Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Andhra Pradesh hails CM NAVEEN PATNAIK as Hero [The Pioneer]

October 29, 1999 had ushered in a new era for Odisha. October would be a natural calamity month. Storms would form in the Bay of Bengal, most disappearing after showing red eyes only, but once in a while one or two very severe cyclonic storms would blow over. Fortunately now, splendidly accurate storm-determining systems have come up, unlike in 1999. Meteorologists have also developed a mechanism for naming severe storms by nations in rotation.
No wonder, most cyclones are feminine because males are less potent anyway. The deadliest on record, Hurricane Katrina, an Atlantic storm formed over the Bahamas on August 23, 2005 had pounded many regions causing irreparable damage to the tune of 108 billion US dollars then, on the coast and inland in multiple landfalls with severest storm surges causing both ‘blow-away’ damage and flood disasters across four days between August 28 and 31. The storm caused such floods as the Americans had never known to even be able to devise a strategy to remain just safe. Katrina with a peak speed of 280 km an hour is the strangest storm known in history.  
The 1999 Super Cyclone in Odisha had touched the entire civilised world so deeply that help came rushing even from strange individuals in faraway countries. Money came like storm surges; volunteers appeared in thousands; ideas and wisdom along with the works poured in overload quantities. The State machinery did not know what to do and how to do anything well. The neighbouring Andhra Pradesh personnel appeared like messiahs to clear roads, remove debris, trace 10,000 rotting human corpses and countless cattle and livestock carcasses and consign them to flames, while the Odisha authorities and volunteers kept gaping in utter confusion. Chandrababu Naidu was considered a demigod.   
Come 2014 and there is a wholly different picture! Cyclone Hudhud, named after an innocent bird in the Southeast Asia, was to make landfall on the Odisha coast. God decided to deflect it to the Andhra coast. The port city of Vizag was to suffer the landfall on October 12. Andhra Pradesh was witless. Despite every preparation, panic had left everything in disarray. By now, Odisha people had become experts in storm management, evacuation, rescue operations and trauma reduction due to constant training and exposure over the years.
Naveen Patnaik, as if to pay back a debt, dispatched highly-trained State personnel. The State’s Fire Service force was on the Andhra soil by the noon of October 13. The 453-strong Odia team equipped with 239 power saws, cutters, 152 power lights, 23 combi-tools and four mobile mini mast lights, all this spread out across the devastated locations to commence rescue and relief work like, taking command from the leaders, more in sign language than screams. Further, 106 men from the Odisha Disaster Response force were dispatched with power cutters, tree fellers-pruners, concrete-steel cutters, hydra cutters and spreaders, et cetera, to engage in high-speed clearing of blocked roads, removing huge fallen trees, electric poles, collapsed structures after installing night floodlights at strategic junctions.
What Andhra did to Odisha in 1999 after days, Odisha did in return by arriving on the spot in hours and the victims were amazed to realise that life can be back to normal soon enough. The trauma factor was virtually dispelled. Victims in Vizag and Srikakulam, like elsewhere, would never be able to forget Odisha rescuers ever for what they did at incredible speed and precision. The Andhra media was over-awed with the contribution of the Odisha team.
That Naveen was guided by good public officials is an undeniable fact. The Special Relief Commissioner and the ADG of Fire Services are a few of the great masterminds who came up with ideas and plans at high speed and organised to have them implemented without losing one moment. On inquiry over phone, Fire Services ADG M Nageswar Rao said it was just a routine duty well-done mainly because the personnel had their skills kept sharp by constant honing through scientific practice. SRC Pradipta Mahapatra, a restless, high-voltage workaholic, said he has not been able to come back to the routine regimen because he was keen that his force return soon and narrate unique tales to learn even more. Pradipta says he was reminded by colleagues from time to time about food and sleep being vital to keep life during the tough hours of planning and monitoring when nothing but saving life and property was highest on his agenda. Similarly, on nagging only, Nageswar Rao would say, “I would only imagine we have not done injustice to the expectations of the victims, the people and the witnessing world around. The Chief Minister had ordered the best possible help to be provided. Thank God, our learning has been put to good use. We are overwhelmed by the media coverage in Andhra Pradesh. Every media house has hailed Shri Naveen Patnaik as a hero. AP CM Chandrababu Naidu visited personally all the cut-off locations to see what we have been doing. The officials of Andhra confess to the fact that Odisha repaid the Andhra debt multi-fold, which is humanity.”
Lastly, the NGO role may be scrutinised. During the 1999 Super Cyclone, the NGOs woke up as late as usual (communication system was not so fantastic then) and kept crazily waiting for the money pots to fall on head. Once the dough was in hand, activities got madly brisk. The external agencies did not care for rigid auditing or scrutiny. Their sole objective was to save lives and rebuild livelihood systems very fast. Big NGOs with huge money flowing went virtually mad. They neither had the exposure-experience nor the broad heart to give away. They created clusters of smaller NGOs (many were born of the cyclone) and behaved as local funding agencies to show off. The founders and leaders used the situation and the free money without tight strings to project themselves as great saviours without ever confessing to the outside world that they were mere social contractors to bring relief to the victims in a most ethically correct fashion. Ordinary people, the same way as ordinary officials, did not understand how the NGOs operated. So they saw the NGO leaders screaming of ‘doing great things’, ‘transparency’ and ‘accountability’. It so happened that the NGOs formed solidarity groups and browbeat the poorer, hungrier ones in such a dictatorial manner that rebellions erupted and friends and followers became bitter enemies forever. Dirty politics prevailed for quite some time, but big talkers had managed to steal the lime light by displaying big-spend and confounding the media. Emergency purchase of shelter sheets, dry food, bottled water, hiring of vehicles had kickback and the mere number of ignorant hungry, needy volunteers had to keep singing praise for the machinating leaders for a little dole-out and in result, extremely self-centric, fraudulent NGO founders assumed larger-than-life pictures. Some of them used the post-Super Cyclone plank to build international careers.
Enough documentary evidence is available to have the NGO pretenders nabbed even today. The moot point is that no NGO, big or small, has shown good enough face in the 2014 Hudhud rescue-relief operations because big funding agencies have stopped assistance or are suspicious of this rare tribe. It is of course true that perfect NGOs do exist, but their number is miniscule. A nearly-confused leader said a band of 15 volunteers is on a tour to AP with only 50 thousand rupees in hand, just good enough for a two-day excursion without any serious work. Not a single big NGO leader, stealing fat salary, has ever donated one month’s salary for relief of any community in distress. The good ones, mostly impoverished, are doing great work without being seen.