Amid collapsed houses left in the wake of the first of two massive
earthquakes last year, a man walks through the rubble in Bhaktapur,
Nepal, April 27, 2015.
Photo: Reuters/Navesh Chitrakar
Victims of the devastating earthquake in Nepal last year are
being deprived of funds to rebuild their homes because they either they
do not own land or cannot prove they owned the place where they lived,
global anti-poverty group Oxfam said in a report Friday.
Nepal's government has announced grants of 200,000 Nepali
rupees ($1,900) to families that can prove they owned land before the
earthquake, which struck on April 25, 2015. However, some of the most
vulnerable people are being excluded from the reconstruction process as
they lack documentation or lost important documents in the tremblor,
according to the report.
“Experience from other disasters shows that women and those
who are landless are often excluded from reconstruction and recovery
policies and plans, largely due to a lack of documentation proving
eligibility for support,” the report said. “When this happens, recovery
takes longer, with people still in temporary shelter many years later.”
The earthquake, which measured magnitude 7.8, and subsequent
aftershocks claimed more than 8,700 lives and displaced over 117,000
people, of whom 26,000 are still displaced a year later, according to
Oxfam’s report.
The report said that the grants being distributed by the government
were insufficient and recommended that the government ensure that women
are named on victim ID cards and all landless people are provided with
one.
Under Nepal's new constitution, formally adopted in
September 2015, women enjoy equal rights to own land. But inheritance
laws have kept the ownership numbers low.
“As we near one-year anniversary since the devastating
earthquake, a lot remains to be done. Support to provide permanent
shelters for the earthquake victims are still primitive, and most likely
will be postponed due to the impending monsoon, putting thousands of
women and children at risk,” Barsha Dharel, a program coordinator for
Real Medicine Foundation, a nonprofit humanitarian aid organization,
told International Business Times in an emailed statement.
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