October 9, 2006 By Paul Jeffrey
MANSEHRA, Pakistan – As winter approaches the north of Pakistan once again, many
of those left homeless by the crippling earthquake in October 2005 are growing
increasingly frustrated and newly afraid. "I want to
start my life here again, but there is no work," said Shams Shah Zaman, a quake
survivor in the remote village of Khanian. "Soon the snow will begin, and our
tents are too thin to withstand the winter. How are we supposed to live here?
The army doesn't want to let us return to the city, but how can we stay here in
the mountains?" A government program to reconstruct housing
has not been without its challenges. Most private relief groups, according to
Zaman, don't venture far from the region's few roads. Church
World Service is among the organizations that work in isolated communities, and
the director of the agency's Pakistan and Afghanistan country program agreed that
time is running out. "There's only a small window of
time before winter hits, and there will be at least 200,000 people without proper
shelter," said Marvin Pervez. "We can't count on this winter being mild like last
year. We're faced with a ticking time bomb." CWS is a
member of Action by Churches Together, the Geneva-based global alliance of churches
and church agencies working in emergencies. The United Methodist Committee on
Relief, another ACT member, has assisted the earthquake survivors through CWS,
the International Blue Crescent, Church's Auxiliary for Social Action and other
groups. Heavy rains in recent weeks have underscored
the urgency of Pervez's warnings. At least 400 people have been killed and thousands
of families displaced by flooding and mudslides, and the staff of the CWS earthquake
reconstruction and rehabilitation program has provided plastic sheeting, blankets,
tents and food packages to affected families. In several
places, the rains have washed away steep hillsides, which last year's quake had
left riddled with cracks, the soil loosened. Many families, casting a wary eye
on the precarious mountains, have not returned to their former homes, preferring
to wait and see what slides away with the heavy rain. The
new rains illustrate the vulnerability faced by those seeking to remain in their
remote villages. Food, animals and fodder were taken away by the quake, and many
returning families, busy constructing makeshift shelters this year, have had little
time to plant new crops. Neighboring families or villages that once helped out
in times of adversity are similarly affected. Controversial
program Much of the mounting frustration stems from a
decision by the government to impose a policy ban on housing construction by nongovernmental
organizations and instead provide cash directly to survivors to rebuild their
own homes. In March, the government's Earthquake Reconstruction
and Rehabilitation Authority announced an installment plan to pay affected homeowners
between $1,250 and $3,000 each, which is said to cover two-thirds the cost of
a simple family home. The program's $2 billion cost is paid by international donors.
Yet the plan has left many confused and has created new
difficulties. Since many villagers lost their identity documents in the quake,
they weren't able to cash their first checks at the bank. Those with the right
connections provided check-cashing services for a hefty fee as high as 40 percent.
And many families used their first checks to purchase clothing and other supplies
rather than bricks and cement. To Pervez, the housing
program is good in theory but problematic in practice. "In many places, people
are being left to fend for themselves," he said. Although
the government agency's decision took CWS and other nongovernmental organizations
out of the business of helping survivors rebuild their homes, the ecumenical agency
? which has been working in Pakistan since 1954 ? has wasted no time in providing
other critical services in the quake-ravaged north. With
support from an ACT appeal for more than $18 million, a diverse staff that includes
experts from more than a dozen countries is spread throughout affected communities,
working to ensure that life will indeed go on. A critical
component of the CWS program is rebuilding the economic infrastructure of rural
village life. This means, for example, providing sheep to families that lost their
animals when stables collapsed. CWS has sponsored a similar program in Afghanistan,
and Mansoor Raza, coordinator of the CWS Disaster Response Program, said it has
worked well. "When we provide three sheep to a woman,
it's like opening a bank account," he explained. "As women sell the wool, milk
and meat, they gain purchasing power, and as the animals reproduce, it's like
building up more money in the bank." CWS also established
training centers in several towns to teach carpentry, plumbing, welding, masonry
and electrical skills to men whose lives were disrupted by the quake. Mohamad
Siraj took the course in welding and today has his own bustling shop in Dhodial,
a village north of Mansehra. A farmer before, Siraj lost his house to the quake,
leaving him and his wife and three children in a miserable camp for the displaced.
Siraj said he spent months doing nothing, just sitting
around in front of their tent, before receiving the invitation to the CWS training
program. At his graduation, CWS gave him a complete set of welding equipment.
"There's no end to the work to be done, and I work every
day making shutters and doors and gates and grills," he said. "I'm making about
300 rupees a day and taking care of my family, and looking at where we can build
a house." CWS is also providing more than 100,000 native
trees for communities to reforest hillsides left bare by indiscriminate logging,
a need underscored by this year's fatal mudslides. In
coordination with Norwegian Church Aid, another member of the ACT alliance, CWS
has worked in several communities to re-establish potable water systems. In places,
that means digging new wells and installing hand pumps. In other villages it has
meant helping residents lay several kilometers of piping to bring in safe drinking
water. Raza said navigating local water politics can
be tricky, but the effort can pay off in communal harmony. "Our
primary purpose is to re-establish channels of water distribution that were destroyed
in the quake, but water is intimately linked to local power structures, feudal
culture, geography and land ownership," he added. "So while we don't go looking
for conflicts, addressing these issues can provide a meeting point for communities
to talk about and resolve some outstanding tensions." Scarred
souls The damage done by the quake goes far beyond the
cracked hillsides and shattered houses. CWS has invested significant resources
in responding to wounds that are harder to see. "Injuries
aren't only physical. There are scars on the souls of people who lost their sisters
and brothers," Raza said. "Time is a healer, but they need someone to talk to,
to listen to them. Otherwise they can't restart their daily lives." CWS
runs several medical clinics for survivors, and Dr. Muhmmad Imtiaz Afridi works
in the one in Paras, where CWS took over a government-built clinic that had never
seen a physician. He noted that while many patients have normal respiratory and
other ailments, others suffer symptoms of depression. "Especially
the women come feeling sick because they've lost their children, some of whom
they've buried but many of whom still lay under the rubble," he said. "Others
have not felt safe in the tent camps. Others are living with relatives, but especially
for women and girls who lost their husbands or fathers, they fear their relatives
won't support them long, and in our culture they have few other options. We're
working on livelihood projects with them, like handicrafts, but for this to have
any long-term impact, we need to figure out a way for them to market their products."
According to Saima Abbasi, team leader of the CWS Psychosocial
Team, the agency has sponsored crafts fairs for displaced women and arts projects
for children, but at the heart of the team's mission is getting villagers to talk
about their experience, which at times is difficult because of the growth of dependency
during the emergency. "During the relief phase, NGOs
provided everything. These days we often enter a village where people are so dependent
that they think we have to give them something," she said. "But we don't. What
we offer is intangible; it's love and opportunities for them to share their thoughts
and feelings. And they need that just as bad as things. "When
the government took over the shelter program but didn't issue the checks on time,
the pressure on families grew, and frustration increased. It's critically important
for the health of the communities that people find a safe way to express that."
The team's work sets CWS apart, according to villagers.
"Many people come to look at us, but no one stays to listen to us except these
people from CWS. They come and ask how we feel. We talk about our families and
our lives. Sometimes we get depressed, but then they come and we talk and we feel
liberated," said Maruf, a woman in Mangli. Her village is near Balakot, where
residents are still living in tents because of fear that what's left of their
hillside plots will slide away with the rains or future tremors. Now
that the first anniversary of the earthquake has occurred, CWS is shifting gears,
encouraging survivors to become involved in community organization, according
to Abbasi. The best therapy now, she said, is for survivors, particularly women,
to become involved in the details of installing new water systems and planning
other aspects of community life. Preparing for
the next crisis In many villages shaken by the quake,
CWS had carried out an ambitious program of training schoolteachers in disaster
preparedness. It paid off. "Many children were saved
because of the quick response of these teachers, and the stretchers and first-aid
materials we provided were well used," Raza said. "But the challenge we face now
is how to make disaster preparedness a priority for the state, which has to assume
its responsibility. We've had no comprehensive hazard mapping in the country,
despite all the disasters we have, and there is no country-wide disaster preparedness
program." Yet Raza warned against preparedness that relies
too much on technology. "The only option for the world
is disaster preparedness, not disaster response," he said. "After the tsunami,
lots of people talked about installing an early warning system in the Pacific.
But are the social structures in these countries geared up and prepared? What
will they do with an early warning? Are evacuation routes in place? Are communities
informed and organized? Preparedness should be grounded in a people-centered approach
rather than in a capital-intensive, technological sort of thing, which is useless
to the people." United Methodist News Service Paul
Jeffrey, a United Methodist missionary journalist and senior editor of Response
magazine, was on assignment in Pakistan for Action by Churches Together. |
|
A young survivor of the October 2005
earthquake fetches water in her village of Khanian, Pakistan. Survivors still
face numerous challenges, and with winter approaching, the people are increasingly
fearful and frustrated at the lack of government response. Church World Service
is one of the few relief agencies working in the isolated areas. CWS is a member
of Action by Churches Together, the Geneva-based global alliance of churches and
church agencies working in emergencies. The United Methodist Committee on Relief
is a member of ACT and has assisted the earthquake survivors through CWS. A
UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey, Action by Churches Together. |
|
A man carries metal roofing through the
rubble of Balakot, Pakistan. Survivors of the October 2005 earthquake still face
numerous challenges, and with winter approaching, the people are increasingly
fearful and frustrated at the lack of government response. Church World Service
is one of the few relief agencies working in the isolated areas. CWS is a member
of Action by Churches Together, the Geneva-based global alliance of churches and
church agencies working in emergencies. The United Methodist Committee on Relief
is a member of ACT and has assisted the earthquake survivors through CWS. A
UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey, Action by Churches Together |
|
Abdul Wahab learns masonry at a skills
training center in Battagram, Pakistan, sponsored by Church World Service, a member
of Action by Churches Together. The United Methodist Committee on Relief, another
ACT member, has assisted the earthquake survivors through CWS, the International
Blue Crescent, Church's Auxiliary for Social Action and other groups. A UMNS
photo by Paul Jeffrey, Action by Churches Together. |
|
Girls get a drink of water at a public
school in Battal, Pakistan, where Norwegian Church Aid, a member of Action by
Churches Together, has installed a water system to replace the one destroyed during
the October 2005 earthquake. The United Methodist Committee on Relief, another
ACT member, has assisted the earthquake survivors through Church World Service,
the International Blue Crescent, Church's Auxiliary for Social Action and other
groups. A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey, Action by Churches Together. |
|
At the Mother & Child Health Center
in the village of Debgran, Pakistan, part of the Earthquake Response Health Program
of Church World Service, a member of Action by Churches Together, Gul Bibi (a
"Lady Health Visitor") weighs Dua Tariq while her mother Farah Tariq looks on.
The United Methodist Committee on Relief, another ACT member, has assisted the
earthquake survivors through CWS, the International Blue Crescent, Church's Auxiliary
for Social Action and other groups. A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey, Action by
Churches Together. | |