advertisement
“My land is gone. My house is gone. My husband is crippled. My sons are away. We have no crops, no firewood,” says Manuara Bibi of Baliara village in Mousuni Island in the Sundarbans.
Like many others on the island, Manuara Bibi has seen the river taking acres of land. After the floods took the last piece of her house, she waits for the water to subside, in a 6ft x 6ft stilt house, barely accommodating the six remaining members of her family.
Her situation is not unique and applies to hundreds like her living on the 54 inhabited islands of the Indian Sundarbans.
The geographical location of islands such as Mousuni make the inhabitants more vulnerable due to floods and embankment erosion, compounded by institutional negligence and human interference.
River bank erosion in Mousuni Island is occurring at a rate of 1.02 kms per year, wreaking havoc and claiming several houses and farmlands. “Those three huts will be gone next year. We thought the river will take them this time itself, but by God’s grace, they got saved,” Kusum of Baliara tells VillageSquare.in, pointing at the three small dwellings on the edge of the bank.
In Mousuni Island, salinity ingress has rendered agricultural land uncultivable for years. Tidal flooding that occurs twice a month makes it difficult for the salinity level to come down.
It is due to a combination of natural events like floods and erosion and anthropogenic factors such as lack of maintenance and deforestation. These weak, and in some cases, partially built embankments, prevent swift back-flow of the flood waters in some parts of the island, resulting in inundation for an extended period of time.
In such a hostile environment, the men often migrate to seek employment. Our study of 60 households in three habitations of Mousuni Island found at least one male member in each of the households having migrated for work. The women are left behind to look after the children and the elderly.
This out-migration has resulted in rising security concerns for the women, leaving them physically and emotionally vulnerable.
“In my island we never saw this. This scares me.” Mamani lives alone with her two-year-old son, after her husband left for Dubai last June.
In order to support the family, the women in the islands look for work, including manual labor. “There’s not much work for us. I carried cement sacks last month, for a house construction in Poila Gheri. They were heavy and I got tired easily. But I didn’t have a choice,” Shikha Guin of Baliara, a widow and mother of two, tells VillageSquare.in.
Salinity ingress has rendered the homestead ponds saline. For all domestic purposes, including water for their cattle, women in the island are now dependent on tube wells.
During their study, Villagesquare.in found that on an average, 300 people depend daily on a single tube well.
The women sometimes have to depend on tube wells in schools, off limits during school hours. They often have to queue in the wee hours of the morning to fill up enough vessels for the day, making about six trips on an average.
Often the women wait for low tide, so as to move easily.
The island has three flood shelters. Payel Samanta, whose family has been residing in one of them for three years after losing everything to the river, laments how she is ostracized by the others in the neighborhood.
Payel’s husband is one of the few remaining in the island, with no means to migrate.
Apart from the physical hardships, the angst that the women go through is aptly described by Rebati Doloi from Kusumtala, “We lost our boat last year. So now my husband tries to fish floating across the river on a big jar. When the water becomes turbulent, I lose sight of him. I feel scared for him,” she tells VillageSquare.in.
The fact that he has to catch fish risking his life describes the plight of those who have not been able to migrate for different reasons.
Lack of access to safe sanitation adds another element of risk for the women on the island.
The ones who do have toilets, still prefer the outdoors. Because toilets without water for flushing is an added drudgery as the women have to make additional trips to fetch water.
Health facilities on the island, for flood-affected families in general and women in particular, remain deplorable.
The primary health center (PHC) in the village is highly inadequate, with no electricity.
The women are often unaware of hygienic menstrual practices. “Cases of urinary tract infection are common,” comments the head ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist) worker of the village PHC, “thus leading to increased chances of cervical cancers.”
A pregnant woman has to cross two rivers to reach the district hospital in Namkhana for delivery, often by herself, since her husband would be away making a living.
With no access to LPG, the women depend on firewood and are exposed to greater threats from indoor carbon monoxide pollution. Privacy is indeed a luxury for the women in the island.
The discourse on the effect of floods tends to look at the affected population as a homogeneous entity. The entire population is seen as flood-affected. But the everyday struggles faced by the women in Mousuni show that women are more vulnerable.
Accordingly, interventions that would ameliorate the wretched conditions of the women in flood-affected areas need to be promoted.
In Mousuni, interventions towards easy access to safe sanitation and drinking water source would go a long way in ameliorating the miseries faced by the women.
Provision of sanitary pads coupled with behaviour change communication activities would make a significant dent in the gynaecological morbidity faced by the women on the island.
An increased number of flood houses with separate sanitation and bathing space for women would reduce the vulnerability that they currently face.
Skill training for women in new activities like prawn culture and rural tourism could offer them an alternate livelihood.
(This article was originally published on Village Square)
Sayanti Sengupta works with SWACHHAGRAHA Aquakraft Projects Pvt. Ltd. Nirmalya Choudhury is a Consultant with Tata Education and Development Trust. The views presented in the article are the personal views of the writers. The Quint does not endorse or is responsible for the same)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)