The Tsunami Disaster

S. P. Udayakumar

December 30, 2005

I write this from the southern tip of India, a region that has always 
been known for its pristine beauty and tranquillity. No major wars 
have been fought on this soil, no disaster has stuck, nothing 
untoward has happened on a massive scale, at least to my knowledge, 
in the past five decades.

All this peaceful record ended so abruptly on December 26, 2004 when 
a draconian tsunami lashed out and wrecked thousands of lives and 
families. The Kanyakumarians who have always looked up to the sea as 
a source of food and nurturance, spirituality and sacredness, 
enjoyment and entertainment, had a rude awakening on the black 
Sunday. With the beautiful frontyard to our peninsular home 
retracting several hundred feet for miles together, people were 
intrigued about this wonderful sight of hitherto unseen under-water 
territory. There were poor people who were eagerly collecting the 
stranded fish and crab for a free meal. There were Christmas 
holidayers, internal and international tourists, religious pilgrims 
taking the ceremonial dip in the sea, and innocent bystanders - all 
had a rude awakening when the cunningly crouched sea leaped forth 
like a ferocious predator. Whole fishing villages have disappeared; 
farmlands have been inundated; people have lost friends, neighbors, 
and
  acquaintances; the loss seems universal; there is a debilitating 
sense of sadness and sorrow in everybody's heart and soul. The whole 
dynamics of life stands altered.

The union government, state government, local government and all 
other government departments have let us down so callously. Although 
there was a golden gap of three hours between the underwater 
earthquake off of Sumatra and the tsunami attack on our coast, nobody 
gave an inkling of what was coming our way. Had there been at least a 
vague warning, it could have alerted and hence saved thousands of 
people.

Displaying utter ignorance, our Chief Minister J. Jayalalitha, the 
chief functionary of the state government, went on repeating on TV on 
the day of the disaster that there was no further danger from tidal 
waves and even exhorted the affected people to stay put. It does make 
one wonder what the meterological department was doing during those 
hours of crisis and if there was any kind of coordination between the 
various departments and people in power.

It is also equally disturbing to see our national President, A. P. J. 
Abdul Kalam, the notorious father of our nuclear bomb, calling for a 
tsunami warning system along the entire Indian coastline after the 
tragedy has swallowed up so many thousands of innocent lives. How 
would this high-tech hawkish guru who dreams of America-like India 
explain why a highly- and densely-populated country with 7,000-km 
coastline never even bothered about joining the Pacific tsunami 
warning system?

The answer is obvious. The Indian elites have always shown interest 
in those "development" projects and defence deals where they could 
steal huge amounts of public money and have largely ignored the small 
steps that could make the life of "ordinary citizens" safe and 
secure. The Indian establishment and its head priests have been 
preoccupied with nuclear bombs, long-distance missiles, mission to 
the Moon, and a permanent seat at the UN Security Council. A simple 
safety procedure such as joining the international tsunami warning 
system to save the ordinary Indians' lives from an impending disaster 
is too small a thing for them to worry about.

This tsunami attack is yet another proof of our pathetic national 
record of emergency preparedness. Even after five days of the tsunami 
assault, there have been bloated human bodies and animal caracasses 
rotting on the open beaches and spreading diseases. Most victims who 
are languishing in the temporary shelters with intimate losses and 
incredible traumas have been complaining about the lackadaisical 
relief work of the government authorities. Politicians blame each 
other, ministers blame top bureaucrats, top bureaucrats blame the 
chotawallahs (lower officials); and all this betray our uncoordinated 
and utterly inefficient administration of the country. On the day of 
the disaster, this writer did not spot even one police officer or 
fire service personnel or a government official on the roads. It was 
the unequipped and empty-handed civilians who were helping each other.

The officials of the Kalpakkam nuclear power station (that is located 
near Chennai) claimed first that they had switched off their only 
functioning reactor the moment they had heard about the earthquake 
near Indonesia. When people started asking uncomfortable questions 
about their not intimating this information to other government 
agencies, the Kalpakkam authorities modified their report saying that 
the reactor shut down "instantaneously" after sea water entered the 
plant premises. Some 65 people including 10 nuclear plant scientists 
are reported dead in the tsunami tragedy. The foundations dug for the 
upcoming Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) plants are flooded and 
some construction workers killed.

If the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) officials are unable to 
protect their own men and machines from a natural disaster, how on 
the Earth are they going to protect us, evacuate us, rehabilitate us 
and safeguard our safety and security from possible attacks and 
accidents on a nuclear power plant? There have been persistent rumors 
about possible radiation leaks from the Kalpakkam plant, but the DAE 
and senior government officials give themselves "completely safe" 
certificate. If that is really so, why can't we have any independent 
inspection and verification by a group of independent scientists and 
Indian citizens? These questions are very troubling.

The DAE and the Indian government are building another nuclear power 
plant at Koodankulam (near the southernmost tip of India) that also 
sits on the Bay of Bengal badly affected by the tsunami. Neighboring 
coastal villages such as Idinthakarai, Kooduthazhai, Koothankuzhi, 
Uvari, Koottapuli have all been damaged by the tidal waves. If the 
Koodankulam nuclear power site is this vulnerable, should we go ahead 
with the construction of this mega-nuclear site? "Of course," answers 
the DAE. Like all the nuclear departments around the world would do, 
the Indian nukedom also claims that they can take care of all these 
eventualities.

The good news, however, is that the "ordinary citizens" of our area 
know for themselves now our establishment's safety awareness and 
emergency preparedness. And they may be asking some serious questions 
about the "development" projects that the Indian elites are executing 
(no pun intended): Colachel commercial harbor (instead of the fishing 
harbor that our fishing community has been demanding); Koodankulam 
nuclear power plant built with Russian VVER technology at 
Koodankulam; Nuclear Fuel Complex at Palaya Kayal; Sethusamudram 
Canal Project (that would dig a short-cut sea route through the Palk 
Strait between India and Sri Lanka (and damage the ecological balance 
of the area). All in the name of development! The development of our 
elites! Naturally, our "ordinary" citizens' cry for appropriate 
technology and sustainable development would sound unpatriotic and 
even anti-national.
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