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WSWS : News
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Scandinavian governments criticised for poor tsunami response
By Niall Green
10 February 2005
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With 52 of its citizens confirmed dead and over 532 still missing
Sweden is, proportionately, the European country worst affected
by the December 26 Asian tsunami.
Some 20,000 Swedes were in the region when the disaster struck
and initial fears of the losses were as high as 3,500. Smaller
numbers of tourists from neighbouring Norway, Finland and Denmark
were also present, with over 1,000 initially feared dead. To date,
19 Norwegians, seven Danes and five Finns have been confirmed
dead. Sixty-seven Norwegians, 62 Danes and 186 Finns remain missing.
For Sweden, the disaster has been particularly traumatic and
has caused the highest loss of life in a single event within living
memory. Unlike its neighbours, Sweden avoided Nazi invasion in
the Second World War and has kept clear of armed conflict for
200 years, save its recent despatch of troops to patrol the Balkans
for the European Union.
This, and the vast suffering of the local populations of the
Indian Ocean region, has led to the social democratic (SAP) government
of Goran Persson being widely criticised for its late and inadequate
response to the tragedy.
Foreign Minister Laila Freivalds has been especially singled
out because, in an attitude reminiscent of the contempt shown
by US President George W. Bush and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair
to the immense human tragedy, Freivalds went to the theatre, not
returning to her post for 30 hours, while news explaining the
catastrophic scale of events flooded in.
One source of frantic reports was apparently the Swedish embassy
in Indonesia. Despite this, very little useful news emerged from
the Foreign Ministry for the many thousands of people fearing
for their loved ones, and no emergency teams were sent to the
region for days.
A poll carried out in early January suggested that 50 percent
of respondents wanted Freivalds to resign.
Even the Swedish king, Carl XVI Gustav, normally silent on
the conduct of the government, felt compelled to go on television
to criticise the lack of information being released. Later, in
a memorial service for the disasters victims, Gustav sought
to spread a pall of general bafflement over events, including
the governments dereliction. I wish I had a good answer
... that I, like the kings in the fairytales could make everything
right (and bring about) a happy ending ... but I am just like
you.... We are all just humans without clear answers.
Sections of the Swedish elite have recognised that the Persson
governments reaction was dangerously out of kilter with
the shocked and empathetic response of millions of Swedes. The
Stockholm police chief warned that should Freivalds appear in
the citys Sergels Square lots of people would want
to have a word with her. Swedish police assigned bodyguards
to the foreign minister, whose predecessor, Anna Lindh, was stabbed
to death in a Stockholm department store in 2003.
Furthermore, there were worries that the governments
obvious lack of effort was damaging the countrys international
credentials. Throughout the postwar period, Sweden worked to overcome
its military and geopolitical weakness by exploiting its neutral
status during the Cold War and promoting its economic interests
under the guise of humanitarianism. To this day Sweden, with the
other Scandinavian countries, tops the league of percentage state
spending on overseas aid.
Duly warned, Persson moved into statesman mode
and set up a commission to investigate the slow response, while
the Constitutional Committee will investigate the lack of information
handed to the king.
The Norwegian government, led by Christian Democrat Kjell Bondevik,
has been similarly criticised by survivors, relatives, tour operators,
researchers and the media for failing to cope with the crisis.
Returning survivors complained that the government had done nothing
to help them return home, and had provided no information on who
was alive or dead. The newspaper Dagsavisen quoted aid
agencies as describing the Norwegian response as lukewarm and
late.
Despite an immediate offer from the Norwegian Air Ambulance
service to despatch three planes, and 10 doctors and nurses, the
government did not respond for three days. Even the police criticised
the foreign ministry, after police offers of help in compiling
lists of dead and missing fell foul of interdepartmental feuding.
The government was also rebuked for its lack of assistance
to Sri Lanka, where the Norwegian government has long brokered
negotiations between the Sri Lankan government and the Tamil Tigers.
In Finland, the foreign ministry has come under fire for several
days of complacency, during which time the scale of the disasters
impact on Finnish citizens was underplayed and urgent eyewitness
reports ignored. The head of news and current affairs of the Finnish
Broadcasting Company warned: Information from the authorities
has never been the whole truth, but in future we shall almost
certainly be giving greater weight to such things as SMS messages
and to unofficial channels of information such as the Internet.
An investigation to restore confidence in the government has been
launched by former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari.
By January 17, Persson and the heads of government of Norway
and Finland arrived in Thailand to lecture the Thai government
on its failure to respond to the tsunami, with Persson asking,
The earthquake came a long time before the tsunami ... Why
wasnt there a warning? Who was responsible for that?
Continuing on his high horse, Persson issued an official recommendation
that no Swede should travel to the region until a tsunami early
warning system was in place.
The three prime ministers also insisted that the rebuilding
of Thailands resorts and hotels be done to higher standards.
No general comment was made on the primitive building techniques
and lack of infrastructure across the region which contributed
so much to the huge death toll. So far as Persson, Bondevik and
Finnish premier Matti Vanhanen are concerned, only Scandinavian
tourists, and tour operators, should expect improvements.
See Also:
The social roots of the tsunami
disaster
[22 January 2005]
Powell declares tsunami aid
part of global war on terror
Imperialism in Samaritan's clothing
[6 January 2005]
Tsunami disaster strips away
Blairs humanitarian pretence
[5 January 2005]
Bushs response
to South Asia disaster: indifference compounded by political incompetence
[30 December 2004]
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