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Foundation For Women (FFW) has sent one staff together with a women
affected by Tsunami from Phang-gna to participate in Asian Women’s Consultation
on Post Tsunami Challenges, which has been hold on 25-27 July 2005,
in Aceh, Indonesia and the statement from the meeting is below:
Seven months after the December 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, affected women continue to be marginalised, discriminated and excluded from the process of rebuilding on all levels: the family, the community and the nation.
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We met in Aceh realising the significance and challenges women face in the tsunami aftermath. 1. Gender discrimination and women’s human rights violations. Thousands of women and children in the affected countries still live in camps and other temporary facilities which lack adequate sanitation, clean water, health services and security. Government compensations have not reached them or are insufficient to restore their livelihoods. In Thailand, women are discriminated even in death: funeral expenses paid for men’s death are twice as much as that for women’s. 2. Women’s right to food is violated. People are on the verge of starvation getting one meal a day. The food rations provided are of very low quality. This affects health of children and pregnant, breast feeding and elderly women. 3. Women suffer from increased domestic violence in camps and temporary shelters, especially in India, Sri Lanka and Thailand as a result of increased alcoholism. There is inadequate protection provided by the police and camp administration because of the general perception of violence against women being a personal matter. 4. Children in camps and temporary shelters do not have access to education. Government scholarships are not sufficient to cover education costs. In Sri Lanka, Aceh and India schools are too far away from camps and transport is not provided. 5.
Both temporary and permanent housing facilities are of low standards
in design and construction and climatic conditions have not been taken
into account. e.g. it is impossible to stay in tin shelters which heat
up in the tropical sun. Facilities do not meet women’s needs: there
are no kitchen and bathing facilities. In Sri Lanka, people remain uncertain
regarding permanent housing. The Sri Lanka Government’s policy on buffer
zone implies that fishermen and others are denied assistance in any
rebuilding activities within 100-200 meters from the shoreline. However,
hotels and tourist resorts near the sea have been restored. In Indonesia,
similar restrictions prevail but some communities went back to their
villages to rebuild their houses even though it means they will not
receive government assistance. In Thailand, some permanent housing have
ownership problems: houses are built by sponsors on the rented land
or on the land owned by someone else so sometime in the future resettled
people will face eviction.
In the light of the above, we express grave concern about lack of consultation with the people affected by the tsunami in the relief and reconstruction process. We demand that: 1.
The governments of the affected countries and non-state actors consult
and involve affected people in the process of reconstruction and rebuilding.
International and national NGOs must consult with the affected communities
in planning, design and implementation of projects. Aceh,
July 27 2005
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