4/2/2005
First Step In Rebuilding Sri Lanka’s Fishing Fleet
In
the first small step in a large-scale initiative to help
restore the livelihoods of thousands of Sri Lankan fishermen
devastated
by December’s Indian Ocean tsunami, the United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) this week handed over
an initial
$380,000 consignment of boat repair kits.
“This is the first shot off the starting block of a programme
that will develop over the next few months to rebuild the country’s
battered fishing industry,” FAO country representative
Pierre Gence said at the hand-over ceremony with Sri Lankan fisheries
minister Chandrasena Wijesinghe.
The donation, funded jointly
by FAO and the German technical cooperation agency GTZ, represents
the start of FAO’s $20
million initial response to the tsunami that ravaged more than
three quarters of the country’s fisheries industry.
As the massive UN-led relief effort moves from the lifesaving
dimensions of the immediate emergency response to the tsunami,
which killed more than 200,000, injured half a million more and
left up to 5 million others in need of basic services, and takes
on the longer-term reconstruction phase, donor governments and
agencies have channelled aid through FAO for the rehabilitation
of the fisheries sector.
The immediate relief project is due to last six months and will
then be followed by a longer-term rehabilitation programme. FAO
will provide fishing nets and gear, as well as outboard engines,
and will repair damaged boats or replace those lost with new
ones. This assistance will cover all regions of the country.
The north and east in particular, already made vulnerable by
civil conflict, were badly hit by the tsunami.
FAO will also provide necessary technical assistance for the
re-establishment of ice plants, cold rooms, fish collecting and
marketing
centres and rehabilitate the fishery harbours and anchorages.
“Our concern is not to reproduce the problems of over-fishing
and wastage of the past. Our aim is to help create a new, sustainable
fishing industry in close cooperation and coordination with the
government and local people,” Mr. Gence said.
As of 31 January, the death toll
in Sri Lanka – the second-hardest
hit country after Indonesia – stood at nearly 31,000 dead
with nearly 5,500 listed as missing. More than 234,000 families
have been affected by the disaster with over 555,000 people displaced.
In Indonesia’s Aceh and
Sumatra provinces, which accounted for more than two-thirds
of the total death toll, the UN World
Food Programme (WFP) is in talks with the Government on an emergency
school feeding initiative as well as a supplementary feeding
programme for pregnant and nursing women and children aged 1
to 5.