Monday, 14 December 2015

Nepalese government earthquake response overview


The following article was published on December 3, 2015 by Deepak Thapa on the Kathmandu Post

It goes over the events in Nepal since the earthquake and makes a reasonable summary of the guidelines and catalogue published by the government (scroll down to the part in bold and blue).


No man’s land

That our state cares for no one, Madhesis and Pahadis alike, lies in its response to the April Earthquake


view original

Houses in the Sindulpachok district after the quake. Photo: ©A&D

For numerologists, the number ‘222’ may have some significance, good, evil or whatever. For non-believers like us, however, if that is the number of days one has to live in temporary accommodation in the hope of government help that shows no sign of materialising, it is quite a few days too many. For, exactly that long a time has elapsed today since April 25, when the lives of millions of people were upended by the Great Earthquake.

After having been caught flat-footed in its response to the quake, the government did redeem itself somewhat by bringing together donors two months later to secure pledges worth $ 4.4 billion. But since then it has been all downhill. The immediate assistance of Rs 15,000 took a while in reaching the affected. That was understandable considering the need for on-the-spot verification of damages, collecting the particulars of the affected, disbursement of budget, and actual distribution. What is not understandable is why it should have taken the government so long to start providing the promised assistance. Imagine living in a state of limbo, not being able to begin life anew, waiting for a seemingly uncaring government to get its act together.

Just as a reminder about the extent of loss, and this is from the Department of Urban Development and Building Construction (DUDBC), “600,000 private homes were fully damaged [and]... more than 285,000 private homes were partially damaged.” That is nearly a million families who have been leading an existence that is going to be even more precarious with the onset of winter. It is a shame that any government should allow this state of affairs to continue for so long, and even more shameful is no attempt to rectify the situation even now.


Big talk

At the June donor conference, there was some smooth talking from the Finance Minister at the time to get the donors to open up their wallets. First, acknowledging that “a joint concern of both the government and our development partners in recent years has been the quality and pattern of public expenditures,” Ram Sharan Mahat said, “Not to let the same bureaucratic and political hurdles slow the urgent task of rebuilding, the government has boldly announced the creation of the National Reconstruction Authority (NRA). It is an Extra-Ordinary Mechanism (EOM) that is informed by international practices and is grounded on past Nepali successes.”

At the same donor conference, then Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, had asserted: “We are committed to ensure that transparency remains at the core of the reconstruction effort.” Notwithstanding the unmentioned ‘past Nepali successes’ as well as later assertions by Mahat that the government would appoint someone apolitical to head the NRA, his party, the Nepali Congress, and its coalition partner CPN-UML soon got embroiled in a tug-of-war about who should lead it. That all but exposed the lie to the stated commitment to transparency and to not politicising an issue that should have been guided solely by a moral imperative. The papers are full of reports on how the continuing tussle between the two main parties has prevented the NRA Act from being passed but the party leaders appear not to care two hoots about what this does to their standing, and to the endless suffering of the people.

Months later, we are still without the NRA, the body meant to mobilise the funds the donors are ready to give and provide succour to the earthquake-affected. The government’s recently released white paper on the economy detailed the cost of this inaction. Of the promised aid for reconstruction, the first quarter of the current fiscal year had seen receipts of only 11 percent of the grant amount and just 5 percent of the loans. Thankfully, even that was received, enabling the government to plan on distributing the Rs 10,000 handout to each affected family ‘to buy warm clothes’ and tide them over the cold season.

There is little indication of when the Rs 200,000 meant for the reconstruction of houses is going to come through. Neither does there seem to have been any consideration of how inequitable the provision of a flat sum to everyone can be. Hence, a family living next to a motorable can have the construction material trucked right up to the doorstep while another not so fortunate will have to have everything carried on human back up to their home, and perhaps expend a good chunk of the government aid in transportation alone. Anyone with any knowledge of the settlement patterns in the hills and mountains of Nepal will know how this can further exacerbate existing inequities in terms of both caste/ethnicity and class.


Bureaucratic hoops

The truth of what lies in store for the thousands waiting for government assistance when it comes through is even more distressing. As Kathryn March, a professor at Cornell University in New York, wrote about what she found as she did the rounds of various government offices trying to implement her small ‘project’ of training construction workers in the Nuwakot locale where she has been conducting research for decades.

It goes as follows (with some paraphrasing by me):

i) homeowners must demonstrate that they are eligible for subsidies and/or loans by, first, obtaining an Earthquake Victim ID Card (at least one trip to the relevant district office) and, second, the interrelated opening of a bank account (another trip);

ii) then they must select one of the approved house designs from the DUDBC catalogue;

iii) first, 25 percent will be advanced to allow them to build the foundation, according to the DUDBC Building Code standards;

iv) after the foundation is finished, homeowners are supposed to call in an engineer to approve the quality of the work, and there is supposed to be an engineer deputed to every VDC with over 1,000 households (and a sub-engineer to those with less)—that is a lot of engineers to be convinced to go work in the villages;

v) when the foundation is approved, another 35 percent is to be released for the construction of the walls;

vi) then another check by the engineer and another 30 percent for the roof; and

vii) another check and the final 10 percent released upon the code-certified completion of the entire structure.


Enough to make anyone’s head spin.

(See for yourself by downloading the entire Procedures for the Flow of Grant/Assistance for Reconstruction of Houses Completely Destroyed by the Earthquake)

One-story designs proposed in the catalogue in different materials: the government grant will most likely not be enough to build these. 
Technical drawings from the DUDBC Catalogue - not exactly accessible to non-professionals.

Download the entire catalogue here

The DUDBC catalogue itself appears to be a fine piece of document. So far published only in English (but hopefully soon in Nepali as well), the engineers have, unfortunately, come up with something that only people well-versed in technicalities will comprehend.

While explaining its content in lay terms is going to be a challenge, it is very unlikely that the Rs 200,000 will go far while adhering fully to the DUDBC manual. Even more, one can only imagine what the actual ‘cost’ will be to the homeowner with all those inspections mandated for every tranche to be released.

The Tarai is on fire because Madhesis feel neglected by the centre. Although the comparison may not be wholly accurate, our state has been no less uncaring of the Pahadi population, and proof of that has been in its response to the April Earthquake.

Fuel crisis in Nepal slows down recovery from earthquake

The blockade in the Indian border has been creating many difficulties in Nepal and slowing down the recovery process even more. Supplies are scarce as winter sets in and the situation looks dire as the article below describes.


Fuel crisis in Nepal slows down recovery from earthquake


Published on 30 Nov 2015 by ACT Alliance - republished on reliefweb - View Original

India has placed Nepal under unofficial trade blockade.

Traffic in Kathmandu, the Nepalese capital, is uncharacteristically slow. The air is not thick with exhaust fumes even on the main roads and the sky is clear blue. The police guards petrol stations. The stations have gated entrances, and cars and motorcycles stand in long lines on the streets.

When the gates are opened, the line of cars and motorcycles begins to move. Vehicles are pushed forward in order to save precious fuel.
There is a fuel crisis in Nepal caused by political motivations. India and some of Nepal’s ethnic minorities don’t accept Nepal’s new constitution, which was signed in September. India is by far the most important trade partner of Nepal and has placed its small neighbour under an unofficial trade blockade.

Line to petrol station in Kathmandu. Distribution normally starts in the evening, but often there isn’t enough fuel for everyone waiting in line. In such cases, vehicles are left in the line waiting for the following day, or the day after.
Source: https://www.kirkonulkomaanapu.fi/en/latest-news/articles/fuel-crisis-in-nepal-slows-down-recovery-from-earthquake/


According to India, the border is closed because of insecurity caused by demonstrations. Nepal blames India for inciting riots and considers the act as a blockade.

Negotiations for lifting the blockade came to a halt when an Indian man was killed in riots in the Terai region on the border between Nepal and India. The UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon has appealed for the parties to open the border, but it doesn’t seem like a solution to the dispute is in sight.

The few buses still operating are crammed full, and people are even sitting on the roofs. Under normal conditions, travelling on the roof is fined, but not now.
A taxi driver has not had time to wait in line. He says he bought his gasolene on the black market – at five times the normal cost.


Assistance work has come to a partial halt

The timing of this blockade is particularly inconvenient for Nepal as it is still suffering from the effects of the historically severe April earthquake. Half a million homes are destroyed. In the 1countryside, entire villages are left in ruins.

“People don’t want to talk about the earthquake, but many suffer from it. In children, the anxiety caused by the earthquake manifests in sleeplessness, nightmares, lack of motivation and underachievement in school”, says Juha Valta, Finn Church Aid Education Specialist.
Juha Valta has been working in Nepal since June. He gives Nepalese teachers training on how to manage the post-earthquake situation.

The training is given in cooperation with Nepalese education authorities and gives teachers and pupils tools to manage their anxiety and identify when peer support is not enough and professional help is needed.

“Teacher training is important right now, because teachers are an important resource in schools and communities. Through teachers we can advance important make important advancements. Training includes elements from hygiene to teaching methods. All this aims to make schools safer and more child-friendly learning environments”, Valta explains.

Finn Church Aid has been able to continue teacher training as planned, but the construction of temporary learning spaces has halted. There are no materials for sale and fuel is in short supply. This has also prevented the last batch of corrugated iron sheets for building homes from being distributed from FCA’s storage.

Juha Valta says the situation in the country is extremely difficult. Hundreds of thousands of people living in temporary shelters are in need of assistance, but fuel shortage prevents aid organisations from delivering relief.

“Winter is coming to Nepal, and people are living in tin shacks they’ve built as shelters for themselves. Temperatures may drop below zero at night, up in the mountains frost can get severe”, Valta says.

Proper rebuilding hasn’t even begun yet. The damaged, dangerous buildings are still standing because demolition costs too and the poor country doesn’t have money.

German assistance for Nepal earthquake recovery

Published: December 14, 2015 by The Himalaian Times

KATHMANDU: Germany pledged to provide Euro 30 million (equivalent to 3.51 billion) to Nepal for earthquake rehabilitation.

German Ambassador to Nepal Matthias Meyer and Finance Secretary Lok Darshan Regmi signed an agreement to this effected on Monday.

According to a press statement issued by the Kathmandu-based German Embassy, the assistance would comprise two programmes, namely a Financial Cooperation Recovery Programme of Euro 25 million and a Reconstruction Programme of Euro 5 million.

While the German Development Bank-KfW on behalf of the Government of Germany would implement the first programme, the German Agency for International Cooperation would be responsible for the second project.

“In total, the German Government has committed Euro 35 million for immediate humanitarian relief and rehabilitation measures following the devastating earthquakes,” the statement said, “In addition, more than Euro 60 million of private donations was mobilised in Germany by Non-Government
Organisations, highlighting the particularly close relations and solidarity be-tween the two people.”

Meanwhile, Ambassador Meyer expressed his concern over the impact of current border disruptions, which hit the people in the earthquake-affected districts and the poorer populations particularly hard.

Friday, 11 December 2015

Welcome the Building Back Better and Safer in Nepal Blog!

Hello everyone,
This our first post on the Build Back Better and Safer in Nepal blog!

The blog is part of the Technical Support Office in Kathmandu, a project developed by Architecture Sans Frontieres Nepal and Architecture & Développement, both members of the Architecture Sans Frontieres International network. The TSO has been working since July to support NGOs funded by the Fondation de France in their rebuilding efforts.

TSO's team providing advice to a NGO. Photo: ©A&D & ASF-Nepal

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Written between Paris and Kathmandu, our goal is to share with the public relevant information  as well as best practices, and codes and guidelines to help those involved in the reconstruction to build back better and safer.

Let's take a look at what's been going on:

- Nepal has finally deblocked government funds, to find out more take a look at this article

- The Procedures for the Flow of Grant/Assistance for Reconstruction of Houses Completely Destroyed by the Earthquake  for reconstruction have been published, they determine the amount granted to families that will have to rebuild their homes after the earthquakes and how the system will be put in place.

- The Nepalese government has published a catalogue for reconstruction - these are pre-approved seismic resistant designs. Anyone wanting to build something else while using the government grant must have a new design made by an engineer.

While this is a good idea in theory, the content of the catalogue worries us: we at the TSO think that poorest families will not be able to afford to build these designs only on the government pre-approved grant, and more cost effective solutions must be found.

You can download the catalogue and see for yourself here:

Design Catalogue for Reconstruction of Earthquake Resistant Houses 

I'm sure there are still many questions (a FAQ is coming soon) and if you need any information in particular you can write to us at tso.asfnepal@gmail.com, come and see us at our office or leave a comment below.

More updates coming soon!