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So much injustice in Boxing Day tragedy

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  • So much injustice in Boxing Day tragedy

    So much injustice in Boxing Day tragedy

    Canberra Times - Australasia
    Dec 28, 2004


    SURROUNDED as most of us probably are by the excesses, the detritus
    and the general aftermath of Christmas, it's impossible to imagine
    what the survivors of the world's most powerful earthquake for 40
    years must be going through right now. The top news story on Boxing
    Day was supposed to be the re-run of the Ukraine elections, not a
    re-run of the Iranian earthquake that left 26,000 people dead in Bam
    on 26 December last year.

    It's still too early to say how many people died in the quake that hit
    the Indonesian state of Aceh on Boxing Day or in those countries - Sri
    Lanka, Thailand, India and the Maldives - fringing the Indian Ocean
    that was subsequently battered by a massive tsunami. The chances are
    we'll never know since many of the coastal settlements close to the
    Oceanic epicentre were completely destroyed leaving no survivors to
    furnish us with tidy statistics.

    The difference between human and natural disasters is that the first
    are avoidable whereas the second we can do nothing about - unless, of
    course, we live in the first world and have a lot of money. Think of
    all those millionaires in Los Angeles with their luxury
    earthquake-proof homes slap on top of the San Andreas Fault. True to
    what I have always considered to be the curiously un-Christian parable
    of the sower, Matthew 12 verse 13: ''To him that hath, even more shall
    be given and he shall have an abundance. To him that hath not, even
    that which he hath will be taken away.'' Natural disasters always seem
    to dump on the poorest communities of the Third World. OK, there was a
    freak hurricane in France just before Christmas which had people
    missing planes and ferries and thousands of households without
    electricity for a few hours, but that was a mere dot in the big
    disaster picture. Every year thousands of Bangladeshis whose average
    income is less than a dollar a week are swamped by typhoons and tidal
    waves. To make their homes flood-proof by erecting low walls made of
    concrete blocks containing a specially designed reinforcing agent,
    would cost less than $10 a family, but the government simply can't
    afford it.

    It's at times like this when all I can do is feel helpless and listen
    to the latest news updates from the disaster zone. It's times like
    this that I don't envy an engineer called David Charlesworth who I met
    about 10 years ago. As I write this he's probably on a plane heading
    for Jakarta with his bag of tools. David works for a charity called
    The Register of Engineers for Disaster Relief. They are the unsung
    heroes of natural disasters. They don't have the glamour of doctors
    saving the lives of small children in field hospitals or the photo
    opportunity value of Red Cross drivers distributing food in refugee
    camps.

    REDR members are the low-profile operators who rebuild the roads and
    bridges and improvise airstrips to make it possible for the doctors
    and drivers to get to the disaster areas.

    When I met David he had just come back from an assignment to the
    Ascension Islands during the Falklands War. The RAF needed an
    airstrip; REDR did it for peanuts. No-frills practicality is the aid
    worker's key word. A friend who went to Gujarat after the 1998 Indian
    earthquake said that aid agencies often missed the basics because they
    got carried away by headline-catching projects. In Gujarat the
    American NGO's were dead keen on the ''Adopt a village'' idea, which
    made great television. They spent days driving around looking for a
    suitable candidate with preferably an articulate, photogenic head
    man. In her experience, said my Christian Aid friend dryly, the
    neediest people in disasters are not necessarily the most
    vocal. Instead of a charismatic village head man, they'd have been
    better off getting in touch with the local Sangam or women's
    group. Every Indian village has one. They are the people who really
    know where the help is needed.

    A year after Bam, President Mohammad Khatami is claiming that only
    $A42 million of the $A2.5 billion worth of international aid promised
    has been delivered. Sixteen years after the Armenian quake, only 50 of
    the 256 houses destroyed in the village of Saramej have been
    rebuilt. With many foreign tourists among the casualties, Sunday's
    victims can expect masses of aid, but how much of it will filter
    through to tiny rural communities? Natural disasters are often
    referred to, particularly by insurance companies, as Acts of God. Was
    there ever a more cogent argument for becoming an atheist? This is the
    first Christmas I didn't go to Midnight Mass. With the benefit of
    hindsight would there really have been much point? - The Independent

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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