Myanmar: Storm - IRIN: 05-Sep-08
IRIN
MYANMAR: Cyclone-displaced ponder relocation
5 September 2008
LABUTTA, 5 September 2008 (IRIN) - The last of Myanmar's
cyclone-displaced have expressed anxiety over a government plan to
relocate them. Some 1,800 people live at the 3-mile and 5-mile camps - a
reference to their distance from Labutta, the largest town at the
southern tip of the Ayeyarwady Delta.
Under the plan, camp residents will be resettled in the two villages of
Pain Ne Taung and Min Kone, home to more than 500 families, where
authorities are now busy erecting hundreds of bamboo shelters to
accommodate them.
But despite these efforts, camp residents are less than convinced.
Many remain badly traumatised by the category four storm, which swept
off the Bay of Bengal in May, leaving nearly 140,000 people dead or
missing and affecting 2.4 million more.
Others are landless or lost everything they had, leaving them
particularly vulnerable.
"I don't want to go," Mon Htay Win, 42, who has lived at the 3-mile camp
for the past four months, told IRIN.
"It's easier if I stay here," the mother-of-four said, citing access to
rudimentary health and education services from the government and
international aid groups operating at the camp.
"I don't want to relocate," agreed Maung Maung, a 24-year-old landless
fisherman from Pue Long who lost his only child in the cyclone and
remains concerned whether he will ever be able to resume his livelihood.
Pressure
"We were given two options: return to our villages or relocate," said
one disgruntled woman. But with scores of villages decimated by the
cyclone's wrath, there did not seem much option.
However, the UN now sees the government's resettlement effort as a step
in the right direction.
"The move is promising," Dan Baker, Myanmar's humanitarian coordinator,
told IRIN in Yangon.
Indeed, aid agencies who visited the two sites in mid-August found that
with some improvements, relocating to the villages would be better than
living in the camps or possibly even returning to their place of origin.
Observers blame the lack of consultation for camp residents' reluctance
to relocate; nor have they been encouraged to visit the villages,
despite being just a few kilometres away.
Pein Ne Taung is less than a kilometre from the 5-mile camp.
"It's really a question of the 'unknown'," one aid worker said. "The
camp is the situation they know. Although conditions are miserable, they
feel relatively safe and they know what they have here," she said.
"Everyone should have the opportunity to go and see their villages of
origin, as well as the two villages the government are proposing them to
relocate to," the aid worker said. "Only then will they be able to make
up their minds properly."
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