MYANMAR: Cyclone-affected fishermen still need help
Source: IRIN
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
THANDAIT, 10 November 2009 (IRIN) - Before the devastation of Cyclone Nargis in May
2008, Cho Tuu, 30, never found it hard to make ends meet, but these days he struggles to feed his family.
Without any fishing equipment, Cho Tuu is forced to pay the equivalent of US$15 per
month to hire a boat, and to hand over three-quarters of his catch to the owner of the fishing net that he rents.
"Some months, I can barely make enough money to even pay for hiring the
boat," said the father of two school-age children from his makeshift hut in Thandait village in the Ayeyarwady Delta, the area worst hit by Nargis.
Though Cho Tuu has been expecting fishing
equipment from humanitarian agencies for more than 17 months, no assistance has come yet.
Like Cho Tuu, officials say thousands of fishermen are still unable to restore their livelihoods
because of a lack of aid following Cyclone Nargis, which left nearly 140,000 people dead or missing, and 2.4 million affected.
After paddy planting, fishing is the second largest source of
income for households in the Ayeyarwady Delta, a labyrinth of rivers, ponds and waterways.
For 20 percent of Nargis-affected households, full-time fishing is the primary source of income,
according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Myanmar.
Tesfai Ghermazien, the FAO's senior emergency and rehabilitation coordinator in Myanmar, said it would take 3-5 years to
fully restore the livelihoods of cyclone-affected fishermen.
"Very few [fishermen], if any, are back to normal," Ghermazien told IRIN.
Although the main sources of livelihood in the
Delta are farming, fish and livestock, these sub-sectors were the least funded in the Cyclone Nargis response, he said. According to the FAO, 1,550 marine fishing vessels, 50 percent of small
inland fishing boats (i.e. about 100,000 out of 200,000), and 70 percent of fishing gear were destroyed by Nargis. ASEAN review
A review of recovery efforts by the Myanmar government, the
UN, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) released in July this year (see: http://unic.un.org/imucms/Dish.aspx?loc=80&pg=384) found that livelihoods remain insecure in the
worst-affected townships of Ayeyarwady and Yangon divisions.
It said that the townships of Bogale, Labutta, Mawlamyinegyun and Pyapon in the delta's south - where fishing is the
predominant income source - had experienced the highest percentage of losses of fishing gear.
However, on average, only 6 percent of surveyed households in these four townships reported
receiving fishing gear as a relief item. Only 11 percent of the surveyed households reported receiving boats, although 33 percent of them said they considered a boat as a pressing need to restore
their livelihood activity, said the review.
A third Post-Nargis Periodic Review is expected at the end of 2009.
Equipment lacking
In an effort to help cyclone-affected
fishermen restore their livelihoods, FAO and its cooperating agencies have distributed about 5,000 boats, and some 130,000 sets of different types of fishing gear, mainly nets and traps.
The
Department of Fisheries has also distributed over 10,000 boats with nets and gear.
Before the end of the year, FAO plans to hand over 200 boats which are expected to have a longer life than
most common boats now being built. It will also distribute a few thousand boats next year.
In the meantime, though, most cyclone-affected fishermen complain that they still do not have enough
equipment.
"There are 154 fishermen in our fishing village, most of whom lost their fishing gear in the cyclone," said Aung Myo, the head of Thandait Village. "But, so far we just got 14
fishing boats and gear."
Besides being forced to hire equipment or take out loans to buy gear, fishermen have complained of the burden of paying for boats distributed by the government, said
Aung Myo.
He said the cost of the fishing boat and gear - nearly the equivalent of US$360 - had to be paid back in four installments.
Other complaints include those about the
equipment distributed. Some say the nets they received were inappropriate - those who fish in rivers were given nets for sea fishing, and vice-versa. Some boats distributed have also been found
wanting.
"The fishing boat I received was quite small," said Tint Swe, 42, who received a fishing boat from the Department of Fisheries on an installation system.
Tint Swe, who lost
two motorized boats during Nargis, said he had been forced to spend additional money to modify the boat to his requirements.
lm/ey/ds/cb© IRIN. All rights reserved. More
humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org










