700
NGOs in tsunami whirlpool
From Thalif Deen at the United Nations
NEW YORK - As a major international donor conference begins in Kandy
tomorrow, Sri Lanka's post-tsunami reconstruction plans may go haywire
due to the multiplicity of non-governmental organisations (NGOs)
operating without a coordinated plan of action.
Coco
McCabe of Oxfam, one of the world's biggest international relief
agencies, told The Sunday Times that despite some examples of good
practices, the overall coordination among nearly 700 NGOs "remains
poor".
"The
problem on the ground is that many agencies, in their haste to spend
and with their lack of experience and knowledge of the context,
just want to get on with reconstruction without consulting local
communities," she said.
In
Sri Lanka, she pointed out, there are cases of transitional housing
for fisher families being constructed in an agricultural area, five
miles inland with no convenient public transportation.
"How
will fisherfolk, who own no trucks of even motorbikes, manage their
boats and sustain their access to the sea? The resources and time
taken to provide these transitional homes end up as waste: the houses
go unoccupied and the latrines unused. Ultimately, they get torn
down and replaced by something appropriate," she added.
Ms.
McCabe said many aid groups showing up in tsunami-hit areas, both
in Sri Lanka and Indonesia, were either unfamiliar with internationally
recognised standards or were simply ignoring them as they attempt
to define a role for themselves.
"Under
these circumstances, coordination becomes critical, and donors should
ensure that more money goes towards coordination," she added.
Oxfam has taken the lead in some water and sanitation coordination
meetings, providing technical support to agencies with less experience.
Ms.
McCabe said there remained a lack of clarity on certain issues,
such as the impact of buffer zones on people's ability to return
to their homes. In the tsunami emergency, the estimated expenditure
per person will be a high of over $400 compared with $40 per person
in Kosovo and just 40 cents per person in the Mozambique floods.
But
although the donor community pledged about $6.7 billion for tsunami
reconstruction, only $2.6 billion have been in firm commitments.
The rest is in limbo. However, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF),
one of the UN's lead agencies in tsunami recovery, is suffering
from an embarrassment of riches.
UNICEF's
Gordon Weiss told The Sunday Times that his agency appealed for
$144 million for tsunami relief and rehabilitation, just after the
disaster struck the countries of the Indian Ocean region back in
December last year.
By
the end of January, UNICEF had received over $510 million, nearly
four times its requirements, most of it in hard cash, not pledges.
The agency made a second appeal asking donors to stop sending money.
Pointing out that UNICEF was a development agency, Weiss said it
will be involved in both relief and reconstruction in Sri Lanka
-- including child protection, health, education, water and sanitation.
Asked
about UNICEF's policy of working with rebel groups, Weiss said:
"We work at the pleasure of the government. We are not an NGO,
and we don't have that luxury." In countries such as Sudan,
Indonesia and Sri Lanka, he said, UNICEF is caught between governments
and rebel groups.
But
in both relief work and reconstruction efforts -- whether vaccinating
children or rebuilding schools -- the agency works mostly through
governments. "Our representatives have diplomatic status,"
he said, a privilege granted by the government, not by any rebel
group.
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