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Upper Kotmale Power Project:
New housing units for 489 families
All the 489 families affected by the Upper Kotmale Hydro Power
Project have been resettled in modern housing units. Many of them were
living in thin-roofed line rooms with no separate kitchen or bathroom.
The Upper Kotmale Hydro Power Project has given a great impetus to
raise the living standards and the social status of the people in the
Talawakelle area. The infrastructure and housing Development in and
around the Talawakele town depict the Government effort to raise the
life standards and social status of the people.
There had been 489 families residing in the Upper Kotmale Hydro Power
Project Area prior to the project commencement. In fulfilling the
Government’s promise to provide them with better housing facilities, 489
modern housing units have been constructed by the project and all
affected people have been settled.
These families had been in nine settlements in the project area viz:
Kumaragama with 61 families. Devisiripura with 20 families, Talawakele
with 160 families, Ratneelakele with 117 families, Middlton Bar with 26
families, Middleton Division with 17 families, Walkers with 28 families,
U.C. scavengers with 39 families, and Nanuoya Division with 21 families.
The 489 families are now settled six settlements with housing units
built under five categories allocated to them on the basis of floor
areas they used to occupy in their previous settlements.
The houses are provided with pipe borne water facility and
electricity supplies. Each housing unit occupies a land area ranging
from 7 to 10 perches. Many of the occupants have taken to home gardening
in their new dwellings. To compensate those who were growing vegetables
in the previous settlement areas 42 plots of land have been provided to
them to grow vegetables. Two cooperative shops have also been
established.
A group of media personnel visited these housing units yesterday,
organized by the Media Centre for National Development of the Ministry
of Mass Media and Information.
Residents interviewed by the media groups expressed their happiness
about getting such modern housing units, which some of them said they
could have never built or dreamt of having on their own, and were
grateful to President Mahinda Rajapaksa for undertaking to build the
Upper Kotmale Project which had been almost abandoned due to political
expediency and other reasons.
About 75 percent of the resettled are Tamils and the rest 22 percent
are Sinhalese and 3 percent Muslims. The Project has also constructed
three new Kovils, and two Christian Churches to replace those affected
by the project acquisition.
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