Pakistan: Earthquake - IRIN: 29-Nov-05
IRIN
PAKISTAN: Loss of livelihoods in quake zone severe
29 November 2005
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations]
DUNG, 29 November (IRIN) - When the 8 October earthquake rumbled through
the tiny hamlet of Dung in the Gojra Union Council, west of the city of
Muzaffarabad, the animals fled to the fields where they destroyed all
the crops.
Most of the villagers had not yet begun harvesting the maize and wheat
that would provide food for two months during the bitter winter. Those
who had started to harvest their crops were only half way through.
The animals that did not flee were crushed to death, depriving villagers
of yet another precious source of food and income.
To make matters worse, the men of the village, who are forced to migrate
to the country's cities every winter to work as cheap labourers to
supplement their paltry food reserves, have not gone. Instead, they are
battling for the survival of their families.
"We've been removing debris and looking after our families, looking for
food and tents. We've been too busy to go to work," said a village
elder.
Agriculture is a way of life for rural families who depend on farming.
But the earthquake, that killed at least 86,000 people, has precipitated
a catalogue of agricultural and economic destruction leaving millions
without livelihoods.
Poverty punctuates every part of life here and the villagers live a
hand-to-mouth existence, eking out a living as farmers and labourers.
In this hilly, mountainous region, flat land is a rare commodity and
usually steep steps of small terraces are all that villagers have for
farming land. Plots of land are poorly fed by water and too small to
yield enough crops to sustain families for more than three months a
year.
Like most farmers in the region, Mohammad Soleyman's life has been
clouded by debt. He owns a piece of land just 20 metres by 50 metres,
which does not yield enough crops to feed his family through the harsh
winter months when Dung is cut off by snow.
So from March every year, Mohammad travels two days by road to reach the
southeast city of Sindh where he earns just over US $3 a day for
backbreaking work, lugging water tanks onto donkeys to distribute to
homes. It is a long way to travel for work, but in Sindh he earns twice
what he would earn if he worked in nearby Muzaffarabad.
The money he earns is not enough to buy the remaining food his family
must stock for winter, so he buys it on credit from shops in
Muzaffaraabd. It then takes him up to six months to clear his debts and
the cycle begins again. But the quake has also disrupted this chain.
"With so many shopkeepers having also had their shops and stock
destroyed they can't afford to give food on credit. Unless poorer people
get relief they really won't be able to support themselves," said
Michael O'Donnell, a food, security and livelihoods adviser for Save the
Children in Muzaffarabad, who have been assessing the impact the quake
has had on livelihoods in the Muzaffarabad and Bagh districts.
Pride of place in most rural households in northern Pakistan is a
buffalo, which can fetch over $800 for the prized Punjabi breed and most
families own at least one such beast. The local, cheaper 'desi' breed
produces about six litres of milk a day. The villagers use half of this
for their own consumption and sell the rest for 25 cents a litre.
"A single buffalo is a real asset for households to have and one female
meets about 15 percent of the household's food requirements. Those
households which have lost a buffalo have lost a significant source of
food for the family," said O'Donnell.
The loss of precious livestock has been great. According to a report by
the Department of Agriculture in Muzaffarabad and the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO), 50 percent of cattle and 47 percent of
buffalo were killed in the district of Bagh and 21 percent of cattle and
29 percent of buffalo were killed in the district of Muzaffarabad.
But the report says that those living at higher altitudes have suffered
even greater losses as more animals were stored inside buildings that
collapsed.
Rural communities also keep cattle and on average each household has at
least one animal, but over 30 percent of goats and sheep were killed.
The earthquake struck at the peak time for cutting local grass for hay
and there has been scarce fodder to feed Mohammad's buffalo, which is
now only producing a litre of milk a day.
Mohammad lost an ox in the earthquake and now he has no way to plough
his land. "I can't afford a tractor and I can't plough the land by
hand," Mohammad said.
Farming equipment was also destroyed by the earthquake, which also
caused substantial destabalisation of the soil. Big cracks slice through
farming land and with the onset of rain, when water will seep through
the crevices causing further damage, there is a serious risk of
landslides.
Water supplies have been severely affected. Many natural springs have
dried up and water channels used for irrigation have been broken,
misaligned, blocked or simply wiped out by quake-related landslides.
Mohammad has not yet received the $2,500 compensation that the
government has promised each affected household. But even then, it won't
be enough to rebuild his life.
"I've lost everything. It will take me three and half years' wages to be
able to afford to rebuild my house," he said. "But what can I do?" he
shrugged with a sad smile.
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