Addressing Post-Tsunami Development Challenges
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The Second Disaster Looms
Reporting in the February 2005 issue of India Currents ["I Deserve More," Why Must tragedy be compounded by indignity?]
after visiting a village in Tamil Nadu and observing the fighting,
arguing, and unfairness among neighbors, Dilip D'Souza makes a comment
that identifies an important Post-Tsunami Development challenge:
- "Travel to a disaster area and watch the relief happen. I guarantee you will end up with searching, agonizing questions about how it happens. And the saddest part is that this is the result of the best of intentions, the most transparent goodwill."
D'Souza concludes with a quote from the late disaster expert, Fred Cuny: "For the survivors of a natural disaster, a second disaster may also be looming."
What do you think? Click below on "Comment" to enter your thoughts on the subject. I look forward to hearing from you.--Michael
Overlooking the Elderly
San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer Pia Sarkar reports [San Francisco Chronicle, page 1, Feb. 10, 2005: To be elderly is to be overlooked as India distributes Tsunami relief]
". . . unlike the children, who are considered the nation's future, the
elderly have been cast off as a low priority in the tsunami's aftermath,
some aid workers say."
What do you think? Click below on "Comment" to enter your thoughts on the subject. I look forward to hearing from you.--Michael
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Reader Comments (5)
[http://www.useless-knowledge.com/1234/dec/article514.html
"I like some of what I read. This is what the American Friends Service Committee, the Quaker group, writes on its website (www.afsc.org ):
"As the situation develops, we will: let the local people determine what response is most needed; provide support for groups or communities that might not be served by larger aid responses; and offer pragmatic, immediate help that builds longer-term recovery so that communities can rebuild long after the media attention and compassionate responses for aid have diminished."
Here is an interesting site for information on tsunami fundraising events, including how Coffee Drinkers Can Help Tsunami Relief Efforts:
http://www.tsunamihelp.info/wiki/index.php/Fundraising_Events
Here's a report/commentary in IndiaTogether that examines the disproportionate impact of the 2004 Tsunami on women in south India: "A recent Oxfam report finds that women were, and are, disproportionately higher victims of the tsunami than men. While nature doesn't discriminate, says Kalpana Sharma, society certainly does, and such tragedies should remind us of this, or women will continue to remain invisible in suffering." Read more, click below
http://www.indiatogether.org/2005/apr/ksh-tsunami.htm
The India Times, Times of India, April 30, 2005 carried this AFP report: "An Indian woman paid just two rupees in compensation for damage to her coconut groves by tsunami waves has angrily returned the state aid, an official admitted on Friday.
"Charity Champion sent back the cheque from local government aid officials who assessed the damage to her coconut crop at two rupees, said Sailen Singh Parihar, deputy administrator of Nancowrie island in the Andamans group."
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1093780.cms
Michael Chacko Daniels, New River Free Press of San Francisco
Check out the following blog:
http://tsunamihelp.blogspot.com/
Michael Chacko Daniels, New River Free Press of San Francisco