Rebuilding lives of Cyclone Aila victims still a challenge (Third of three-part series)(With Images)
June 30th, 2009 - 12:33 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )By Arun Anand
Pathar Pratima (West Bengal), June 30 (IANS) Many of the one million people affected by Cyclone Aila live in small islands amid a maze of rivers and canals in the Sundarbans, the world’s largest mangrove forest. The topography is making it tougher for them to rebuild their lives.
The damage inflicted by the May 25 cyclone on the poor residents of Sundarbans is so severe that the best efforts of humanitarian agencies are proving inadequate.
Thousands of people in the two West Bengal districts covered by the Sundarbans - South and North 24 Parganas - have lost their livelihood options. Survival itself has become the most challenging task for them.
“Huge resources are required to provide even immediate relief; much more would be required to rebuild their lives,” Zubin Zamin, humanitarian response manager with NGO Oxfam India, which is working in the Sundarbans to provide relief to the cyclone victims, told IANS.
Zaman’s immediate requirement is 10,000 mosquito nets as all residents face an alarming increase in the number of mosquitoes. “We are trying to raise resources for that,” he added.
“After the cyclone, the island villages were flooded with the river water as embankments were breached. There has been no effort to pump out this water from these villages even after more than a month has passed. The stagnant water has led to breeding of mosquitoes. This is proving to be a major health hazard,” Gopal Pramanik, president of local NGO Sundarban Social Development Centre, told IANS.
Pramanik’s organization is working in close coordination with Oxfam India and several other agencies for providing relief to the victims. “The only mode of transport to most of the villages in this area is boat. There are very few boats that can travel fast and carry enough relief material,” said Pramanik.
“Toilets and septic tanks remain underwater, plants in inundated areas are dying on account of saline water, cattle and livestock are also affected since water and food sources remain scarce,” says an Oxfam India assessment report.
Volunteers working in the Sundarbans emphasise the need to build a long-term plan for creating livelihood options, rebuilding houses, repairing schools and creating fresh and clean water sources.
“That is the only way to rebuild their lives and this is the biggest challenge,” says Jyotika, a local volunteer who has been camping in the area for about a month now, distributing relief material.
The saline water, which flooded most of the villages after Cyclone Aila, has destroyed the fertility of the land. “Nothing can be cultivated in these fields for the next three years,” says Pramanik, adding “this means loss of livelihood options for thousands of families”.
In the absence of livelihood options, migration has already begun from many villages. The men are moving out leaving the women and children back. While some are going to neighbouring districts, many have moved to cities in West Bengal as well as other states.
According to a Unicef assessment report: “The situation is precarious in South 24 Parganas and North 24 Parganas districts of the Sunderbans area. Approximately 920,000 houses have been damaged, the majority of them in Sundarbans.
“Facilities in the affected blocks are overwhelmed, with a lack of human resources and guidelines. Disease surveillance is weak in facilities and in the medical camps, which will lead to difficulties in the rapid identification of outbreaks and infectious diseases.”
(Arun Anand can be contacted at arun.anand@ians.in)
- Another disaster unfolding in cyclone-hit Sundarbans (First of a three-part series) (With Images) - Jun 28, 2009
- Children worst affected by Cyclone Aila (Second of a three-part series) - Jun 29, 2009
- Children of Sunderbans still bear scars of Aila havoc - May 25, 2010
- Bengal to acquire land for building river embankments - Jun 04, 2011
- In Sundarbans, weak embankments a major concern this monsoon - Apr 12, 2010
- Battered but still balloting, Sundarbans shows way - Apr 28, 2011
- Weeks after cyclone Aila, civic amenities in disarray: Oxfam - Jun 12, 2009
- On Dominique Lapierre's mind - Sundarban and Africa - Dec 01, 2010
- Cyclone Aila devastates Sundarbans - Jun 07, 2009
- Not possible to repair all embankments hit by Aila: Bengal minister - Jun 06, 2009
- Cyclone-affected victims in WB to get UNICEF aid - Jun 05, 2009
- Hit by Aila, cyclone survivors scoff at Buddhadeb (Lead) - Jun 02, 2009
- Mamata announces sops for Sunderbans - Jan 31, 2012
- Pilgrims not to pay tax at fair: Mamata - Oct 20, 2011
- Hundreds of West Bengal villages still marooned, Aila toll 117 - May 29, 2009
Tags: aila, alarming increase, breeding of mosquitoes, cyclone victims, health hazard, humanitarian agencies, humanitarian response, major health, mangrove forest, mosquito nets, poor residents, pratima, relief material, response manager, septic tanks, stagnant water, sundarban, sundarbans, underwater plants, west bengal