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One year after the Asian tsunami: an indictment of the profit
system
Comment by Wije Dias, General Secretary of the Socialist Equality
Party (Sri Lanka)
31 December 2005
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A year has gone by since the December 26 tsunami devastated
the coastal belts of 12 countries from north Sumatra in South
East Asia to Somalia and Kenya on the west coast of Africa. But
a man-made disaster of massive proportions continues to blight
the lives of the millions of survivors who still languish in appalling
conditions without proper shelter, jobs, health care or education
facilities for their children.
The initial destruction was a consequence of natural forces
beyond mankinds control, although magnified and exacerbated
by the lack of a tsunami warning system, of adequate planning
or of a co-ordinated emergency response. There can be no justification,
however, for the social catastrophe that continues to exist twelve
months later. The callous treatment of the tsunami victims expresses
the indifference and contempt of the profit system for the plight
of the worlds impoverished masses.
The Asian tsunami was one of the worst disasters of the past
100 years. Officially, the overall death toll is estimated at
226,000. The majority occurred in Indonesia where 165,708 people
died, followed by 35,262 deaths in Sri Lanka and 16,389 in India.
Another 8,240 people were killed in Thailand, 108 in the Maldives
and another 227 in other countries.
The statistics for the number of people left homeless are even
more staggering. The official number of displaced persons
was 532,898 in Indonesia, 519,063 in Sri Lanka and 647,599 in
India. Another 21,663 lost their homes in the low-lying Maldive
Islands, 6,000 in Thailand and 13,000 in other countries.
Millions more people were affected in other ways through the
loss of their livelihoods, damage to their homes, loss of personal
effects, injury and psychological trauma. Overwhelmingly the victims
were poorthose least able to recover from the calamity.
Many were fishermen or day labourers who had no choice but to
settle near the sea, usually in makeshift accommodation that offered
no protection from the huge waves.
It should be recalled that the initial response of world
leaders to the tragedy was an undisguised lack of interest
or concern. President Bush remained at his ranch, only issuing
a perfunctory statement of sympathy some days later. The first
US offer of financial assistance$15 millionwas derisory,
about $1 for each of those affected. Only after an outpouring
of public support, sympathy and donations from ordinary people
around the world threatened to expose the official disdain did
the tune change.
Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga was enjoying a holiday
in Britain and failed to return to the island for three days after
the disaster, let alone oversee the immediate relief work, which
was ill-organised and inadequate. In many cases, it was the bare
hands of workers, young people and other volunteers who cleared
the debris, attended to the injured and homeless and rescued hundreds
who would otherwise have perished. The political establishment
regarded this spontaneous response not simply as an embarrassment,
but as a threat to its authority. Kumaratunga imposed a state
of emergency and placed the entire relief effort, including volunteers,
under military supervision.
Nearly two weeks after the tsunami, various political leaders
gathered in Jakarta to stage a show of concern and to hypocritically
offer sympathy and aid. The representatives of the worlds
wealthiest countries paraded as great benefactors of the oppressed
Asian masses, while the governments of Sri Lanka, Indonesia and
Thailand expressed gratitude for the pitiful amounts on offer.
Behind the façade, each of the major powers was calculating
how best it could exploit the tragedy for its own purposes.
One year later, the worlds politicians and media have
been at pains to paint the international aid effort in the brightest
of colours. One of the more shameless attempts was an article
in the Foreign Policy magazine entitled The Tsunami
Report Card. Its three authors, including former assistant
secretary of state for South Asia Karl F. Inderfurth, declared
that full reconstruction may take five years or longer
but then hailed the operation in glowing terms:
[I]f the level of commitment demonstrated by the international
community is maintained, the tsunami will be remembered as a model
for effective global disaster response, not just as a disaster.
Because of the speed and generosity of the response, its effectiveness
compared to previous (and even subsequent) disasters, and its
sustained focus on reconstruction and prevention, we give the
overall aid effort a grade of A.
It may well be true that the effort to assist the tsunami victims
has outshone the response of the major powers to other disasters.
But if that is the case, the comments are a devastating indictment
of the entire capitalist order. The millions of victims throughout
Asia are also entitled to pronounce judgement: if this is the
best you can do, you have failed and the social system you represent
deserves to be abolished!
According to UN data, a total of $13.4 billion was pledged
in relief and long-term reconstruction aid for the tsunami-affected
countries. Government promises accounted for less than half$6
billionwhile nearly as much, $5.1 billion, came from private
individuals and companies. In the US, donations from private sources$1,480
millionwere nearly double the official government pledges
of just $857 million.
Much of the government money has yet to be realised. The US
has paid only 38 percent of the aid that it promised. The EU pledged
1.3 billion euros for reconstruction, and has disbursed only 367
million. Likewise individual European countries, including Britain,
France and Italy, have failed to honour their pledges.
Reviewing the conditions of the survivors, a UNDP report stated:
Tens of thousands have found temporary accommodation with
friends or relatives, but many thousands of people remain in tent
camps and shelters. Living conditions in those centres deteriorated
during the year, and tens of thousands more durable temporary
housing units will be needed until permanent housing is built.
According to an estimate by the Australian SBS documentary
program Dateline, more than two million Asians are
still living in tents or temporary accommodation despite the presence
of hundreds of aid agencies and promises of billions of dollars.
Much of the temporary housing is nothing more than
a small one room wooden box, without any basic amenities such
as clean water and electricity.
The housing figures indicate the magnitude of the social problems.
In Indonesia, out of 141,000 houses destroyed, only 5,000 permanent
houses have been rebuilt or repaired in the last year. In Sri
Lanka, 6,179 houses have been completed to replace the 103,836
homes destroyed. In the Maldives, where 7,223 homes were washed
away, only 836 have been rebuilt. The number of new houses would
be far less but for the work of a multitude of local and international
aid organisations.
The survivors, many of whom lost everything, need more than
a temporary roof over their heads. Fishermen lost their boats,
small traders and hawkers lost their stalls and transport, and
farmers lost their crops and equipment. Many were heavily indebted
even before the disaster and have no money to reestablish themselves.
Most have received scant assistance, with many families completely
dependent on small, sporadic handouts from the government or aid
agencies. In most areas, work is yet to begin on restoring health,
education and other services even to the inadequate pre-tsunami
levels.
No one should be surprised by this state of affairs. Having
decided it was impossible to simply ignore the tragedy, the major
powers made commitments of money and personnel, not to help the
victims, but to advance their own political and strategic agendas
in the region.
Eben Kaplan, writing in the Foreign Policy magazine,
explained that the US had already begun reaping the dividends.
US aid has fostered very positive sentiments towards the
United States in tsunami-affected areas, reports show. One survey
found as many as 65 percent of Indonesians now hold a more favorable
view of the United States.
But the US aid operation was more than just a PR exercise.
Washington used the opportunity to put US troops on the ground
for the first time in Sri Lanka and Indonesia, setting an important
precedent for future operations. The US military presence in Aceh
brought the Bush administration one step closer to its ambition
of reestablishing links with the Indonesian armed forces. US aid
also helped forge closer ties with the ruling elites throughout
a region that has become an important focus for American foreign
investment and geo-political interests.
Not to be outdone, Americas imperialist rivals in Europe
and Asia have also exploited the disaster. According to the UN
report card, Japan was the only country to meet and
surpass its official pledge of $500 million. Germany, in collaboration
with the Indonesian government, pledged to finance the installation
of a regional tsunami early warning system but, while it has yet
to meet even half of its promised aid, the major German aid agencies,
organised under the banner Germany Helps, are busy
pressing German national interests in the region.
All of the major powers have come together, however, to push
for an end to two longrunning civil warsin Sri Lanka and
Indonesia. For both countries, the granting of aid was made contingent
on progress in the so-called peace process. The push
for peace was motivated, not by concerns for the suffering these
bloody conflicts have inflicted on ordinary people, but because
of their destabilising impact throughout Asia. Both war zones
lie adjacent to key naval routes and both have the potential to
become lucrative new cheap labour platforms. Aceh also has significant
reserves of oil and gas.
In the case of the Sri Lankan conflict, the international arm-twisting
has proven a dismal failure. The ruling elites are so mired in
communalism that even the effort to get the Colombo government
and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to agree to a
limited, temporary arrangement for the distribution of tsunami
aid collapsed. No sooner had President Kumaratunga signed the
Post Tsunami Operational Management Structure (P-TOMS) in June
than her Sinhala chauvinist allies pulled out of the minority
government. The Supreme Court put the final nail in the coffin
by declaring the central features of P-TOMS unconstitutional.
Far from bringing the government and the LTTE together, the disaster
has heightened the danger of war. In response to growing social
unrest, including protests over the lack of tsunami aid, both
sides have stirred up communal hatred to divert attention and
to shore up their own bases of support.
The one apparent bright spot was Aceh. Prior to the tsunami,
the Indonesian military had been engaged in a brutal secret war
involving 50,000 heavily armed troops and paramilitary police
units. A state of emergency had been declared and, despite a media
blackout, numerous stories emerged of torture, rape and extra-judicial
killings. In the wake of the disaster, the Indonesian military
continued its operations and turned the refugee centres into concentration
camps to choke off support for the Free Aceh Movement (GAM).
Hit by military setbacks as well as the devastation of vast
areas of coastal Aceh, GAM leaders dropped their demand for an
independent Aceh and agreed to disarm. Although the peace deal
has been hailed as a great breakthrough, there is no guarantee
it will hold. With the Indonesian military already pressing to
put more troops in the province under the pretext of providing
humanitarian aid, the agreement is just as shaky and uncertain
as the present ceasefire in Sri Lanka.
Perhaps the most graphic exposure of the irrational character
of the profit system is the fact that the whole terrible tragedy
could happen again tomorrow. A year after the disaster there is
still no tsunami warning system for the Indian Ocean, even though
the technology involved is neither complex nor expensive. What
is required is a coordinated international system of pressure
sensors and water level gauges linked by reliable communications
to a centre for the rapid processing, analysis and release of
alerts.
International co-ordination, however, is precisely the problem.
From the outset, the project has been plagued by national rivalries,
with Indonesia, Thailand and India insisting on developing their
own systems. It is a sensitive issue, said Ulrich
Wolf, program specialist at the UNs Intergovernmental Oceanographic
Commission, on December 16. He added: There is no total
trust for others to analyse data.
The mutual suspicion arises out of national interests and prestige,
not technical issues. India plans to spend $28 million on its
own early warning network, scheduled to be ready by September
2007. Indonesia is investing $125 million on its own project,
while Thailand plans to have a system ready by the end of 2006.
Three badly coordinated national systems will inevitably be less
effective and more costly than a single international warning
system.
The tsunami itself respected no national boundaries. Moreover,
those millions of ordinary working people throughout the world
who selflessly donated aid, and the locals who did everything
humanly possible to rescue and support the victims, gave no thought
to national or communal divisions. The humanitarian instincts
of ordinary people stood in marked contrast to the reaction of
the political establishment. They provide a small glimpse of what
would be possible if the vast resources created by the international
working class were utilised to meet the social needs of the worlds
population.
One year after the tsunami, the failure of the international
aid operation and the desperate conditions facing the majority
of survivors demonstrate that the spontaneous sentiments of ordinary
people must be given conscious expression in a political movement
that sets out to replace the outmoded system of capitalist nation
states with one based on international socialism. That is the
perspective of the International Committee of the Fourth International
and the World Socialist Web Site.
See Also:
One year after the tsunami, Sri Lankan
survivors still live in squalour
[29 December 2005]
Clinton paints false picture
of "progress" for Sri Lanka's tsunami victims
[30 November 2005]
A socialist and internationalist
perspective to confront the Asian tsunami disaster
[9 February 2005]
The social roots of the tsunami
disaster
[22 January 2005]
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