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In
the picturesque village of Lamniyan, 63-year-old Hasina Begum sits
listlessly near a pile of rubble, waving her hands to shoo away
the flies swarming around her.
What
used to be her home is now a place that haunts her. This is where
she lost her husband, an 18-year old son,16-year-old daughter and
two grandchildren when the massive October 8 earthquake struck her
village, located over 6,000 ft up in the remote Jhelum valley.
"I
do not have any strength left. When you reach my age, it is time
to prepare for the life hereafter, but I have to start again from
scratch," says Hasina, who is now penniless.
The
quake devastated an area of more than 30,000 square kilometers,
killed more than 80,000 people and left about 2.5 million homeless
in Kashmir and northern Pakistan. But Hasina survived along with
her son and three grandchildren who were out in the forest to collect
firewood at the time that the devastating quake struck.
Almost
all the houses in the village of Lamniyan were destroyed and most
villagers fled for safety to the makeshift camps set up by the government.
They buried over a thousand of their fellow villagers, who died
in the October earthquake. "Almost every house had two or three
dead and there was no one to console them," Hasina recalls.
Hasina and some her siblings were evacuated to the Chattar
Class camp near Kohala district where they were provided food and
medical care. A school was also set up for the surviving children.
Five months after the quake, however, the government asked them
to leave, setting March 31 as a deadline.
Many
families tried to resist the move, but the government announced
that those who chose to stay back would no longer have any benefits.
Soon after the deadline elapsed, the NGOs supplying food rations
and running schools as well as medical facilities in the camps were
asked to leave. The government has since cut off water and electricity
supplies in the majority of these makeshift camps.
Hasina's son, Mohammed Yamin, said government officials had promised
the affected that they would get transport back to the village,
food rations for two months and 175,000 rupees for the reconstruction
of their houses. "Once we packed our belongings and uprooted
our tents, they gave us neither the money nor the transport to return.
We have been here for three weeks now and there is no sign that
we will get any kind of compensation," he said.
Yamin
said they are surviving on the money he was able to earn while he
worked in Muzaffarabad, but he had no idea what would happen to
the family once they consumed these savings.
Almost
all the villagers in Lamniyan have returned to their villages and
have more or less similar stories to tell. Most of them were allowed
to take the tents from the camps and they now live in these tents
in the villages, surrounded by piles of rubble.
Young
children in bare feet and tattered clothes can be seen wandering
aimlessly in the valley. Many have not yet returned to their schools
which had resumed functioning in temporary classrooms put up by
NGOs working in these areas.
More than 2,400 of the 2,570 schools across the region collapsed
during the earthquake, killing thousands of children. "There
used to be 110 children studying in this school, but only 23 of
them show up now," says Abdul Rahman, a local teacher. He said
many of the children perished, others were badly wounded.
The
earthquake, which scored 7.8 on the Richter scale, was followed
by almost 1800 aftershocks and these tremors continue to cause landslides
which may worsen when the monsoon arrives in June and July. "The
children get petrified every time there is an aftershock or when
it thunders," says Alafuddin, another villager.
There were also fears of over 10,000 children at risk of dying due
to exposure and cold as 250,000 people above the snow line faced
a life-threatening situation in the winter months. However, they
were spared the worst as the winter was less severe this year.
The government as well as some aid agencies claim that the repatriation
had to be undertaken on an urgent basis to prevent the villagers
from becoming dependent on handouts. "The camp environment
was causing multiple social problems and some camps had even become
dens of prostitution," argues Sardar Hussain Shah, secretary
of the Pakistan Red Crescent Society, Muzaffarabad.
He said some people had become so dependent on free meals that they
were not willing to work anymore. "It has become difficult
to hire a labourer these days. Many of these people say that when
they can collect free rations, then why should they work,"
he adds.
Some NGO activists, however, do not agree. Michelle Hawkins, Communications
Officer, Médecins du Monde UK, says that given that current
weather conditions are causing a number of landslides, and the conditions
for a decent life in their village of origin will not be realised,
it is reasonably difficult to envisage people returning. "The
displaced people are still living in tents and a good number no
longer have land or the financial means to rebuild their house and
resume a normal life," he said. It is a fact that thousands
of villagers are constrained to stay on in the camps even after
supplies have been cut off, as the roads leading to their villages
are still blocked by landslides.
For example, roads leading from Chinari to Chikoti and onward to
the Neelum valley were closed for several weeks due to a landslide.
Similarly, villagers of the Kaghan and Naran valleys are still not
in a position to return to their respective areas because roads
in these areas have been completely wiped out.
Up to 150 refugee camps have already been officially shut down and
those who choose not to leave the camps are being told that their
compensation will be withdrawn.
But Abid Hussain, who lives in a camp near Islamabad, which houses
nearly 6000 families, said living in a camp now is as good as being
in jail. "They have withdrawn all the facilities, including
food, and four of my children are sick," he said.
Hussain said when he asked for transportation money, he was told
that the camp inhabitants were ungrateful people and the authorities
did not care how they returned," he said.
Rasheeda Begum, a widow who lives in the camp along with her four
children, says the family has been harassed by government officials.
"They closed down the camp schools, stopped supplying us food
rations, and are now threatening to cut off the water supply,"
she said.
She said when the earthquake struck, it was the authorities who
insisted that people should move to the camps. Every one was treated
well and the Prime Minister himself came to inaugurate the camp
school. "We never planned to be here forever, but we are surprised
that the situation could change so drastically within the span of
a few months," she remarked.
She said that while some government officials had built palaces
for themselves out of the money collected in the name of the earthquake,
they were not parting with the basic funds needed to rebuild. "We
told them from the very first day that we did not need supplies,
we just wanted help to reconstruct our houses, but they were more
concerned with photo opportunities to show the world that they were
treating the quake victims well," she said
Some of the villagers believe that the government wants to evacuate
the camps because there are going to be elections in Kashmir after
June and they want the number of voters to increase.
The government had announced the provision of 175,000 rupees for
each house destroyed. However, just a few victims have been able
to collect the first instalment of 25,000 rupees.
A local organisation has called for a general strike in the quake-stricken
areas to protest the failure of ERRA (the Earthquake Reconstruction
and Rehabilitation Authority), a body set up by the government to
supervise the reconstruction activities, to provide compensation
to these victims.
People complain that the ERRA authorities ask them to bring in the
original ownership documents of their houses, to collect the first
instalment of 25,000 rupees. "Many of the villagers have lost
their documents after their houses collapsed, while some children
are yet to get properties transferred in their name after their
parents died in the earthquake," says Khalid Mahmood.
Mahmood said the authorities had been asked to ascertain the legal
rights of these families through elders and local officials in each
village, but they had refused to accept this proposal. As a result,
most victims have yet to benefit from the reconstruction fund announced
by the government.
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