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WSWS : News
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: India
Tsunami survivors in southern India speak to the WSWS
By Ram Kumar and Sasi Kumar
21 January 2005
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Ten days after tidal waves hit south India on December 26,
corpses were still being recovered from the sand and wreckage
in Nagapattinam district when World Socialist Web Site
reporters visited the area on January 6.
Eight thousand people in the district were killed by the tsunami,
most of them from poor fishing families, 73 villages were damaged,
36,860 houses smashed and 196,184 people seriously affected. The
tidal waves also destroyed around 10,200 fishing vessels and damaged
another 893 boats. Over 10,500 families are now living in temporary
accommodation in the Seruthur, Poompuhar and Nagapattinam areas.
According to official figures released on January 20, Indias
tsunami death toll has risen to 16,413 with the number of confirmed
deaths at 10,744 and 5,669 people reported missing, presumed dead.
Indias home ministry has estimated total damage from the
tsunami to be $1.6 billion.
In Nagapattinam many of those who had lost loved ones are in
a state of despair, their desperate plight compounded by the slow-moving
response of state and federal government authorities to the disaster.
Ragu Chellakunchu, 18, lost a number of his close relatives,
including four young children of his great uncle. About
4,000 to 5,000 people, including traders from the neighbouring
state of Kerala, come to Keechankuppam fish market every Sunday.
At least 4,000 people would have been killed when the waves hit,
he explained.
The government has only distributed Rs.4,000 [$91], 60
kilograms of rice and a white dhoti [traditional cloth worn by
Indians] per family but the total lost by each family is over
Rs.100,000. We could live if the government provided us with at
least half that sum, but we dont believe that it is going
to give us the required compensation.
Mariyappan, 40, a fisherman for 30 years, was critical of the
governments attitude towards the tsunami survivors. We
had more help from ordinary people and there was no assistance.
There was no government authorities for 10 days, he said.
In Keechankuppam weve buried about 1,500 people
and have been discovering corpses on a daily basis, he continued.
The situation is so bad that we will not be able to go fishing
for at least two to three months. How are we going to survive
during this time?
In Akkaraipetttai we spoke to 27-year-old Rajini Kuttian, who
lost his mother when the tsunami hit his village. Sixty
huts were destroyed by the waves. About 250 people lived in these
dwellings so about four to five people in each family were killed.
My eldest brothers wife died attempting to save her children.
Pointing to a rooftop, he continued, Those able to get up
there survived.
Kuttian told the WSWS that the authorities should provided
decent accommodation. He said that the Rs.100,000 promised by
the government for the next of kin had not materialised.
Private and voluntary organisations have done more to help
the victims, he added.
Kumar Narayanan, 30, said: Everything in our house, from
the computer to the television and fridge, has been washed away,
he said. My younger brother was studying for B. Tech. and
lost all his books.
Narayanan accused government officials of hijacking some of
the relief supplies: Officials take up to half the things
that have been donated by the voluntary organisations, he
said. There are some elements who stop the relief during
transport and so it doesnt reach the survivors.
Murali Dhakshina Moorthy, 28, pointed to huge losses now facing
fishermen whose vessels had been destroyed: An ordinary
catamaran and net costs Rs.150,000, a boat approximately Rs.250,000,
and a motorboat about Rs.1.5 million. What kind of assistance
is the government going to provide us for these losses?
Moorthy was also angry because these losses could have been
avoided if the government had issued a timely warning. He said
that fishermen should be provided with weather reports and tsunami
warnings on a daily basis. We already had problems harvesting
enough fish but now we are in a desperate situation like the peasants
that some time back had to eat tat curry.
Patma Vettri, a 32-year-old mother of five children, said:
My youngest son was studying for his first standard and
told me that as he was doing well and would be made the class
leader. Id just begun cleaning the house when all of a sudden
the tsunami hit and took him away. My other four children are
very upset over his death and did not eat properly for several
days.
Vettri explained that her husband did not have a permanent
job. Although able to secure occasional employment fishing, he
was only paid about Rs.500 for three days work.
Pukazhenthi, 52, a hairdresser told WSWS reporters that the
tsunami survivors received more help from the voluntary
organisations and individuals, who properly distributed the aid,
regardless of caste and religion. But the government has
tried to stop them doing this. They were told that all assistance
had to go through government channels, she said.
New Delhi turned down offers of international aid, saying it
could cope with the disaster itself. There is growing evidence,
however, that many survivors are not receiving enough aid. The
Hong-Kong based Asian Human Rights Commission issued a statement
on January 10 declaring it was extremely concerned about
the pathetic state of relief operations being carried out in India.
It pointed to the lack of coordination, aid mismanagement, caste
discrimination in the distribution of supplies and the meagre
quantities of relief.
What the WSWS team saw supports these criticisms. Government
officials claim that the number of tsunami refugee centres in
Nagapattinam district has been reduced from a peak of 82, accommodating
86,000, to 40 with 36,000 people. But this decline is not because
the government is providing safe and adequate housing.
Fishermans wife Bhagya Lakshmi, who was sheltering in
a Nagapattinam wedding hall said: Over the last two weeks
we have been moved from a temple to a school and then to a wedding
hall. Now they say we have to move again because they want to
conduct marriages here. While trying to calm her wailing
baby, she added: I dont know how Ill manage
this little one and another son in this way.
It is not clear how long the affected families will be forced
to live in temporary accommodation. According to government officials,
about 12,000 sheds were being erected at 38 different locations
in the district. The government will build more than half of these
structures6,524 unitswith the rest provided by Non
Government Organisations and other private bodies.
Volunteer assistance
In contrast to the government indifference, sympathy and support
from ordinary people has been overwhelming. Residents from a village
near Bangalore, the Karnataka state capital, collected money and
a truckload of relief items to be distributed among Nagapattinam
survivors.
WSWS correspondents spoke to B. Shetti, a volunteer from that
group. The 28-year-old cable operator said: I dont
believe most of what the government claims to be doing, but the
private organisations are helping a lot. We banded together and
collected relief to help those affected and came straight here
to see the situation firsthand and make sure that the survivors
were given this assistance.
The WSWS team travelled 10 km from Nagapattinam to Velankanni,
which is another coastal town and regarded as a holy city by Christians.
Velankannis death toll has reached 2,000 with 1,000 missing.
As well as fishing families, pilgrims to the Velankanni church
and small shopkeepers near the church were killed when the tsunami
hit.
Pathima Veerappan, 37, ran toy and bangle stalls along the
Velankanni seashore. She lost all her propertyshops and
houses. My husband and I were preparing fried fish for the
tourists that day. Suddenly the wave came and we tried to hang
onto each other, but couldnt. I was being dragged by the
wave but shouted to our servant boy Bala that I was going to die.
He pulled me back. When I opened my eyes my clothes had been washed
away so somebody covered me with a jute bag. I still have pains
in my body because I was hit by a van being carried along by the
wave.
It was the day after Christmas so if you take into account
the number of tourists, the death toll will be probably be about
6,000. But the Father [of the church] and the authorities are
minimising the figures in order to stop any panic that might affect
the number of tourist visits to the area.
Devayani Swakkanraj, 30, a domestic worker earning Rs.400 a
month, was devastated by the tsunami. Her husband works in a local
hotel. Our native place is Vizhupuram but we have been living
here for the last 20 years. We had a rented house but it has now
been destroyed and we have nowhere to stay. Weve received
food from private voluntary organisations but cannot afford to
even purchase a mat or a pot.
Government sanitary workers from Tiruchchirappalli, a major
city hundreds of kilometres inland, came to Velankanni to help
clean up the area.
Team supervisor Balu, 35, told WSWS reporters: We are
digging up dead bodies every day in this area. This morning, even
after nine days, we found two more corpses and buried them. The
smell from the heaps of rubbish and wreckage is terrible.
Many of the corpses, he continued, are not
taken to be counted because the police have instructed us to bury
them as soon as they are found. The actual death toll, therefore,
must be much higher than the government statistics.
See Also:
South Indian fishing villages devastated
by tsunami
[19 January 2005]
India: tsunami warnings could have been
made
[10 January 2005]
India: over 14,000 dead and hundreds
of thousands displaced
[4 January 2005]
The Asian tsunami: why there were no
warnings
[3 January 2005]
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