
shore with an unprecedented ferocity,' Moonesinghe told IANS on the
third anniversary of the deadly tsunami.
In Peraliya, 1,500 people were killed in a matter of minutes, when
the railway train in which they were travelling was struck by giant
waves twice in quick succession.
Peraliya town too lost heavily, with 2,500 dead and 450 families
rendered homeless. The battered, dented and rusted train quickly became
a major tourist attraction, being the last vestige of the tsunami in the
area, and the grimmest reminder of it.
'The corals in the 'coral garden' at Hikkaduwa and Akurela have
survived the fury as they are better able to stand the waves than the
species on land.
And they continue to be a tourist attraction,' Moonesinghe said.
'The authorities must stop not only the mining of corals, as a matter
of great urgency, but control the discharge of effluents from the beach
hotels, that dot the coast,' he said. The palm fringed coastline from
Colombo to Galle has been a major tourist attraction, especially for
Westerners looking for sun and sand.
The place bristles with small and large lodges and hotels, several of
them right on the shoreline.
Tsunami had induced some awareness of coastal management. The
government had introduced a rule that there should be no construction
within hundred metres of the shoreline. But the conservation measures
are being implemented in a very 'desultory' manner, says Moonesinghe.
Over the years, the sea has eroded the southwestern coast greatly,
and beaches are becoming scarce all along the Colombo-Galle road.
In many places, the shoreline is barely a few yards away from the
main road and rail line.
And it is feared that due to global warming, erosion will only
increase in the years to come, hitting tourism, which is already
declining due to the war and the terrorist bombings.
IANS |