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From: Shana Berger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Some people I met a couple years ago from an amazingly strong network of
fishing communities based in Maine have set up a fund for tsunami
victims from fishing communities. Funds would go directly to the
National Fisheries Solidarity Movement (NAFSCO), a grassroots
organization in Sri Lanka doing tremendous work both to meet immediate
food and shelter needs of victims as well as to help fishing dependent
communities get back to work so that they can support themselves again. 
I can vouch for the US organizations involved in setting up this fund.

> NAFSCO is a grass-roots movement of fisher people in Sri Lanka
representing themselves in local and global battles such as industrial
aquaculture, pollution, oil & gas development, privatization and
industrialization of the oceans, workers' rights, and environmental and
economic justice.

For more info, go to: http://www.namanet.org/relieffund.htm

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http://indiatogether.org/2005/jan/dsh-tsunami.htm

Tsunami, Mangroves and Market Economy
By Devinder Sharma

As the first news reports of the devastation caused by the tsunami killer
waves began to pour in, a newsreader on Aaj Tak?s Headline Today
television channel asked his correspondent reporting from the scene of
destruction in Tamil Nadu in south of India : "Any idea about how much is
the loss to business? Can you find that out because that would be more
important for our business leaders?"

Little did the newscaster realise or even know that the tsunami disaster,
which eventually turned out to be a catastrophe, was more or less the
outcome of faulty business and economics. The magnitude of the disaster
was only exacerbated by the neoliberal economic policies that pushed
economic growth at the expanse of human life. It was the outcome of an
insane economic system - led by the World Bank and IMF - that believes in
usurping environment, nature and human lives for the sake of unsustainable
economic growth for a few.

Since the 1960s, the Asian sea-coast region has been plundered by the
large industrialised shrimp firms that brought environmentally-unfriendly
aquaculture to its sea shores. Shrimp cultivation, rising to over 8
billion tonnes a year in the year 2000, had already played havoc with the
fragile eco-systems. The "rape-and-run" industry, as the Food and
Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) once termed it, was
largely funded by the World Bank. Nearly 72 per cent of the shrimp farming
is confined to Asia.

The expansion of shrimp farming was at the cost of tropical mangroves --
amongst the world's most important ecosystems. Each acre of mangrove
forest destroyed results in an estimated 676 pounds loss in marine
harvest. Mangrove swamps have been nature's protection for the coastal
regions from the large waves, weathering the impact of cyclones, and
serving as a nursery for three-fourth of the commercial fish species that
spend part of their life cycle in the mangrove swamps. Mangroves in any
case were one of the world's most threatened habitats but instead of
replanting the mangrove swamps, faulty economic policies only hastened its
disappearance.

Despite warning by ecologists and environmentalists, the World Bank turned
a deaf ear. Shrimp farming continued its destructive spree, eating away
more than half of the world's mangroves. Since the 1960's, for instance,
aquaculture in Thailand resulted in a loss of over 65,000 hectares of
mangroves. In Indonesia, Java lost 70 per cent of its mangroves, Sulawesi
49 per cent and Sumatra 36 per cent. So much so that at the time the
tsunami struck in all its fury, logging companies were busy axing
mangroves in the Aceh province of Indonesia for exports to Malaysia and
Singapore.

In India, mangrove cover has been reduced to less than a third of its
original in the past three decades. Between 1963 and 1977, the period when
aquaculture industry took roots, India destroyed nearly 50 per cent of its
mangroves. Local communities were forcibly evicted to make way for the
shrimp farms. In Andhra Pradesh, more than 50,000 people were forcibly
removed and millions displaced to make room for the aquaculture farms.
Whatever remained of the mangroves was cut down by the hotel industry.
Aided and abetted by the Ministry of Environment and Forests and the
Ministry of Industries, builders moved in to ravage the coastline.

Five-star hotels, golf courses, industries, and mansions sprung up all
along disregarding the concern being expressed by environmentalists. These
two ministries worked overtime to dilute the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ)
norms thereby allowing the hotels to even take over the 500 meter buffer
that was supposed to be maintained along the beach. In an era of market
economy, that was reflected through misplaced Shining India slogan, the
bureaucrats are in league with the industrialists and big business
interests.

Much of the responsibility for the huge death toll therefore rests with
the government and the free market apologists. Tourism boom in the
Asia-Pacific region coincided with the destructive fallout of the growth
in shrimp cultivation. Over the last decade, tourist arrivals and receipts
rose faster than any other region in the world, almost twice the rates of
industrialized countries.

Projections for the year 2010 indicate that the region will surpass the
Americas to become the world's number two tourism region, with 229 million
arrivals. What is being projected as an indicator of spectacular economic
growth hides the enormous environmental costs that these countries have
suffered and will have to undergo in future.

In the past two decades, the entire coastline along the Bay of Bengal,
Arabian Sea, and Strait of Malacca in the Indian Ocean and all along the
South Pacific Ocean has been a witness to massive investments in tourism
and hotels. Myanmar and Maldives suffered very less from the killing spree
of the tsunami because the tourism industry had so far not spread its
tentacles to the virgin mangroves and coral reefs surrounding the
coastline.

The large coral reef surrounding the islands of Maldives absorbed much of
the tidal fury thereby restricting the human loss to a little over 100
dead. Coral reef absorbs the sea?s fury by breaking the waves. The tragedy
however is that more than 70 per cent of world's coral reef has already
been destroyed. The island chain of Surin off the west coast of Thailand
similarly escaped heavy destruction.

The ring of coral reef that surrounds the islands did receive some
punching from the furious waves but kept firm and thereby helped break the
lethal power of the tsunami. Mangroves help to protect offshore coral
reefs by filtering out the silt flowing seawards from the land. Tourism
growth, whether in the name of eco-tourism or leisure tourism, decimated
the mangroves and destroyed the coral reefs. If only the mangroves were
intact, the damage from tsunami would have been greatly minimized.

Ecologists tell us that mangroves provide double protection - the first
layer of red mangroves with their flexible branches and tangled roots
hanging in the coastal waters absorb the first shock waves. The second
layer of tall black mangroves than operates like a wall withstanding much
of the sea's fury. Mangroves in addition absorb more carbon dioxide per
unit area than ocean phytoplankton, a critical factor in global warming.

It happened earlier in Bangladesh. In 1960, a tsunami wave hit the coast
in an area where mangroves were intact. There was not a single human loss.
These mangroves were subsequently cut down and replaced with shrimp farms.
In 1991, thousands of people were killed when a tsunami of the same
magnitude hit the same region. In Tamil Nadu, in south India, Pichavaram
and Muthupet with dense mangroves suffered low human casualties and less
economic damage from the Dec 26 tsunami.

Earlier, the famed mangroves of Bhiterkanika in Orissa (which also serve
as the breeding ground for the olive-ridley turtles) had reduced the
impact of the "super cyclone" that had struck in Oct 1999, killing over
10,000 people and rendering millions homeless.

The epicenter of the Dec 26 killer tsunami was close to Simeuleu Island,
in Indonesia. The death toll on this particular island was significantly
low simply because the inhabitants had the traditional knowledge about
tsunami that invariably happened after a quake. In Nias island, which is
close to the Simeuleu island, mangroves had acted like a wall helping
people from the destruction. The challenge therefore for the developing
countries is to learn from the time-tested technologies that have been
perfected by the local communities.

Let us now look at the comparative advantage of protecting environment and
thereby reducing the havoc from the growth-oriented market economy. Having
grown tenfold in the last 15 years, shrimp farming is now a $9 billion
industry. It is estimated that shrimp consumption in North America, Japan
and Western Europe has increased by 300 per cent within the last ten
years. The massive wave of destruction caused by the Dec 26 tsunami in 11
Asian countries alone has surpassed the economic gain that the shrimp
industry claims to have harvested by several times.

With over 150,000 people dead, the staggering social and economic loss
will take some time to be ascertained. World governments have so far
pledged US $ 4 billion in aid. This does not including the billions that
are being spent by relief agencies. World Bank has in addition considering
boosting the aid packet to US $ 1.5 billion. It has already given (by Jan
10, 2005) $ 175 million, and bank President James Wolfensohn has been
quoted as saying: "We can go up to even $ 1 billion to $ 1.5 billion
depending on the needs" In addition, the World Food Programme (WFP) plans
to feed some 2 million survivors for the next six months.

The feeding operation is likely to cost US $ 180 million. If only
successive presidents of the World Bank had refrained from aggressively
promoted ecologically unsound but market friendly economic policies, a lot
of human lives could have been saved. What did the world gain from pushing
in market reforms with utter disregard to environment and human lives? Can
Wolfensohn justify the financial backing doled out to the aquaculture and
tourism sectors by drawing a balance sheet of the costs and benefits,
including the social cost involved? Take the shrimp farms, for instance.

The life cycle of a shrimp farm is a maximum of two to five years. The
ponds are then abandoned leaving behind toxic waste, destroyed ecosystems
and displaced communities, annihilating livelihods.

The farms come up at the cost of natural eco-systems including mangroves.
The whole cycle is then repeated in another pristine coastal area. It has
been estimated that economic losses due to the shrimp farms are
approximately five times the potential earnings. Tourism is no better.
Kerala in south India, marketed as "God's own country", destroyed the
mangroves in a desperate bid to lure the tourists. It is only after
tsunami struck that the state government was quick to announce an Rs
340-million project aimed at insulating the Kerala coastline against tidal
surges.

Other tourist destinations in Asia will now probably go for a rethinking.
The question therefore that needs to be asked is whether we need to
extract a heavy human toll before we realize the follies of blindly aping
the stupid market economy mantra? How many more people we want to die and
how many millions we want to go homeless before we realize the grave
mistake of pushing in the market economy? Who will hold these free market
economists responsible for the human loss and suffering?


(Devinder Sharma is a New Delhi-based food and agriculture / trade policy
analyst.  He also chairs the New Delhi-based Forum for Biotechnology &
Food Security. Among his recent works include two books GATT to WTO: Seeds
of Despair and In the Famine Trap.  Responses can be mailed to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED])

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