Pakistan: Earthquake - IRIN: 29-May-06
IRIN
PAKISTAN: Rescuing quake capital from toxic waste
29 May 2006
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations]
MUZAFFARABAD, 29 May (IRIN) - Seven months after the 8 October quake
which killed at least 80,000, the stench of death has finally wafted
away from Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
However, something almost as bad has come in its place. The city of
700,000 people has been turned into a massive rubbish dump.
An estimated 25 million cu metres of rubble lies scattered across it,
and, according to city municipal officer Zahid Kashif, just over 2
million cu metres has been removed so far. Atop the debris, deposits of
filth lie dumped - and in the scorching heat of May, with temperatures
climbing above 30 degrees Celsius - it creates a terrible odour that
never quite seems to leave some parts of the city.
A continued shortage of latrines and sanitation facilities means some
living in the tents still dotted across the city, including 10,000
people from Muzaffarabad itself who were left homeless by the quake, use
open spaces as toilets. They must also survive the hostile weather in
canvas tents, which provide almost no protection from the intensity of
the sun. Rain, forecast by the end of June, can only add to the squalor.
"Look at how we live. Like animals, among this rubbish. And now we are
being told it contains poison that could kill our children," Muhammad
Rashid, 28, told IRIN. Rashid's house in Muzaffarabad collapsed during
the quake, and he, his wife and two small children have lived in a tent
since then.
Beyond appearances, the lingering stench and the mosquitoes that swarm
above rubbish heaps, there is something more sinister about the heaps of
debris. Local health officials and environmentalists fear that the
mountain of waste and rubble contains dangerous heavy metals, including
lead.
"The use of lead in paints is common in this part of the world. But now
this lead, and the iron and zinc contained in the rubble, are leaching
into the soil," said Ali Hussain, an environmental scientist working in
Muzaffarabad.
His views have been endorsed by government officials, including Babar
Minhas, an environmental officer who has described the situation as
"disastrous". At a workshop in Islamabad on 27 April, Minister of State
for the Environment in Pakistani-administered Kashmir, Mufti Mansoor,
stated that toxic materials contained in debris were a cause for concern
regarding health.
Across Muzaffarabad, small children, many barefoot and thinly clad,
climb and tumble across the rubble. Experts fear these children are at
risk of lead poisoning - which, especially in children, can cause brain
damage and also lead to anaemia, kidney problems and harm to the nervous
system.
"We need to test these children to determine if they have absorbed lead,
and take steps to avert further exposure," Dr Atif Tanvir, a
Muzaffarabad paediatrician told IRIN.
Still more worrying are the reports that rubble is being thrown directly
into the waters of the Jehlum and Neelum rivers, which meet in
Muzaffarabad. Their banks are now stacked with debris, and experts warn
that the many tons thrown into them may have lead to water
contamination.
"This could pose a threat to aquatic life, and also to the many people
who use water for drinking or irrigation purposes," Ali Hussain
explained.
The situation points to the perils posed by both the scale of the quake
disaster, and the failure, some NGOs have said, to fully streamline and
manage the aftermath. The fear now is that the effects of toxins spread
across Muzaffarabad could leave a still longer-term and more devastating
impact on the people who live there, with the full health consequences
still far from clear.
The UN Resident Coordinator, Jan Vandermoortele, has already said that,
according to estimates, at least 100,000 people will have to continue to
live in tents until next winter. Some 10 camps, based in Pakistani-
administered Kashmir and in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP),
will house these people.
The offical has said that people are continuing to live in tents mainly
because their "lands have been washed away or the area where they live
faces a risk of further earthquakes."
Meanwhile, in Muzaffarabad, amid increasing media attention, there is an
attempt to clear away the rubbish. But the efforts are slow, handicapped
by a lack of equipment, and, victims claim, a lack of governmental will.
There is, however, hopeful news from other cities. Early in May, the UN
Development Programme (UNDP) and its implementing partner, the UN Office
for Project Services (UNOPS), said that a rubble removal exercise had
been completed in Bagh, Battagram and Garhi Hbaibullah districts.
"I am very pleased with the success of the project. We have succeeded in
clearing 300,000 cu ft of rubble," said UNOPS Project Manager Geoff
Hourn. A US $1.5 million International Organization of Migration (IOM)
project to clear rubble in Muzzafarbad began in April.
The teams hope to complete the gigantic task over the next nine months,
despite the problems. Project Coordinator David Savard told IRIN: "The
task is huge and quite tough with narrow lanes making it sometimes
impossible for the dump trucks to access the rubble sites."
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