Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Tsunami Victims Forgotten...

I read this with sadness, the millions donated for the Tsunami victims never really got to them, but was used to build s half finished Tsunami museum...very sad!

KEDAH – AFP: MALAYSIA'S tsunami victims are threatening to cast a protest vote against the government in March 8 polls over broken promises for new homes and mismanagement of relief funds.

Some of the affected homes in Kota Kuala Muda Malaysia by the 2004 tsunami. The tidal wave affected more than 3300 residents and destroyed more than 600 homes in the area. -- ST PHOTO: ONG CHIN KAI

In the sleepy town of Kota Kuala Muda in northern Kedah state, villagers whose homes were swept away by the deadly waves say that more than three years after the tragedy the government has still not kept its word.

'I was given a letter and keys by Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak in 2005 to a temporary settlement with a promise that we will be later shifted to a new house,' says Abdul Wahab Zainon.

'It breaks my heart when the promise is broken. I don't know why they did this to me,' said the 57-year-old, who still lives in his damaged house with his family.

The December 2004 tragedy which ravaged the coastlines of a dozen countries claimed 66 victims in Malaysia, mostly swept from the beaches of the island state of Penang.

Further north, Kota Kuala Muda suffered the worst damage to homes, boats and businesses, with at least 700 simple wooden shacks damaged or destroyed as well as 12 lives lost.

Most people in the area are fishermen and rice farmers, and commonly have large families of four to five children which they support on incomes of only about RM500 (S$219) a month.

Mr Abdul Wahab said his village used to be a stronghold of the powerful United Malays National Organisation (Umno), which has governed Malaysia since independence in 1957 at the head of the National Front multiracial coalition.

But Mr Abdul Wahab said that like many others here, his allegiance had shifted after he received aid worth only a quarter of the RM10,000 he spent making his home habitable.

'We will all vote the Islamic Party PAS, or Keadilan,' he said, referring to two opposition parties hoping to make strong gains this year as the government faces criticism over rising prices and seething ethnic tensions.

Another disgruntled villager Shafigam Shuib, 32, said the Malaysian public had donated some RM85 million relief funds but there was nothing to be shown for their generosity.

He pointed to some abandoned structures - foodstalls, a community hall and a tsunami museum that were half-built after the tragedy and are now just eyesores after the projects stalled.

'This is a classic case of corruption and wastage. Do we need those structures? No. Why waste the money? It should be used to upgrade our broken homes here and upgrade the road which floods whenever it rains heavily.

'I will vote PAS. I want to deny victory to Umno,' he said.

Across a river in the sister town of Kuala Muda, the damage was minimal but the government said it would shift villagers away from the vulnerable shoreline. They too are still waiting.

'To meet the ruling politician to seek help is impossible. Only his cronies get to see him. Many youths have deserted Umno,' said Latif Hashim, 32.

'Now I climb trees to put up PAS flags. I am going to vote the opposition in the March polls,' he said.

In Kuala Muda, which is part of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's constituency, a brightly coloured housing scheme for tsunami victims has been built but the scores of single-storey dwellings remain empty.

Local PAS member Zulkifli Ishak said it will remain a ghost town because locals cannot afford the RM40,000 that each of the homes costs.

T. Jayabalan, a social activist in Penang, said that despite the anger, the government's well-established electoral machine and huge resources would ensure it retained seats in the tsunami zone.

'The fact the promises made after the tsunami have not been held, we will see some votes going to the opposition,' he said.

'But voters only see the opposition figures during elections. The people do not see the opposition as a viable alternative.'

A 2006 report by Malaysia's auditor-general found that millions of ringgit in aid money for tsunami victims was badly managed.

The report also targeted poor construction standards in the repair and building of houses in Penang and Kedah, saying that 'contracts were not signed, projects completed late and the quality of the work shoddy'. - Straits Times

1 Comments:

At 12:17 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

doc, i knew the residents mentioned in this article. it's very true that most of them did not received what they was promised to them. most of the villager got as little as rm 500 to 1000 as compared to the millions and millions of funds collected.

i have the oppurtunity to conducted a community survey in the kampung tepi sungai (kota kuala muda) which was badly damaged by the tsunami.

we had the oppurnity to survey every houses in that kampung, to our surprise, the villagers were not getting the things promised by our BN government.

i can understand their frustration and anger. seriously...

some of the damages were too much to bear and i still could remember how they cried helplessly when i visited them during the survey.

we should not look at the history but BN should have kept their promise as to help them to rebuilt their homes, post-traumatic counselling etc.

when i read this article, i felt sorry for them.

but at least they know the corruptions of BN and willing the vote for a change!!!

the malays are voting for a change at last... AND where are the chinese and indians???

Lets join your hands and vote out the corrupted BN.

VOTE FOR A BETTER MALAYSIA!!!

 

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