People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 26 June 30, 2013 |
Uttarakhand
Monsoon 2013 calamity
Raghu
IT is about ten
days since
Uttarakhand was hit by torrential rains and cloudburst of a
scale not seen in
the state in over 50 years, which, along with accompanying
floods and
landslides, have caused untold devastation in the state.
Thousands of locals
and out-of-state pilgrims on the famous char dham yatra
routes (to the four
holy sites of the Kedarnath and Badrinath temples, and the
Gangotri and
Yamunotri glaciers and temples) have died, many villages
have been totally
destroyed, many towns have suffered horrendous damage, and
several roads and
bridges have been swept away. The material damage and the
toll on people has
been so heavy, and the civil administration has been so
unprepared, disorganised
and overwhelmed, that a week into this disaster even the
essential rescue work
is still incomplete, while relief, rehabilitation and
reconstruction have not
even begun to be envisaged.
A more detailed
assessment of the
disaster management undertaken will no doubt be done by
authorities at both state
and central levels later, both so as to identify problem
areas and so as to put
in place adequate strategies, capabilities and institutional
mechanisms to be
able to cope better with the next calamity. Hopefully, the
considered opinions
of experts, academics, social organisations, panchayat
representatives and
others would also be taken on board.
Yet even at this
stage, even while
the tragedy unfolds, some things are quite evident and need
to be understood
and borne in mind. In the midst of relief operations or
while dealing with the
numerous detailed aspects of reconstruction and
rehabilitation, or even while
writing up post-disaster reports recommending follow-up
actions, some basic even
causal issues are often forgotten or ignored. Before getting
lost in the
minutiae of logistical issues, detailed disaster management
plans, procurement
and placement of equipment, manpower training and so on, all
of which are
undoubtedly important and necessary, it is crucial that we
also step back and
look at the larger picture, at underlying factors and
issues, so that long-term
preventive, precautionary and preparatory measures are taken
alongside those to
deal with disasters after they have occurred.
This is critical
because, while the disaster
itself was precipitated by the sudden and unprecedented
downpour, the calamity
cannot, indeed should not, be considered a purely “natural
disaster.” Even if one
cannot take the disaster as a fully man-made one, human
activity has
contributed greatly to the consequences of the torrential
rains and the trail
of destruction wrought. The pattern of development in the
Garhwal hills, the
poor planning and worse implementation with respect to
settlements,
infrastructure and tourism, the nexus between political,
bureaucratic and
commercial interests leading to numerous sins of commission
and omission, all
these have contributed to and enlarged the scope of this
disaster. And even the
main causal factor behind this calamity, the extraordinarily
heavy rainfall,
can be at least partially attributed to societally-induced
climate change that
has resulted in erratic monsoons and increased incidence of
extreme weather
events worldwide.
CLIMATE
VARIABILITY AND
EXTREME WEATHER
EVENTS
Extreme weather
events are one of the
many well-recognised outcomes of climate change. The
increased occurrence of
cyclones, tornadoes, heat waves, excess rainfall and
flooding in recent years
has been well documented. But how do we know that these are
taking place
because of human-induced climate change, rather than to the
usual variability
in weather? After all, it rains more in some years than
others, there are
floods in some years and droughts in others.
Scientists are now
much more
confident than a few years ago about the linkage with
climate change. First,
the increase in these incidents is well above the standard
statistical
variation seen over the last many decades. Second, the
severity of these events
too is much greater. Just as the decade 2000-2010 saw nine
out of the ten hottest
years in this century, so too in the past several years
unprecedented
quantities of rainfall have been recorded over very short
periods in many
instances all over the world. Much more frequent Category 4
and 5 hurricanes
have occurred in the Atlantic and the Pacific in each of the
past few years,
massive snowstorms and blizzards have hit North America and
Europe in the
winter of 2011, unprecedented heat waves and drought have
hit the US, France
and Spain. In 2012,
The scientific
reasoning behind why such
extreme weather events take place, and why they can be
attributed to climate
change, has been clear for quite some time. Rain or snow
fall, in other words
precipitation, takes place because water vapour in the
atmosphere condenses
upon cooling. With global warming, the quantity of water
vapour in the
atmosphere increases. Cooling
however is
less efficient due to excess greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere which traps
heat and allows less heat to escape, so total rainfall may
not increase that
much. But when it does rain over specific areas, the
rainfall is likely to be
heavier due to excess accumulated moisture. Similar
explanations relating to
changing patterns of upper air circulation due to global
warming can be offered
for the increased frequency and intensity of cyclones and
dry-weather events or
droughts.
In the Indian
monsoons, rainfall data
going back to the late 19th century available from Indian
Meteorological
Department weather stations all over the country show that
the monsoons are
arriving later and withdrawing later, by roughly two weeks
on average. The late
arrival and departure of the monsoon rains, combined with
the different
temperature profile in the changed period, is expected to
have a serious impact
on agriculture and crop yields.
On the other hand,
the monsoons this
year have been at least two weeks early. This is quite
characteristic of
weather conditions under climate change.
Whereas it is
known that more extreme
weather events will take place, that there will be more days
of heavy rainfall,
that the monsoons are shifting to a later period, climate
change also makes
weather events more unpredictable. For disaster
preparedness, the key lesson is
to take note of these broad trends, and be prepared for the
worst in terms of
heavy rainfall and resulting floods, more severe storms,
heat waves and
droughts.
DISASTROUS
MANAGEMENT
There has been a
great deal of
comment in the media about the management of rescue and
relief operations in
Uttarakhand, and as discussed earlier, even preliminary
discussions about
reconstruction and rehabilitation have not taken place. The
Armed Forces, along
with some paramilitary forces such as the Indo-Tibetan
Border Police and the
National Disaster Response Force (NRDF), have performed not
just commendably
but remarkably in the still on-going rescue operations
mainly targeting
pilgrims and the occasional airlifting of relief supplies.
The military in
particular has shown yet again that it stands out among
institutions in the
country as regards preparedness, capability, performance
efficiency and
dedication. But the civilian administration in Uttarakhand
in particular, and that
at the central level as well, has shown itself to be
thoroughly incompetent,
unresponsive, ill-equipped and unwilling to or incapable of
learning the right
lessons and institutionalising requisite changes.
The Disaster
Management (DM)
apparatus at both centre and state, with the exception of
the paramilitary NRDF
comprising battalions from the CRPF, BSF, CISF and ITBP, has
itself been an
unmitigated disaster.
The first and
perhaps most important
element of DM is preparedness, which has been self-evidently
and woefully
lacking. This is obvious from the poor condition of the
roads, the lack of earth-moving
equipment anywhere in the disaster zone, the total absence
of any measures to
anticipate the flooding and take precautionary flood control
or protection
measures near settlements, and the obvious absence of state
or local level
first responders who have perforce had to be military and
paramilitary.
It is not yet
clear what role the
National Disaster Management Authority has played in the
post-disaster
scenario, but given the developments of the past ten days,
one is left
wondering if there was at all any DM Plan for Uttarakhand
and what if any steps
had been taken to build disaster response and management
capabilities in the state.
The Disaster Management Act of 2005 had envisaged a paradigm
shift from the
usual pattern of post-disaster response to a pro-active,
integrated disaster
management system with emphasis on prevention, steps to
minimise impacts and
preparedness for dealing with disasters when they occur.
This would involve
preparation of response and contingency plans, building
capacities in the
civilian administration including the police, instituting
physical measures
including acquisition and deployment of equipment and
working with local
communities to build disaster preparedness in the population
as a whole. It is
obvious that none of this has been done in Uttarakhand, a
state known to be
prone to a variety of disasters and which has suffered major
calamities in the
recent past, for instance the infamous Uttarkashi earthquake
of 1991.
The State Disaster
Management
Authority is virtually non-existent, not having had a single
meeting the past
several years. And the National Authority, the NDMA, had
been without a Head
till one was hurriedly appointed several days after the
Uttarakhand calamity.
What a disaster!
NO RELIEF
FOR LOCALS
At the time of
writing, reports from
the ground by the media, NGOs and social workers all reveal
a virtual vacuum of
disaster response other than the military and paramilitary.
The civil
administration is conspicuous by its absence. Pilgrims have
herded together by
themselves and waited for military helicopters to airlift
them, with no local
authority to organise orderly rescue prioritising women,
children, the aged or
infirm. While rescue efforts have proceeded apace, with
close to 100,000 people
mostly pilgrims having been evacuated to date, little or no
relief operations
such as provision of food, temporary shelters, first aid or
medical care,
clearly not the mandate of the military, have been visible.
All the focus has
been on pilgrims, which is understandable to some extent
since they are
outsiders without local shelter, care or support systems.
But hundreds of
villages have been
destroyed in the Kedar valley, Rudraprayag, Uttarkashi,
Pauri, Chamoli and
elsewhere. Hundreds maybe thousands of local inhabitants
have lost their lives
or been seriously injured, numerous people are still
missing, tens of thousands
have lost all their property and been rendered homeless.
Many thousands of
people from various parts of Uttarakhand, who move to the
disaster zone during
the yatra season looking to earn some additional income or
even as their main
cash income for the year, have been severely affected. No
attention has been
paid to any of these local people and their problems, no
arrangements have been
made for food, medical care or shelter. Even at the time of
writing, leading
state authorities are declaring their immediate and “sole
priority” is rescuing
the pilgrims from locations of large concentrations, and
that “all other issues
will be addressed later.”
One understands of
course that in
disasters of such magnitude, local administration officials,
police and health
workers are also among the disaster-affected and it
therefore takes time for
them to get organised, leave alone activate themselves for
first response. But
this is precisely where leadership plays a role, be it from
ministers or
elected representatives or from bureaucrats and the police.
Regrettably, none
has been forthcoming in Uttarakhand, or for that matter from
Pilgrims on the char
dham yatra
have no doubt had a harrowing time, but at least most of
them have been
rescued, with the military taking the lead role with respect
to their travails.
The local inhabitants, the people of Uttarakhand, have
unfortunately been
completely left to themselves, with nobody to hear their
laments or look after
their needs; victims of a calamity largely man-made and
certainly compounded by
governmental callousness and incompetence.
DISASTER WAITING
TO HAPPEN
Uttarakhand is not
alone in having to
suffer from unconscionably poor governance in
Large townships
have grown on, or too
close to, river banks. For those who have not visited
Uttarakhand, visuals on
TV and in the print media show densely packed multi-storeyed
houses, hotels and
other properties almost on the waters edge. Many such
buildings have collapsed
or lie buried under two storeys of mud. Over the years,
property sharks and
local officials and politicians have minted money from
permitting or encouraging
such “development.” Anyone who has visited Uttarakhand
recently would have seen
the haphazard development or expansion of townships, new
restaurants, hotels
and tourist facilities, all coming up along river banks,
with nobody having a
clue as to how and by whom permission was granted.
Then there are the
roads. Garhwal has
long been known for its poor road infrastructure, even in
comparison with the
Kumaon region of Uttarakhand, a story of neglect and
backwardness that
questions the logic of a new hill state. Now roads have
certainly been built,
especially along the yatra routes and linking major towns.
But the roads are of
poor quality, the road-cutting leaving already the unstable
hillsides even more
bare and unstable, prone to landslips even during normal
rains, and proper
measures for stabilisation of the slopes are not taken.
Blasting and other such
techniques are often used unscientifically and without due
precautions,
damaging not only hill slopes but also nearby habitations.
Material from
roadworks or other civil works such as in tunnels, dams etc
are routinely
simply dumped into the rivers flowing beneath, especially by
private
contractors while authorities are least bothered. This has
significantly raised
the river bed, making the rivers more prone to flooding even
with a little
additional or sudden rush of waters.
A controversy has recently arisen, and
will undoubtedly be
stoked in the coming weeks, about declaring some regions of
Uttarakhand as
“ecologically sensitive.” The issue is not with the label
assigned, but its
implications. For instance, whether it means “no
construction” or “no
development” zones, as with certain forest areas. All
concerned would do well
to remember that people of the Uttarakhand hills have long
suffered due to lack
of roads and communication infrastructure, poor access to
health facilities and
to markets for their produce. Issue is not whether
development but what kind of
development?
The growing road
infrastructure,
urban centres and their commercial facilities, and yatra
tourism have all grown
far beyond the carrying capacity of these fragile
mountainous areas of the
Shivaliks and