Pakistan: Earthquake - OCHA: 22-Dec-05
IRIN
PAKISTAN: Widows in quake area battle to survive
22 December 2005
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations]
MACHIARI VALLEY, 22 December (IRIN) - Since Mariyam Nessa's husband died
of an asthma attack while ploughing his fields five years ago, her
neighbours in the hamlet of Duliard have always helped out.
But after the earthquake, which killed over 86,000 people and devastated
the remote Machiara Valley, where Duliard lies, her neighbours have no
time to help Mariyam as they must battle for their own survival.
Mariyam lost her husband before the disaster but thousands of others
lost their husbands in the quake that ravaged the region. Now these
widows are struggling to survive.
The earthquake flattened Mariyam's home and all that remains is a deep,
black hole where the huge mud roof collapsed, burying all her
possessions. With no one to help her, it took Mariyam six days to cobble
together a crude, makeshift shelter from bits of wood and ragged shawls.
But it does not protect her or her children against the cold. The icy
wind howls in and the shelter is likely to collapse with the first heavy
snowfall.
"It's hard without a man as there's nobody to help me. I must do
everything myself," she says.
To survive Mariyam must plough the hard ground with her bare hands and
harvest her corn and potato crops. Her children are either too small or
too ill to help. Her eldest son, who is 18, suffers from the same
crippling asthma that killed her husband and she is afraid that if he
pushes himself too far, he too will have a fatal asthma attack.
Since the earthquake dried up the mountain springs in the area, Mariyam
and her small children must now walk several hours up a perilous
mountain track to fetch water from a spring in another valley, balancing
heavy metal urns on their heads.
"These women do a massive amount of work and it's extremely hard,
they're very vulnerable and there's no one taking care of them," said
Maggie Tookey from the UK-based charity Edinburgh Direct.
The crops the villagers harvest are not enough to nourish and support
them through the bitter Himalayan winter months when these isolated
communities are cut off from the outside world by up to 3 m of snow. To
survive, the men in Duliard, as in many farming communities across
Pakistani-administered Kashmir, spend four months a year working as
cheap labourers, often earning less than a dollar a day in cities across
Pakistan.
But widows like Mariyam do not have this extra source of income.
Instead, their lives are clouded by debt, as they must borrow money and
buy food on credit from other villagers and shops in towns.
"I sell potatoes and corn but this isn't enough to survive so everything
I buy is bought on credit," says Mariyam.
The village elders in Machiara Union Council, which is made up of 10
villages and 1,104 households, say that there are some 200 widows who
are without adequate shelter or aid.
"The number might even be more," said Rahmat Ali, tracking guide working
with the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
"These widows are getting aid last and are suffering more than families
who have men around to help," he said.
The women are also suffering from more medical conditions, according to
Dr Zulfkar Ali who works with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
"These women suffer from joint pain due to carrying bigger loads on
their shoulders and doing even more work than they usually do," Dr Ali
said.
"As well as cutting hay for animals, harvesting crop, milking, manage
livestock, cooking, cleaning and looking after their children they now
have the added pressure of surviving under these conditions. It is too
much for them," he said.
Mariyam says two of her small children are ill and she is frightened for
the future. Since the IOM arrived in Duliard, she now has a blanket and
a sheet of tarpaulin, but she says she needs help to rebuild her house
and mend her ruined land, a task that could take up to four months.
"Before the earthquake people in the villages would help us and look
after us," she says. "But now they don't have time. We've been
forgotten."
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