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June, Bogale, Myanmar It takes two hours by a
diesel-powered boat to reach Shwe Pyi Aye Village from
Bogale Township, one of the five townships most severely
hit by Cyclone Nargis. Almost half of the villages
population, 441 people, perished in the tropical storm.
Three of them were Thin Thin Ayes brother, father
and 14-year-old daughter.
Thin Thin Aye, 31, used to make a living by cutting
and selling firewood. But the May cyclone wiped away
her house, the wood and all her hand tools. Her remaining
family survive on rice rations from other agencies and
NGOs. They also received tarpaulin sheets which provide
a temporary roof.
There is nothing to do now, she said. I
hope I can get a fishing net. At least my family will
be able to live on fish. We dont want to live
on donation anymore.
At the village meeting the United Nations Development
Programme organised, Thin Thin Aye brought her four
surviving children. She was one of the approximately
200 villagers who showed up. Five community organisers
who have worked on UNDPs Human Development Initiative,
which has operated in the region since 1994, explained
the goal of the meeting the villagers themselves
would select beneficiary households for different types
of early recovery assistance.
The capacity to operate at this grass-roots level stems
from UNDPs long history of working closely with
communities, as directed by the Executive Board mandate.
With guidance from the facilitators from UNDP and its
implementing partner PACT, the villagers first selected
seven members three of them women
to form the villages early recovery committee
by using a simple blind voting method. They then broke
into different groups. Finally, the early recovery committee
compiled the list of beneficiary households, and all
the groups agreed to the final list.
This is a development process woven into relief
operations, said Alan McMahon, project manager.
We are not just injecting cash. We are actually
setting up an open and transparent system that will
help the villagers make their own decisions.
After several hours of animated discussions, including
a quick lunch break, the villagers selected 30 families,
Thin Thin Ayes included, as the most vulnerable
households, making each household eligible for a one-time
USD40 grant. This enables the villagers to purchase
any material they need right away. The villagers also
selected half of the villages households for shelter
assistance. When these households receive USD120 from
UNDPs Bogale Township office in the next few days,
they will be able to use the cash to rebuild their houses
after the monsoon. Lastly, the villagers selected another
55 percent of the households to receive cash grants
and in-kind assistance to help them resume livelihoods.
UNDP
also provides cash-for-work schemes, enabling each household
to receive USD2 per day for the initial round of 10
days, for community activities such as clearing ponds
and paddy fields and removing bodies. The cash will
enable the villagers to purchase any materials they
need. The village committee, together with UNDP facilitators,
will conduct public audit to make sure the cash is spent
appropriately. If there is any sign of misuse of funds,
the village becomes automatically ineligible to participate
further in this project.
During the cyclone, Moe Kyi, 33, held on to a coconut
tree with one arm and one of her children with the other.
The river rose up to her neck, she recalled, and swept
away her four-year-old boy. She said she wanted things
to go back to the way they were before the disaster.
She would also like a new fishnet to replace the one
she was able to salvage.
The villagers decided that her family would receive
livelihoods assistance, said Khaing Ye Mon, 25,
who has worked as loan officer in the village for three
years. She knows Moe Kyi and her circumstance intimately,
as those of other members of the micro-finance groups
in seven different villages. She and teams of other
community organisers from UNDP and PACT will be travelling
to 70 different villages in the township in the next
ten days to help survivors select beneficiary households
and disburse cash, addressing urgent early recovery
needs.
The project helps people like her to live normal
again, she said referring to Moe Kyi.
As for Thin Thin Aye, she said any sign of dark cloud
gathering in the sky scares her now, because it makes
her think that it might be another cyclone. With the
cash grant from UNDP, she would be able to buy a new
fishnet. As her youngest daughter nestled in her lap,
there was a hint of smile in her eyes.
At night, I pray that there will be no more cyclone,
just a lot of good luck, she added.
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