This week
the U.S. government unveiled six projects in
Trincomalee District funded by the U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID). Mr. James
F. Entwistle, Deputy Chief of Mission at the
U.S. Embassy in Colombo, visited the projects,
which ranged from a vocational training center
to programs to provide water to formerly displaced
persons.
On Tuesday, December 21, Mr.
Entwistle laid the foundation stone for a new
addition to the Trincomalee Technical College.
This building will be used for teaching masonry
and plumbing skills to Sinhalese, Tamil and
Muslim youth. Following this, Mr. Entwistle
visited with youth from all three communities
in Murugapuri division and unveiled a signboard
carrying a peace message at a burial site for
Hindus, Christians and Buddhists. The signboard
signifies the completion of a clean-up program
that comes as part of more than six months of
language and conflict mitigation training and
volunteer work in Trincomalee town. Mr. Entwistle
then traveled to Trincomalee's Morawewa division
to officially inaugurate a community center
that marks the completion of a rehabilitation
project in Namalwatta village. This rehabilitation
project included water deliveries, well construction,
tank rehabilitation and the construction of
a community center for Muslim, Tamil and Sinhalese
persons returning to their homes after years
of displacement. Mr. Entwistle also unveiled
a billboard that displays peace messages been
designed by local residents of the division.
The first in a series, these billboards will
be erected on the Horowupatana road leading
from Trincomalee District to Vavuniya District,
effectively linking the East with the North
Central part of the country.
On Wednesday, December 22,
Mr. Entwistle traveled to Kantale to launch
two new peace projects. One project supports
youth who are active in peace building and are
receiving U.S. assistance to express peace-oriented
messages through mural painting on public buildings.
Another project, through a local women's federation,
involves conflict mitigation workshops for local
government and civil society leaders.
"These projects, worth
over one hundred thousand dollars, represent
the commitment the United States government
is making to increase support for a negotiated
settlement. This assistance represents an investment
in the present peace building efforts in Trincomalee
for a peaceful and prosperous future for the
nation of Sri Lanka," said Mr. Entwistle.
"The absence of war has made these initiatives
possible," he continued. "Now more
than ever it is important to continue to work
for peace."
USAID's Office of Transition
Initiatives (OTI) supports efforts to end the
long-standing conflict in Sri Lanka by increasing
support for a negotiated settlement. Since USAID
initiated the program March 2003, OTI has signed
260 grant agreements -- mostly with local organizations
-- totaling over U.S.$6.3 million.