In times of a major crisis, governments
often seem to get paralysed in grappling with the situation.
Sri Lanka offers one example where the State did not allow
itself to get crippled in the wake of the worst ever tsunami
disaster that the island nation has ever seen.
The local NGOs as also a horde of foreign NGOs rushed to
ground zero to give a helping hand but it was the State machinery
which ensured speedy recovery from the crisis. In Sri Lanka
the NGO did help but not to expectations. Instead, it goes
to the credit of the Government, which ensured that children
did not lose even a single day of their studies, all communication
channels were restored in record time and reconstruction of
housing of the affected families was taken up on a war footing.
Shanti Fernando, the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the
Reconstruction and Development Agency, Sri Lanka, which functions
directly under the Presidential Secretariat, gives a blow
by blow account about tsunami and the failure of some International
NGOs in meeting their commitments. The shortest time span
in which Sri Lanka emerged out of the tsunami devastation
puts even USA to shame for its failure to come out of Katrina
even till date.
-Editor
Business Economics, New Delhi |
Post tsunami recovery in Sri Lanka
By Shanti Fernando
The Tsunami of December 26, 2004 ravaged the coast of Sri Lanka.
It was the biggest natural disaster that had struck the country
within historical memory. Around thirty thousand people died in
the tragedy. Nearly a hundred thousand homes were damaged or destroyed.What
is equally striking is the way in which Sri Lanka, a country which
has not experienced even a flood, earthquake or cyclone of a dimension
that can be called large or widespread within historical times,
recovered from an event which shook the hearts and minds of the
world’s population.
The major share of pride for Sri Lanka’s quick recovery
is owed to the government. Sri Lanka demonstrated the efficacy of
its State administration to act fast and effectively to bring the
situation under control and help restore economic and social life
to near normal levels without delay.
Immediately the tsunami struck the Sri Lankan coast, it was the
adjoining communities, the religious institutions and the armed
services that doubled up behind the local administration to come
to the relief of the affected people.
Drive from the top
President Kumaratunga being away from the country at the time, Prime
Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa commanded the crucial rescue and relief
stage of the aftermath and immediately mobilised the Centre to provide
relief to the ravaged districts. He also lost no time in appealing
for support to the international community. He started the process
by calling his friend the Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh
within hours if not minutes of the tragedy. India in turn lost no
time in being the first country to airlift relief to Sri Lanka’s
affected people.
Inspired by the dedication of his initiative and spurred on by
the pathetic situation on the ground, the public service at the
level of the affected districts – cut off from the Centre
by the damage to roads, railway and telecommunications – came
out with a dedication unparalleled in the recent history of the
island State, to demonstrate the superlative manner in which it
can come to the help of the people and the country in an hour of
need and challenge.
Immediate
relief
The armed services too were out in their numbers, working with untold
dedication to rescue people and provide relief. And at ground level
the temples and churches transformed themselves into local rescue
and relief centres, and together with the local schools were the
camps where those internally displaced were provided food and shelter.
Inland communities supported the local administration by organising
themselves to provide food and clothing to their brothers and sisters
along the affected coast, until the State was able to secure this
aspect of the relief operation.
Health services
Speculating on the basis of the experience of the post disaster
scenarios of other countries, scare stories of impending epidemics
began to do the rounds. But this was not to be. Sri Lanka is known
for the high quality and the wide spread of its health services.
The achievement of the country’s health sector in the aftermath
of the tsunami stands unique. Thanks to the speed and effectiveness
of their preventive and curative services in the effected villages
and refugee camps, not a single epidemic of even a small dimension
is known to have occurred, bringing pride to the health services
of a small developing third world country.
The Railway restored in 57 days
The southern railway track from Angulana near Colombo to Matara
in the deep South, a length of 135 km, was completely damaged and
partly destroyed. The railways department lost no time in mobilising
its staff to assess the damage and reinstate the track. With the
active support of trade unions, the department was able to re-lay
the track and commence rail services to the final point at Matara
in 57 days. This was another unparalleled achievement for a developing
third world country and a pride to its State sector services.
Roads back in shape
Needless to say the coastal roads were badly damaged by the tsunami,
making road transport to the affected districts difficult if not
impossible. Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, in his capacity as
Minister of Highways, directed the Road Development Authority (RDA)
to mobilize all foreign and local contractors working on road projects
in the country to clear the debris, install emergency bridges at
all locations and make the roads motorable within 72 hours of the
tragedy.
Under the drive of the Prime Minister / Minister of Highways, Mr.
Mahinda Rajapaksa, engineers and workers toiled day and night to
achieve the target and enable vehicles transporting food and other
needs to access the villages and refugee camps where displaced persons
were housed. It has been commented that such an achievement would
have been the pride of even a developed industrial country.
Water, power and phones come alive
Needless to say, electricity transmission too was disrupted: So
was water supply and telecommunications. It did not take 10 days,
in most places much less, for electricity and water to be restored.
Wire line telephony took around three weeks to restore in some places,
while wireless telephony was restored in a matter of three days
at the most.
Schools never closed
Schools on the other hand were on vacation at the time of the tsunami.
To the eternal pride of the educational services of the country,
all students in schools that were damaged or destroyed were located
in other functioning schools nearby when schools re-opened for the
New Year in January. Not a single day of education was therefore
lost by the affected children.
INGO/NGO avalanche
Everything was restored fast except housing: And that is the exception
that proves the rule - namely the efficiency and effectiveness of
the governmental machinery in Sri Lanka. Immediately following the
tsunami, large numbers of International Non Governmental Organisations
(INGOs) found their way to Sir Lanka, as they did to other tsunami
ravaged countries, to offer aid and assistance. Exploiting the wave
of sympathy and compassion that engulfed the world in the immediate
aftermath of the tragedy, these organisations were able to amass
a great deal of funds for relief and rehabilitation from compassionate
organisations and individuals in the rich countries.
The INGO avalanche which followed the tsunami also included a considerable
number of fly-by-night organisations of dubious origin and credibility
as well. A country that had no previous experience of such an onslaught
of international NGOs and other aid-offering organisations obviously
did not have the capacity to discriminate between the reliable and
the unreliable, the trustworthy and the fugitive, and the truthful
and the deceitful among them.
Housing reconstruction handed to INGOs/NGOs
Overawed by these enormous offers of help from INGO and
NGO communities the world over, the Sri Lankan government decided
to hand over the responsibility to them of constructing new houses
for those who were located within the 35 metre restricted zone declared
by Sri Lanka’s Coast Conservation Department. 58 well known
international and national NGOs came forward and solemnly pledged
to construct 65,782 houses which would have enabled not only the
30,049 families of the restricted zone but even the non-entitlement
bearing sub-families who lived with the main householders and non-entitlement
bearing encroachers and those who lived on rent in other people’s
houses in the restricted zone to access new houses for themselves.
Hopes ran high. With news pouring in through the print and electronic
media of the enormous resources raised for tsunami relief and rehabilitation
from the compassionate public of the rich countries, it was expected
that the displaced families living in the 57,057 transitional shelters
will live in permanent houses in double quick time.
But hopes blasted
But this was not to be. Of the 65,782 houses pledged by the 58 NGOs
and INGOs, Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) were signed by them
only in respect of 34,686 and what is more shocking is that by Novmeber
30, 2006 only 12,207 houses were completed and anther 12,897 were
in different stages of being constructed. By way of example, one
well-known International NGO which pledged to build 15,000 houses,
signed a MOU to construct 5,534 but in fact completed only 526 houses
a year and eleven months after the tragedy. Another equally well
known International NGO which had pledged to build 26,000 houses
and entered into an MOU only with respect to 992 houses had in fact
completed only 91 houses during the same period.
The NGOs that worked
At the same time all NGOs were not equal defaulters or
failures. Many kept their word and acted with transparency while
many more contributed to the over-all failure of the sector in the
matter of post tsunami house construction. As a result, 14,961 families
still continue to live in transitional temporary shelters nearly
two years after the tsunami. It is noted that as a rule the smaller
NGOs honoured their promises and this included almost all the Buddhist
Temple groups from Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan the USA etc. that
came forward to build houses for the affected families.
Lack of transparency
This level of irresponsibility or failure on the part of
the INGO and NGO communities taken as a whole contrasted sharply
with the commitment and dedication of the governmental administrative
services in the post tsunami relief and reconstruction phase. The
Sri Lankan media as well as the Reconstruction and Development Agency
(RADA) have repeatedly appealed to the NGOs for transparency.
They have been challenged to openly declare details of the funds
collected by them for tsunami relief and rehabilitation, the proportion
expended on themselves by way of salaries, living expenses, administrative
costs, transport and other allowances. They have been compared to
the proverbial beggar who continuously re-infects the wound on his
hand in order to be able to go on begging from his benefactors.
But all this has been of no avail. To our knowledge not a single
NGO or INGO has gone public with the kind of information which the
Sri Lankan public has been demanding.
Thanks NGOs. “Let us do ourselves”
Frustrated by their recurring failure to perform in the
matter of housing reconstruction and increasingly despondent as
the second year of post tsunami reconstruction and rehabilitation
rapidly draws to a close, RADA has appealed to the defaulting NGOs
and INGOs to give the pledged funds to the affected families themselves
to construct their own houses under the supervision of the district
administration.
Unlike two years ago when they were in a state of intense shock
and bewilderment, two years up the road the homeless families are
today in control of their circumstances and ready to engage in their
own house construction. RADA has appealed several times to the NGO
and INGO communities to now respond realistically to the changed
circumstances of those displaced, and instead of building houses
for others to support the people to build their houses for themselves
with the funds they collected in the name of the tsunami affected
people. 12 INGOs and NGOs have responded positively to this call
and are now in the process of supporting the construction of 1617
houses by affected families on this basis.
Restoration of Houses
For the affected families that lived outside the restricted
zone, four donors namely IDA / World Bank, ADB, KFW / Germany and
SDC / Switzerland, came forward with resources to enable families
to repair their partially and fully damaged houses. Cash grants
of SL Rs. 250,000 (US$ 2,500) for fully damaged houses and Rs 100,000
(US$ 1,000) for houses partially damaged were released in installments
via the national banking system through a scheme carefully monitored
and supervised by the district administration. Of the 39,361 fully
damaged houses, 11,513 (29%) have been fully restored and the remaining
27,818 (71%) are under repair. Of the 39,823 partly damaged houses
benefiting from this scheme, 34,988 (88%) have been fully restored
while the remaining 4,835 (12%) are still under repair.
Thus in regard to partially damaged houses, the scheme has been
most successful. In respect of the more severely damaged houses
– the fully damaged category – however, it is our experience
that the grant is insufficient and progress has been hence restricted.
But despite these limitations it is agreed that the scheme has been
efficiently and effectively implemented and monitored by the country's
district administration.
Means of livelihood back on track
Most of the livelihoods affected by the tsunami were those related
to fishing, tourism and the thousands of mini and micro enterprises
based on these major pillars of the local economy and on providing
the day to day needs of the local population. Surveys have revealed
that more than 75per cent of the affected households have successfully
re-gained their main source of income with perhaps slightly lesser
income than before.
Regarding the fisheries which was badly hit by the tsunami, reports
indicate that 100 per cent of damaged boats, engines and gear have
been repaired and 95 per cent of destroyed boats, engines and nets
have been already replaced. 70 per cent of the catch is back to
pre-tsunami levels though fishing restrictions in the Northern and
Eastern seas are affecting the livelihoods of fishermen in those
areas.
75 per cent of the land used for paddy cultivation and 84 per cent
of the land used in vegetable cultivation are back in use. The shortfall
is due to factors such as soil salinity, labour shortage and lack
of access to working capital in the Eastern districts.
The reasons for this rapid recovery of livelihoods include the efficiency
of the Government in quickly restoring the fisheries harbours damaged
by the tsunami, the ability of the Government to provide as many
as 57,862 loans and grants with an outlay of more than Rs.200 million
(US$ 200,000) for the recovery of micro, small and medium enterprises
through government sponsored finance schemes, and the role of INGOs,
NGOs and Bilateral Donors in establishing their own grant and loan
schemes and in helping restore the damaged fishing fleet of the
tsunami affected districts.
Who is efficient; State, NGOs
Thus as we slowly but surely reach the second anniversary of the
Asian tsunami, Sri Lanka presents the case of a State sector that
has been efficacious, efficient and successful when contrasted with
a non governmental sector that has failed dismally in housing reconstruction
and also lacked the transparency and accountability that is strongly
built into the country’s system of governance.
– Reprinted with permission of Business Economics,
New Delhi.
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