The
sea has crept almost 15km into Kutubdia, an island off the coastal town
of Cox's Bazar in southeastern Bangladesh, one of the world's most
dangerous cyclone zones. "The sea has been coming closer and closer,"
said Abdul Mutalib, 75, whose mud hut was washed away 15 days ago.
"Allah
jane ke hobe [God only knows what will happen]" he added wearily in
Bengali, or Bangla, the national language, wiping beads of sweat off his
weather-beaten face with the back of his hand. He knows the island will
eventually disappear entirely, and then "Sabhi shesh ho jabe
[everything will come to an end]."
F.M. Nurul Alam, a senior
coordinator at the COAST trust, a social justice NGO working in southern
Bangladesh, explained patiently: "Since the day they are born, the
people of Kutubdia are waging a war with the sea."
Erosion
as a result of stronger and higher tides, cyclones and storm surges is
eating away the islands off Bangladesh's southern coast. Kutubdia, once a
250 sq km island, has been reduced to about 37 sq km within a century,
but the islanders are convinced the sea level has also been rising.
Yet
the largely fishing community of Kutubdia cannot live without the sea.
"We only know how to catch fish," said British Jawaldas, a fisherman,
who says he has observed the sea encroaching six kilometres inland over
the last 10 years.
"We can't do anything else, which is why we
think twice about migrating from here. We know the end is coming, but
what work will we find to feed our families elsewhere?"
Global
warming is sounding the death knell for low-lying coastal islands that
are only five to eight metres above sea level, said local scientists.
The rising sea will also strengthen tidal forces and exacerbate erosion,
the COAST Trust pointed out.
"Factual information regarding the
extent of sea level rise in Bangladesh is very limited," said Mohammed
Shamsuddoha, general secretary of the Equity and Justice Working Group, a
network of NGOs. "But the Khulna region in southwestern Bangladesh has
recorded a 5.18mm per year sea level rise."Sea
level rises at some tidal stations in the Bangladesh coast are: Hiron
Point: 4mm per year; Char Changa: 6mm per year and Cox's Bazar: 7.8mm
per year, as reported by the Meteorological Research Centre of the South
Asian Association for Regional Cooperation in the capital, Dhaka.
A
rise of more than one metre, which could be reached in this century,
means Bangladesh could lose 15 percent to 18 percent of its land area,
turning 30 million people into "environmental refugees" by 2050
according to some estimates, the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) noted.
On the other hand, new land is being created. After
studying 32 years of satellite images, Bangladeshi scientists found the
landmass was increasing by 20 sq km annually as a result of silt being
deposited in the Bay of Bengal by big Himalayan rivers like the Ganges
and the Brahmaputra, said Mohammed Abu Syed, a research fellow at the
Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies.But
the new silt islands, or "chars", only become habitable after a few
years, and the country's existing landmass is being washed away faster
than new land is being formed. More
than 60 percent of Kutubdia's population has migrated, and most of the
remaining 150,000 are considering leaving. Atiqul Chowdhury, coordinator
of the health, disaster management and coastal renewable energy section
of the COAST Trust, said at the rate at which the island was shrinking,
the Trust estimated that it would disappear within the next 70 years.
Diversifying
As
the sea works its way inland, increasing salinity has also affected the
ability of the island's farming community to grow paddy rice and
vegetables.
"It was amazing - we used to dig a well in one spot
and the water would be sweet, while another well only a few metres away
would have salty water," recalled Saber Ahmed, 45, who now lives in a
settlement for "environmental refugees" from Kutubdia.
He is
among the fortunate 10,000 families from the island resettled by the
government in Cox's Bazar in the 1980s, where they have continued
fishing as a way of life and making a living.
Several farmers in
Kutubdia have switched to producing salt, "but this seasonal, as it is
possible only during the dry season", said the COAST Trust's Chowdhury.
The
quantity of land in Bangladesh is limited, and even more so on an
island like Kutubdia, so the COAST Trust has encouraged poor farmers to
take up farming shrimps and mud crabs in floating nurseries or cages.
The crustaceans are reared in floating plastic containers tied to a
bamboo frame planted in the sea or river.
The COAST Trust has set
up more than 200 cooperatives to help fishing communities market dried
fish, and also provides microcredit to women to set up small-scale
businesses to support their fishing families.
Disaster warning
Almost
every month more families in Kutubdia lose their homes to the sea. "We
provide livestock and building material to the families," said
Chowdhury.
COAST,
along with the NGO, CARE Bangladesh, has set up disaster committees in
the communities to warn them of incoming cyclones or tidal surges.
Committee members use megaphones to warn the community of impending
disasters. COAST has also set up a radio link between at least eight
islands along the southern coast to track potentially disastrous weather
events. "But the question
remains, 'What will happen to the people? What is their future in a
country where landlessness is a huge problem?'" said the COAST Trust's
Nurul Alam. "They have no future to plan for." Many
Kutubdia residents who fled the 1991 cyclone, which claimed 22,000
lives, have been forced to build their homes on wetlands near the
official settlement for refugees in Cox's Bazar; others have settled in
cramped living conditions in neighbouring towns like Chittagong, where
they work as day labourers. "We
are trying to campaign for the resettlement of environmental refugees
with the government," said Nurul Alam. "Or the developed countries will
have to take up the responsibility of resettling them." Kutubdia
is one of a large number of islands off the southern coast of
Bangladesh - with a combined population more than 2.5 million - and all
of them are shrinking. Bhola, the biggest, has lost about 227 sq km of
land in the last 50 years; Hatiya, which once covered 1,000 square km,
has been reduced to 21 sq km over the last 350 years.
"We know
all about the greenhouse gases being released into the air by the
developed countries, which is why we are suffering," said Gopal Jaladas,
the son of a fisherman who goes to college.
In the last two
years he has seen his entire neighbourhood of 150 huts swept into the
sea by tidal surges. "Why don't you tell them to stop?" he asked the
IRIN reporter. "We are drowning here."
Source : http://irinnews.org
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