
The project total cost has been estimated at 104.5 million rupees, with the balance funds coming from the Sri Lankan government.
The first phase of the project, aimed at restoring the fort and turning it into a tourist attraction, is scheduled to be done during the period November 2009 to December 2012.
The Jaffna fort is said to be the second largest surviving fort in the island and had been well-preserved until the outbreak of the ethnic conflict in the early 1980s.
The fort served as an army garrison from the inception of the war.
Troops based inside the ramparts used to fight regular mortar duels with the Tamil Tiger rebels.
As the insurgency gained strength, the Tamil Tigers laid siege to the fort, cutting off supplies and eventually forced the army to withdraw.
The Tigers later demolished parts of the ramparts.
A church inside the fort has been reduced to rubble.
Built in the shape of a pentagon, the fort’s defence works consist of thick and high ramparts and bastions surrounded by a wide, deep moat.
A project concept paper said the Jaffna fort conservation work would also help generate employment in the former war zone.
Nineteen conservation projects are being done with financial aid amounting to 702 million rupees from the Netherlands government under the Sri Lanka - Netherlands Cultural Cooperation Programme, in force since May 2006.
What happened to them and why they are silent of this issue of resurrecting the old dutch fort in Jaffna? I'm not surprised if LBO doesn't publish these comments as they would like to stay away from government scrutiny.
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