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Kashmir earthquake survivors abandoned to freezing winter
By Deepal Jayasekera
16 January 2006
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Three months after the October 8 Kashmir earthquake, many thousands
of survivors are living in tents and face the danger of freezing
to death as the Himalayan winter worsens. Severe cold waves have
been reported from the quake-affected areas, with nighttime temperatures
falling well below zero degrees Celsius, and heavy snows have
fallen. Minus-2 degrees has been recorded in Muzaffarabad, the
capital of the worst hit Pakistani province of Kashmir and minus-13
degrees in mountain villages where many earthquake victims are
living.
Aid agencies have been warning for months of a looming winter
disaster whose death toll could easily exceed that of the initial
catastrophe. At least five million people in Pakistan and India
were affected by the 9.0 magnitude quake. More than 87,000 people
have died, and about three million are still homeless, many living
in temporary tent camps or in mountain villages, increasingly
cut off from relief supplies.
CARE International warned again on January 5: [T]he harsh
Himalayan winter is expected to be even worse than usual this
year, creating fears of another wave of deaths from hypothermia,
pneumonia and other respiratory infectionsparticularly among
childrenamong those with no or inadequate shelter and poor
sanitary conditions.
It added that there are not enough winterised tents to go around,
so survivors had begun moving south in search of warmer weather.
Those most at risk from the extreme cold are the estimated
1.5 million people who havent found shelter... For many
of them, the prospects of finding properly winterised shelter
are running out.
Another aid agency, ADEPT, reported on January 9: Three
million shelterless are spending nights in the open. Many villages
continue to remain inaccessible... Cut-off villages need urgent
help and medical aid and thousands could die of hypothermia, injuries,
and disease over the next few weeks as the harsh Himalayan winter
looms.
There are reports that 15,000 tents have been supplied.
But these are such that they cannot keep out the harsh cold of
the Himalayan winter. Winter has not yet begun but night temperatures
drop as low as minus five degrees centigrade. What are required
are arctic or winterised tents that can keep out the cold, withstand
the howling winds and do not crumble under the six to eight feet
of snowfall, and allow a fire to be lighted inside (kerosene stoves
or heaters would create another logistical problem of supply of
fuel).
SOS-Kinderdorf International reported on January 10: Massive
landslides resulting from heavy snowfall and rain often block
the main road from Islamabad to quake-hit Muzaffarabad, the capital
of Pakistan-administered Kashmir. Relief aid often cannot be airlifted
into the region because of fog. Due to the cold temperatures,
many children in the region are suffering from pneumonia and bronchitis,
while many cases of gastroenteritis are reported at the various
emergency relief camps.
According to Camp Management Cluster, an estimated 137,008
people are living in 26 planned and 113 spontaneous camps across
the affected region. ActionAid reported on January 11 that the
snow has been so heavy that about 20 percent of tents have collapsed
in some areas.
Early last week, dozens of tents collapsed at Mira Tanolian,
a village about 6 km from Muzaffarabad. The families also complained
about the lack of warm clothing. Look at me. Im wearing
just one sweater and this one shawl. Its not enough to cover
myself. The children are falling sick. We were told we would get
additional blankets but they still havent come, Nasima
Bibi, 45, a mother of five, told reporters. Residents said that
although they had received ample rice, grain and lentils, they
needed warmer clothes as well as tarpaulins to insulate and waterproof
their tents.
Aid agencies have complained about the shortage of corrugated
iron sheets for building, which is forcing many people to live
in the snow in summer tents. People living outside the camps,
who have refused to leave higher mountainous areas, face even
more severe conditions. They often have no protection against
the freezing winter.
Oxfam Australia emergency manager Richard Young said those
who had chosen to remain in their villages might not survive the
winter. So it is going to be very tough, but I have to respect
the views of the people themselves. ... Theyve made a conscious
decision to stay up in their homes for very understandable reasons.
Another aid worker pointed to these understandable reasons.
Ingvar Anda from Caritas Australia, which is carrying out relief
work in the Boi and Diola regions, said on January 10: Some
of the displaced people have chosen to camp next to their destroyed
houses because their fields are important for their livelihoods...
It is the preferred option of the affected people in this region
that they to stay close to their houses and land or their families,
rather than going to larger camps, due to security fears and poor
living conditions within the camps.
These people are so dependent on their crops and/or cattle
that they cannot leave them. The authoritiesboth the Pakistani
military regime of General Pervez Musharraf and the regional Kashmiri
governmenthave failed to provide any alternative livelihood
or adequate financial support for them.
Disease and trauma
Agencies have also reported that snowfalls and icy rains have
flooded latrines, adding to the health hazards caused by poor
sanitation and waste management facilities in the relief camps.
According to a joint statement issued on January 5 by the World
Conservation Union (IUCN), the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WFN),
and CARE International, clean water and sanitation are not available
in many areas. They said the absence of hygienic solid waste management
should be accorded the highest priority.
Quoting a report on the Pakistani health system, the Dawn
newspaper reported on January 10 that Musharrafs government
also lacked a program to control leishmaniasis, a parasitic skin
disease. The risk of spread is currently high due to ideal
breeding conditions, it said.
Widespread effects of trauma have been reported among quake
survivors. Khalid Saeed, a mental health coordinator with the
World Health Organisation, estimated up to 180,000 victims had
serious mental disorders, including severe depression, psychosis
and anxiety. Half a million faced moderate mental problems, such
as stress and flashbacks. Up to two million people needed psychological
first aid, which included help in finding their way to relief
workers and tracking down family members.
Saeed warned: Without treatment their problems will worsen...
They wont be able to resume their lives and take part in
reconstruction. It will not only affect them but also their family
and the community.
International organisations have highlighted the environmental
hazards that are threatening survivors health. In their
January 5 statement, the IUCN, WFN and CARE said displaced survivors
were putting pressure on fragile forests, and warned that heavy
winter precipitation could bring down more landslides.
The conditions faced by the quake survivors are an indictment
of the Musharraf regime and the world powers. All of them knew
from the outset about the coming Himalayan winter and that no
adequate measures had been taken to protect the survivors from
the freezing conditions. Tens of thousands of victims have been
simply abandoned to their fate.
Not only is the relief operation woefully inadequate but there
is no sign of any serious reconstruction work. Pakistani Prime
Minister Shaukat Azize told correspondents in Islamabad on January
10: We have a long way to go to complete the reconstruction
and rehabilitation work.
Even the meagre pledges made by the major powers
for relief and reconstruction works have not materialised. According
to a UN press release on December 30, just $US226 million has
been committed of the $550 million UN Flash Appeal for humanitarian
assistance.
Last week, the UN Humanitarian Air Cargo and Passenger Services
(UNHAS), which maintains air cargo operations to transport relief
materials, stated that it had received only 54 percent of its
$100 million appeal. It warned that if additional funding did
not arrive, the current operation might have to stop in the second
half of March.
The air operations are vital for hundreds of thousand of survivors
scattered in remote and high-altitude areas, which are difficult
to reach because roads have been blocked and access cut by landslides.
The US has contributed only $8.5 million to the UNHAS appeal.
According to the UNHAS, Washington provided only 29 helicopters,
and of these, just 4 S-70s and 12 Chinooks remained in operation.
See Also:
Second disaster looming
for millions of Kashmir earthquake victims
[5 December 2005]
Kashmir earthquake
fails to advance India-Pakistan cooperation
[28 November 2005]
After the Kashmir
earthquake warnings of a second disaster
[25 October 2005]
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