THE LIGHT OF ANDAMANS
| ISSUE 30 | 20 APRIL 2012
COVER STORY:
TSUNAMI-AFFECTED FARMERS:
LIES AND DAMN LIES
By
Zubair Ahmed
It's
very easy to say that the farmers have waited eight years. However, in these
eight years, the Islands saw three
Administrators, four Chief Secretaries, five Deputy Commissioners and countless
Commissioner-cum-Secretaries for Relief and Rehabilitation.
Simultaneously,
the submerged landscape has also changed its nature into different avatars
during the last eight years. Before tsunami, it was agricultural land,
post-tsunami, it was called tsunami affected land, later it turned to be a
fishing ground brimming with fishermen and crocodiles, now it's transforming
into a mangrove groove with fresh offshoots appearing here and there. Finally,
nature-lovers and conservationists have started to realise that the
newly-formed wetlands are turning into an abode for migratory, resident and
common birds.
However,
the status of the affected farmers has remained unaffected without much to talk
about. The Administration never allowed them to shed the affix
'tsunami-affected' from their names. They are sympathised with and everybody
worth of their salt has tried to play with their emotions. Elections were
fought and won on this issue.
When
the Home Minister P Chidambaram visited the Islands
to take stock of the development and progress of this territory, he proclaimed
at a public meeting at Congress Bhavan that ANI Admn has successfully completed
the Tsunami Rehabilitation Programme except carpeting of 4.8 km road and
distribution of compensation package to the farmers whose lands are
submerged.
"The
2012 tsunami did not touch the shores of Andamans, as it felt ashamed how ANI
Admn had miserably failed in compensating the poor farmers affected by the 2004
tsunami," said an aggrieved farmer sarcastically on the attitude of ANI
Admn towards the tsunami-affected farmers of South Andaman.
Some
called the day of protest a black day, others a shameful day. And, the ANI
Administration felt that a day was wasted. The Deputy Commissioner wanted his
honour not to be breached. The bureaucrats at the highest level did not want to
climb down the elite pedestal and meet the protesting farmers. The Lieutenant
Governor, who had once openly declared his personal interest in the tsunami
compensation issue, shirked away from meeting the farmers as it seems, he
himself remains clueless and in darkness about the issue.
After
a long wait and various forms of protest in the last couple of years,
assurances of various types and kinds were what the farmers got in exchange.
When the Home Minister P Chidambaram visited the Islands
in January this year, he promised twice that an amount of Rs 130 crores has
been sanctioned and will try to disburse it before 31 March 2012.
There
is a deep sense of betrayal, fear and permanent sense of loss, as the
landowners, who see their submerged land and the lackadaisical attitude of the
Administration.
In
fact, the Home Minister did say that the fund has been given to ANI Admn and
about 95% victims are willing to take the compensation package and a small
minority of about 5% are reluctant and his request was to convince the
remaining few. He categorically said that efforts will be made to disburse the
amount before the end of last financial year. He even said that it would be
very difficult to reopen and revise the package at this moment and when
specifically asked, assured that the submerged land would not be acquired in
lieu of the compensation amount, as it was a natural disaster.
When
the protesting farmers met Bhupinder Singh Bhalla, Commissioner-cum-Secretary,
Revenue he informed them that the amount was only sanctioned and not allotted,
and the file is in Ministry of Finance. It is also strongly doing the rounds
that the amount was diverted.
There
has been lack of transparency in the ways of the administration. First, they
failed to identify sufficient alternate land, and later they announced the
amount as relief and now they are stressfully mentioning it as compensation in
lieu of submerged land.
When
mourning the deaths of thousands in a ritualistic manner, precious little has
been done for the living. It has been a long game of passing the buck and any
other tool that could justify inactions. The inertia of rest breaks only in
bursts, after such protests.
Its
time the Admn removes the albatross of Tsunami Relief and Rehabilitation round
its neck closes the file and the territory moves ahead with other pressing
developmental projects.
The
Islanders deserve not a clarification, but immediate release of the relief
amount and surely an apology for all the lies and damn lies perpetrated in the
due course.