Friday, December 31, 2004

Tales from the dark side of Killari quake

NO parties tomorrow. At least not for me, I’m trying to tell my friends. I’m training myself to usher in 2005 with a new hope as the grief of sev­eral unknown faces stares at me from the images of a terrible tragedy unfolding across the eastern coast. I don’t know what difference it would make if a few individuals didn’t party. Still, I don't want to go gaga to ring in the New Year.

The Sunday tsunami that has ravaged South Asia, including India, takes me back to 9/30, 93. Killari. 6.4 on Richter scale. Official records say that 86 villages in eastern Marathwada were wiped off the face of the earth. Killari then, the seismologists told us, was India’s worst earthquake since her Independence. The Government put the toll around 10,000. I visited Killari and a few other villages like Sastur and Talni thrice after that. Every visit underlined the ravaging facts of life on those who were spared by the Mother Earth’s outburst.

The Killari quake changed the geography of eastern Marathwada overnight. More importantly, it battered the people's psyche. There are numerous stories -- of those who did not survive the quake, and those who are still living with the scars of the trag­edy fresh on their minds. Life obviously didn’t wait for them. They were dragged along and forced to make a new begin­ning, yet adjusting with post-quake life was a bundle of pain for each of them.

I have a few distinct memories of Killari. Two young sisters who were away at their mama’s place when the quake destroyed everyone and every­thing back home. It was easy to read their bewildered faces, yet it was very difficult to fathom their minds. Both had stepped out as part of a family full of life, and a week later the unemotional system had required them to return to a dead heap of rubble.

During one of my trips, I met a young boy, an engineering diploma holder, who took me to the ruins which once was his village. Walking towards the village temple, a broken yet very well kept man­sion-like structure caught my attention. What’s that, I asked my ruins-guide. That was my house, the boy said without batting his eyelid. The next bit of infor­mation was even more disturbing. The boy told me he visits his “home” every alternate day and keeps it clean. He then showed me a few masks of Gauris and idols of Ganapatis that were retrieved while clearing the debris. Those life­less idols kept under a temple tree had witnessed ten seasons since they were unearthed.

There was a widow who was staying with her 11-year old daughter. The young girl was a few months old when the ca­lamity struck the region. She remained buried along with her mother under the debris for more than six hours. Her ma-in-law did not allow rescue workers to pull her out since this young lady was “guilty” of bearing a girlchild. Now she wants her daughter to grow to be someone really “big”. Fighting with her own family, she is now the secretary of a village self-help group, and now makes speeches even before the govern­ment officials.

Every time I listen to quake-hit people, I find a common thread -- the psychologi­cal trauma. The fear is still there. People were physically rehabilitated. They got money and new houses though they were hardly keen on living in those matchbox structures. But hardly anything was done to heal the injuries the quake had inflicted on people's minds. Hundreds of these quake-hit people still prefer to sleep outside their houses. Even a decade after the quake. They still have not overcome their fear of stones. The newly seismically strengthened concrete hous­es suddenly change into monuments of fear once the sun goes down on Killari or any of the rehabilitated villages.

The Maharashtra Emergency Earth­quake Rehabilitation Programme manual published sometime in 1994 had acknowledged the sweeping fear in peo­ple's minds. The situation still remains unchanged. One among every third survivor suffers from a psychological disorder, says another report. Many still suffer depression. This inevitably had resulted in alcoholism and other addic­tions. There were instances of pseudo-pregnancies. As every tragedy inevitably spells more miseries for women, Killari too has several issues to sort out.

Why Killari alone, psychological devastation is the flip side of a process called development. Be it an irrigation dam, or a road. Prosperity is hardly shared with the people who are uprooted for “a common good”. Their lives are thrown to the winds, literally.

The world around me now is talk­ing about absence of an early warning systems, efficacy of India's disaster management plans, and new coastal regulations, yet I would like the world to hear a feeble voice calling out to respect the tenderness of the human mind and give the wisdom to start afresh. Happy New Year!

(First published in The Maharashtra Herald on December 30, 2004)

Saturday, December 4, 2004

Let us wash our hands...

UN General Secretary Koffi Annan a few weeks ago expressed fears about the ever-wid­ening rift between political priorities and genuine human needs. Isn’t that true? There is no iota of doubt that the priorities of politi­cal leaders never match mine, or for that matter, yours.

The same news item speaks of a Ke­nyan journalist blaming Indian industrialists for exploiting pan-African nations. He alleged that they (the industrialists) bend rules, abuse environment and do not value la­bour. He was apparently referring to industrialists of Indian origin in his country and other African countries. Both these statements, by Koffi Annan and by the unnamed Kenyan scribe, came during the ongoing Global Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for All (WASH) Forum, currently underway in a city called Dakar, in distant Senegal.

The Forum retold the world the stark truth that every 15 seconds, a child dies as a result of diseases related to unsafe drinking water and inadequate sanita­tion. More disheartening facts were reiterated in Dakar last Monday when the Global Forum was formally inaugurated. An estimated 2.6 billion people do not have decent sanitation facilities. The UN Secretary General put forth a formula to prevent deaths caused by liv­ing in insanitary conditions and reverse the situation. We need to improve on the progress we have made to date, working simultaneously on water and sanitation, We also need to make the wider effort to alleviate the crushing poverty and ill-health suffered by so many of Indians.

The Dakar meet has highlighted certain vital issues, which are visible in our own backyards too. Look at our own Mutha River. A troop of kayakers recently went on a river-pilgrimage from Alandi to Pandharpur. The post-excur­sion report of the troop tells us a horrify­ing truth -- that not a single cubic inch of water in the Indrayani or the Bhima River is safe for man or cattle. And we are all responsible for the situation.

The UN has launched an effort to achieve its Millennium Development Goals by 2015. It has also declared the decade between year 2005 and 2015 as the International Decade for Action. And theme for the decade is “Water for Life.”

Annan stresses that cooperation at the international level to achieve the desired goals could only be achieved through working together at the local and national levels -- with communities, local authorities and national governing structures "committed and fully involved in making sure that real actions are tak­ing place in their midst".

Sir Richard Jolly, who heads the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council, recommends seven critical steps to ensure acceleration of action towards the goals of water, sanitation and hygiene. To begin with there is a need for all countries to put sufficient resources in their government budgets. The second crucial step is women's empowerment and the strengthening of their influence in all matters relating to water and sanitation systems. Then come catalytic commitments from aid donors, mobilization of school systems with children and youth as agents of change, search for new partnerships and coalitions, and yardsticks with clear objectives to measure success indicators with ongoing monitoring and evaluation of human impacts.

I spent the last week in Pench Tiger Reserve, the home of wolf boy Mowgli in Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle Book. The one thing that struck me about tribal Karma­jhari was cleanliness. I remembered Karmajhari when I was reading comments made by Vanessa Tobin, the UNICEF director for water and sanitation, who is attending the Global Forum. She wants a real global drive to promote sanitation and good hygiene. She also underlines the need for low technology and low-cost options in the field of public hygiene.

Form our entire ritual obsession with cleanliness, we, in India, live in remark­ably unsanitary conditions. Good sanita­tion involves a whole lot of issues. For instance, it means greater availability of hand washing facilities for people. This is a challenge especially in rural areas of developing countries, which face water shortage. According to Tobin, "Commu­nities are universally receptive because they know (better sanitation) can only benefit their children's health, but there is resistance within the development agenda on sanitation."

This has been a vital aspect since wa­ter-borne diseases such as cholera thrive under poor sanitary conditions in urban and rural environments where people have limited access to clean water for cooking or even for washing their hands. British medical journal Lancet reports that some 40 per cent of all diarrheal ill­nesses, which kill an estimated 2,000 chil­dren daily, can be wiped out if sanitation, including personal hygiene, is improved. What we is need is some simple intervention. Teach people to wash their hands after using the toilet and before eating. And then teach them to wash their hands off dispassionate policy makers. After all it is a question of public health.

(Excerpted from an article first published in The Maharashtra Herald on December 2, 2004)