The Inconvenient Truth A peep into the ad-hoc way of life of the residents of rural South Andaman, post 2004 Earthquake Tsunami Debkumar Bhadra, Shore Point, Bambooflat, S Andaman - 744107, email : debkumar_bhadra@yahoo.com
Life under island conditions had been peaceful and content until the epic disaster christened the “Great Sumatra-Andaman Earthquake”
rattled our islands on the 26th day of December 2004 at 6:29 am IST followed by a massive tsunami that washed away anything to everything coming its way. The multiple-disaster caught the islanders unawares, mostly in their sleep following the Merry Christmas celebrations. Before the “boxing day” nobody had the slightest idea that the sea, amid which they had been leading their life, could threaten their very existence. The disaster turned out to be a learning experience for majority of islanders who got to know the word tsunami, though sounds Indian to our ears, is in-fact a word of Japanese origin; meaning giant harbor waves generated by undersea tectonic or volcanic activity. The 2004 slow slip undersea earthquake incidentally shifted Andaman and Nicobar Islands south-west by about 1.25 m. Remote sensing and visual inspection of shoreline changes provide evidence for both uplift at Andaman group and subsistence at Nicobar group. GPS measurements indicate 60 cm uplift at Diglipur, 84 cm subsistence at Port Blair, 7 cm subsistence at Havelock, and 34 cm uplift at Hut Bay. The tsunami breached the shorelines claiming lives, destroyed buildings, uprooted trees, washed away roads, bridges, and submerged large tracts of land. The disaster also had enormous effect on the islands fragile ecosystem. The coral reef and mangrove ecosystems bore the burnt of natures fury, silently. Several NGO’s (national and international) responded to the crisis situations providing timely relief materials and services to the affected. The Indian Government too pumped in ample funds for relief, rehabilitation and rebuilding the disaster torn islands. It is this generous Govt grant, humanitarian aids from NGO’s and the efforts put in by the A&N Administration that helped our people overcome the trauma. But after 6 long years, Relief, Rehabilitation and Rebuilding is a story of neglect for the residents of rural South Andaman. It is this dimension of the disaster that the present article intends to explore. Apart from the visible damage to life and property, the 2004 epic disaster had a telling effect, throwing life of a large section of populace from rural South Andaman out of schedule. An estimated 14000 passengers and hundreds of 2, 3, 4 and 6 wheelers used to commute daily between Bambooflat and Chatham
on board ferry (and or vehicle ferry) boats operated by Directorate of Shipping Services (DSS). Students, office goers, traders, daily wage earners, transporters, tourists, patients, and members of the public comprise the passenger traffic across the route. Before the disaster struck, ferry boats plying in the route were known for following the arrival/departure schedules strictly. Post disaster, everything has become thing of the past. The disaster caused minor damages and submergence of Bamboo flat jetty yet the route had to be kept operational keeping in view of large commuter traffic across the creek. Moreover sea route was the only means for the commuters of rural South Andaman. The DSS did the right thing operating vehicle ferry minus 6 wheelers, for the time being. The sea in the region grew so violent that only particular boats