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| Aceh
after the Tsunami, Dec. 2004 |
Another day, another unnecessary loss of lives: 24 people killed and 10
still missing in floods and landslides on the small island of Tahuna off
Indonesia's Sulawesi. The date is January 12, 2007.
At an alarming rate, Indonesia is replacing Bangladesh and India as the
most disaster-prone nation on earth. Whenever the word Indonesia appears
on the list of headlines on Yahoo News, chances are that another enormous
-- and often unnecessary -- tragedy has occurred on one of the islands of
this sprawling archipelago.
Airplanes are disappearing or sliding off the runways, ferries are sinking
or simply decomposing on the high seas, trains crash or get derailed on
the average of one per week Illegal garbage dumps bury desperate
communities of scavengers under their stinking contents. Landslides are
taking carton-like houses into ravines; earthquakes and tidal waves are
swallowing up coastal cities and villages. Forest fires from Sumatra are
choking huge areas of Southeast Asia.
The scope of disasters is on a scale so vast that they cannot be
discounted simply as the nation's bad luck or as the wrath of gods or
nature. Corruption, incompetence and gross indifference on the part of
ruling elites and government officials are to blame. Poverty, in
combination with a dearth of sound public projects as well as kleptomania,
is taking the lives of hundreds of thousands of desperate Indonesian men,
women and children.
Since the 1965 U.S.-sponsored military coup that deposed Sukarno and
installed the military regime of staunchly anti-communist and corrupt
pro-market dictator Suharto, Indonesia has escaped serious scrutiny by the
international media and governments. After Suharto was forced to step down
in 1998, Indonesia has been hailed by the international media as an
emerging and increasingly tolerant democracy: yet the only political
parties allowed to compete in elections are those that are staunchly
pro-business.
All continue to cover up the facts of Indonesia's recent history, notably
the 1965 massacre and the nation's recent social collapse and the slide
toward Muslim domination of Indonesian politics and society. In the wake
of major earthquakes, tsunamis and landslides, citizens are encouraged to
pray, instead of analyzing facts, particularly the facts of government
failure and corruption.
Some of the disasters that have struck Indonesia are man-made; many are
preventable; in all cases the possibility exists of reducing the human
toll. On close scrutiny it becomes obvious that people die due to almost
non-existent efforts to prevent the loss of life and the lack of basic
education. Perhaps it is above all the product of a savage unrestricted
market economic system, which allows enrichment of the very few at the
expense of the majority who live on less than 2 dollars a day in this
resource rich country.
Indonesia is profit-driven to the extreme. When combined with extreme
corruption, the result is a formula for disaster. Particularly when there
appears to be little profit to be made from implementing preventive
measures. Dams and anti-tsunami walls are almost everywhere considered
public works and it is precisely this word -- public -- that has almost
disappeared from the lexicon of Indonesia's decision makers. Short-term
profits for special interests receive much higher priority than long-term
gains for the entire nation. Moral collapse of the nation is reflected in
these values, which slight the interests of the working poor.
Ferries are sinking not "because of high winds and waves"; they
are sinking because they are overcrowded and badly maintained, or more
precisely because they are allowed to be overcrowded and badly maintained.
Everything is for sale, even the safety of passengers. Companies care only
about their profits, while government inspectors are mainly interested in
bribes.
In the recent well-publicized sinking of the Senopati Nusantara ferry on
December 30, 2006 as many as four to five hundred are feared drowned. But
this was just one of hundreds of maritime disasters that occur in
Indonesia each year. While there are no comprehensive statistics available
(the Indonesian government publishes none), some maritime routes lose
three or more vessels a year.
The Indonesian airline industry has one of the worst safety records in the
world. Since 1997, at least 666 people have died in eight major airplane
crashes in Indonesia. Some of the pilots are so badly trained that planes
regularly skip off runways, miss runways altogether or land in the middle
of them. Maintenance is another issue: flaps often don't function
properly, wheels cannot be taken in after take-off, seldom changed tires
frequently blow up on touch down. It is a mystery how some airplanes --
particularly the old Boeings 737s flown by almost all Indonesian airlines
-- make it through inspections.
Local civil aviation officials told the author that the navigation systems
at several major Indonesian airports are in a disastrous state,
particularly those at Makassar in Sulawesi and Medan in Sumatra.
Adam Air which recently lost a plane off Sulawesi with 102 people on board
during a short inter-island hop -- without a mayday and with the flight
recorder still unrecovered -- is presently locked in a lawsuit with two
former pilots who claim that the airline was violating every imaginable
international regulation in order to maximize profits and cut costs. The
two are among 20 pilots who have resigned, refusing to fly badly
maintained aircraft, fearing for their lives and the lives of their
passengers.
"The industry growth is so fast and it's not matched by the growth of
human resources," said Dudi Sudibyo, an aviation expert called on to
advise President Bambang Susilo Yudhoyono about Adam Air Flight KI-574.
"There are not enough regulators, flight inspectors or planes,"
he told The
Associated Press. The fact that no Indonesia airline has ever been
held legally responsible for a major accident is indicative of unbridled
corruption in the Indonesian government, legal system and regulatory
bodies.
On average, a deadly train accident occurs every six days in Indonesia,
many caused by the lack of gates at its 8,000 level crossings. In
comparison Malaysia had no fatal accident for 13 years up to 2005 (the
last year for which statistics are available).
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| Jan
2005: Scavengers
search rubble following Aceh tsunami |
Despite the fact that Indonesia has relatively few cars per capita, its
roads are the "most used" of any network in the world (second
only to Hong Kong): 5.7 million vehicle-km per year of road network (2003
data, The Economist World in Figures, 2007 Edition). Despite epic
congestion resulting in the generally slow pace of traffic, more than 80
people die per day on Indonesian roads, mostly due to the terrible state
of the infrastructure and poor law-enforcement, according to The Financial
Times.
Earthquakes alone do not kill people. Poor construction of houses and
buildings are the culprits, together with the lack of preventive measures
and preventive education. It is a well known fact that Indonesia, located
on the so called ring of fire, is prone to natural disasters. But the poor
can count on no large-scale public housing projects (like those in
neighboring Malaysia), which could withstand earthquakes. Almost every
family must build its own dwelling. Major earthquakes kill hundreds,
sometimes thousands of people, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.
At least 5,800 people died and 36,000 were injured on May 27, 2006 during
the earthquake that struck central Java near the historic city of
Yogyakarta, recording 6.3 on the Richter scale. Primitive infrastructure,
inadequate medical facilities and corruption in the distribution of aid
are responsible for the unacceptably large number of casualties after each
major tremor.
Illegal logging and deforestation are the main reasons for numerous
landslides, frequently the result of deforestation. There are numerous
solutions to this problem, including law enforcement, inspections and
attempts to provide alternative means of livelihood for those communities
that are so desperate that they are literally forced to dig their own
graves by destroying the environment, which in turn annihilates entire
communities. But almost nothing is done, as illegal logging is a huge and
lucrative business that greases hundreds of willing palms.
In December, 2006, dozens of people were killed in landslides and flash
floods in northern Sumatra Island, forcing 400,000 people to flee their
homes. In June 2006, floods and landslides triggered by heavy rains killed
more than 200 people in south Sulawesi province.
Tidal waves, known as tsunamis, killed more than 126,000 people in Aceh
province in December 2004. Not only was the response of the Indonesian
government and military inexcusably slow and inadequate, but a large part
of the massive foreign aid disappeared in corruption. Instead of helping
victims, many members of the Indonesian military extorted bribes from
relief agencies and destroyed precious supplies including drinking water
and food when bribes were not paid.
Many victims were prevented from returning to their own land while
children were forcefully separated from their parents (who lost birth
certificates during the tragedy) and "adopted" by religious
organizations; some became victims to human trafficking. More than two
years after this devastating tragedy worsened by a scandalous land grab,
hundreds of thousands are living in temporary housing.
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| Jan
2005: Searching
for loved ones at Aceh airport after the tsunami |
Many victims of another tsunami, which struck the coast of southern Java
on July 17, 2006, are still waiting for any substantial help. At official
count, 600 people died, but the real number was almost certainly much
higher. Indonesian officials received early warning from Japan but refused
to act, later claiming that there was not much they could do, as the area
was not equipped with sirens or loudspeakers.
Indonesia often suffers from man-made disasters that strain comprehension.
Mud volcano -- a torrent of hot mud from deep beneath the surface -- began
surging from a natural gas exploration site after a drilling accident. The
mud inundated entire villages right outside the second largest city --
Surabaya. This was the result of flawed safety procedures by a gas
exploration company. The principal well owner is PT Lapindo Brantas, which
is linked to the wealthy family of Indonesia's Welfare Minister Aburizal
Bakrie.
This "accident" displaced more than 10,000 people, covering more
than 1,000 acres of land with hot mud, and destroying Surabaya's only
motorway as well as the major railway line. Garbage buried entire
communities of poor scavengers at an illegal dumping site outside Bandung.
There are many more cases similar in nature, but a complete list would
require entire book to begin to do justice to the subject.
The question is when will Indonesian people say that enough is enough and
when will they demand accountability and justice, exact statistics and a
concrete blueprint for solutions? In almost any other country, two recent
disasters -- the sinking of the Senopati Nusantara ferry and the
"disappearance" of Adam Air's Boeing 737 with 102 people on
board -- would be more than enough to force cabinet ministers to resign.
In Indonesia, these tragedies are seen (or presented) as yet another
misfortune with no one accepting responsibility and no one held
accountable.
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| Jan
2005: Women of Aceh losing hope following the tsunami |
Indonesia's press and mass media report every disaster in excruciating
detail. But they fail to provide analysis to show that what is happening
is extraordinary and intolerable, that probably no other major country is
experiencing such devastating loss of human lives due to disasters that
are either man-made, easily preventable, or subject to government action
to minimize casualties. To link the enormous number of lost human lives in
countless disasters with corruption and the system's socio-economic
priorities is unthinkable for the major media. The Jakarta Post,
Indonesia's leading daily newspaper, recently declined to publish this
commentary.
Since December 2004, Indonesia has lost some 200,000 people in various
disasters, excluding automobile accidents and military conflicts. That is
more than Iraq lost in the same period of time in the course of a deadly
war, and more than Sri Lanka or Peru lost during their long civil wars.
Indeed, many Indonesians are experiencing lives as dangerous and hazardous
as those in war-torn parts of the world. In the absence of comprehensive
statistics and comparative analysis, however, few realize it.
Indonesia is poor, but it certainly has the capacity to protect some of
its most vulnerable citizens. The main problem is a lack of political will
and a system whose priorities lie elsewhere. There is plenty of concrete
and bricks to build dams and walls against tsunamis, to reinforce the
hills around those towns, which are in danger of being buried by the
landslides. One has simply to look around Jakarta where dozens of new
shopping malls are springing up and at the palaces being built for corrupt
officials.
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| Jan 2005: Children
of Aceh |
Failure to deal with the problems of natural and man-made disaster is
rooted in the combination of the dominance of the calculus of profit and
the system's corruption. Local companies and officials have developed an
uncanny ability to profit from everything, even from disasters and the
suffering of fellow citizens. When the toll has to be calculated in
hundreds of thousands of lost human lives, corruption becomes mass murder.
Source: http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?article_class=3&no=340266&rel_no=1
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