His advice? Start working now and get survivors involved in the
process.
"Please prepare warehouses now all over the region and fill them
with construction materials," said Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, who headed
a specially created, powerful government agency tasked with
coordinating more than $7 billion in aid that flowed to the country
after the disaster. "Fix the prices now."
The Indian Ocean tsunami killed about 230,000 people in a dozen
countries. Indonesia's Aceh province was the worst-hit area,
accounting for about half the deaths. Much of the provincial
capital, Banda Aceh, was leveled.
Aceh's reconstruction didn't always run smoothly, especially during
the first year, but it is now almost universally regarded as
successful. Around 130,000 houses were built in less than three
years, along with scores of airports, roads and schools. It was the
biggest construction project in the developing world.
These days, the only sign that Banda Aceh was the epicenter of an
appalling disaster are two ships carried miles inland by the giant
waves. They are now popular and well-managed attractions on a
"tsunami tourism" trail in the city.
There are lessons to draw from the 2004 tsunami, and from more
recent — and more criticized — reconstruction efforts after
disasters in Japan and Haiti. The Philippines also has much
experience of its own recovering from typhoons and other disasters.
A full assessment of the damage caused by the typhoon has yet to be
carried out. There were far more deaths in Aceh. The Philippines
government said Wednesday that the typhoon killed more than 4,000
people and left 1,600 missing. But experts say the scale of the
reconstruction needed in the Philippines looks broadly comparable
with that in Aceh.
Like Indonesia in 2004, the Philippines has functioning national and
local governments with committed, educated employees. Foreign
countries are more likely to help if they can see efforts being made
to spend money well.
Just under two weeks since the typhoon, saving lives and providing
emergency aid are still the main focus. Corpses are still being
collected from beneath the debris. But in a week or two, authorities
will start transitioning into an "early recovery phase" and planning
how best to rebuild the estimated 320,000 destroyed houses.
"It's never too early to start talking about it," said Nancy
Lindborg, the assistant administrator of the U.S. government's aid
arm. "What's very important is to move as quickly as possible, so
you enable people to start thinking about the future."
Philippine Interior Minster Mar Roxas said authorities were already
considering whether to put people in tents or bunkhouses. In Aceh,
authorities built 24 wooden barrack-style complexes for survivors,
but they were not popular, often located far from the original
villages of the residents or their workplaces.
Aceh managed to build just 16,000 permanent houses in the first year
after the tsunami. Spiking construction costs were one problem:
Inflation hit 41 percent at one point as massive amounts of money
chased limited supplies. Another complicating factor likely to be
seen in the Philippines was that land titles and government records
were destroyed.
"It was almost impossible," said Mangkusubroto via telephone from
Jakarta. "People shouldn't have to live in tents for more than six
months. It causes social tension."
It will likely take months to even decide where to build, or what
safety standards to use, because the government and affected
communities will need to work together to come up with the right
answers. In Aceh, authorities initially banned construction close to
the sea, but this was shelved as impractical because the province
relies on fishing.
[to top of second column] |
"We have to make sure that these buildings are not built in unsafe
areas," said Nathaniel Von Einsiedel, the chairman of an urban
development consultancy firm. "We don't want to commit the same
mistake that may have contributed to the severity of the destruction
in the first place."
The Philippine government said about $320 million in foreign aid has
been pledged to the relief effort.
That's far less than the $7 billion Indonesia received after the
tsunami — the most generous response ever to a natural disaster —
but that massive amount of money created its own complications.
Some of the more than 180 aid agencies that flocked to Aceh took on
projects they were not qualified for or duplicated other schemes.
Some families got a house they didn't need, or in a place where
didn't want to move to. Others got more than one. Today, empty,
rotting houses aren't hard to find.
Another lesson from Aceh: Giving cash to disaster survivors, either
in a grant or in exchange for projects such as cleaning debris, is
effective and popular. Expect to see those schemes used widely in
the Philippines. Old-school development thinking shied away from
handing out money, partly out of fears it would be "squandered."
Studies by aid agencies and academics have shown that is not the
case.
Success in Aceh contrasted with stuttered reconstruction efforts in
Japan following the 2011 earthquake and disaster, where more than
half of the 470,000 people who either lost their homes or were
evacuated from close to the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant have
yet to be permanently resettled. Ample funds have gone unspent due
to legal and bureaucratic obstacles to rebuilding and shortages of
construction workers.
The aftermath of the Haiti earthquake in 2010 has also been
troubled. The capital is awash in new construction, but the
International Organization for Migration says nearly 200,000 people
are still living in makeshift settlements. The international
community pledged $5.4 billion to help Haiti, but only about half
has been delivered to date.
The Philippines is poor, but its governance structures are stronger
than those in Haiti. Aid groups will have less money to spend than
after the 2004 tsunami, but coupled with Philippine government funds
and loans from agencies like the World Bank, many experts and aid
workers are optimistic that the region will recover.
"I think it would be disappointing if we come back in four years'
time and people are worse off than what they were coming into this,"
said Michael Delaney, who leads Oxfam America's humanitarian
response to emergencies.
[Associated
Press; CHRIS BRUMMITT]
AP writers Fakhrurradzie
Gade in Banda Aceh, Teresa Cerojano in Tacloban and Elaine
Kurtenbach in Tokyo contributed to this report.
Copyright 2013 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|