Oxfam's work in Sri Lanka in depth
Oxfam's relationship with Sri Lanka extends as far back as 1968. From then until the early 1980's, projects and partner organisations were supported from Oxford, Bangkok and India.
In 1986, a country office was established in Colombo to focus on the extreme poverty suffered by those who are internally displaced and others directly affected by the ethnic conflict. Projects ensured that basic water and sanitation needs were fulfilled, access was given to sustainable livelihoods, rights of the women were protected and different ethnic communities were mobilised for peaceful coexistence and development.
The tsunami of 26 December 2004 brought about massive destruction. People lost their villages, homes, livelihoods and loved ones in minutes. Immediate interventions were necessary and Oxfam GB swung into action to address these emergency issues. Addressing water and sanitation, public health, livelihood, shelter and gender needs in the districts of Matara, Hambantota, Ampara, Batticaloa, Trincomalee, Vavuniya and Killinochchi. Oxfam GB works through over 50 local partner orgnisations to implement its programmes.
Oxfam's work in Sri Lanka
Oxfam's work in Sri Lanka covers four main areas:
Last updated: September 06
Where we work
Papers and resources
- A place to stay, a place to live: Challenges in providing shelter in India, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka after the tsunami - Dec 05 (155KB pdf)
- A place to stay, a place to livei - Dec 05 French translation (151KB pdf)
- A place to stay, a place to live - Dec 05 Spanish translation (176KB pdf)
- The Spoils of Peace: How can tighter arms export controls benefit both the poor and British industry? - Feb 02 (139KB rtf file)
- Education: The Global Gender Gap - Apr 00 (493KB rtf file)
