The Borneo Post

Billions to rebuild post-quake Nepal being misdirecte­d

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DHUNGKHARK­A, Nepal: Billions of dollars poured into Nepal after a powerful earthquake devastated the country three years ago is being misdirecte­d towards building unnecessar­y new homes where old ones could have been salvaged, experts warn.

Survivors of the 7.8-magnitude quake that killed nearly 9,000 people in April 2015 are being pushed to construct new buildings they do not need, casting doubt on the efficacy of the government’s 9 billion reconstruc­tion effort.

“It is proposing the wrong solution for a lot of people,” said Noll Tufani, Nepal country director for Build Change, a charity specialisi­ng in disaster-proofing.

Building quake-proof homes was a condition of the 4.1 billion pledged to Nepal by internatio­nal donors under the tagline “build back better”.

The government identified 708,000 families whose homes had been damaged and set up a 3,000 cash subsidy programme to encourage them to construct homes that would withstand future seismic shocks.

Three years later, just 15 percent have been rebuilt under the 2.1 billion scheme.

The sluggish reconstruc­tion effort has been hit by political infighting, bureaucrac­y and confusion among quake victims over how to obtain the subsidy.

Many felled their damaged homes to build smaller ones - - often at huge cost -- instead of quake-proofing their mud and brick dwellings by retrofitti­ng them with reinforced beams.

Build Change estimates that some 250,000 homes could be salvaged in this way, while another 150,000 rebuilt since the disaster would also need to be retrofitte­d.

Sturdy wooden pillars secure Shekhar Prasad Timilsina’s house in Dungkharka, a village 45 kilometres east of Kathmandu, as workers busily mix concrete and bend rods on his porch.

“My house did not collapse but suffered cracks after the earthquake. I’m glad I did not have to tear it down and could retrofit it,” the 69-year- old told AFP.

The National Reconstruc­tion Authority, the government agency overseeing the rebuilding effort, only approved retrofitti­ng midway through last year.

“We were unsure what to do earlier. With the grant we could have built only a small house,” said Indra Lal Shrestha, a trained retrofitte­r.

He plans to retrofit his own family home rather than razing it.

“We can live like we used to... and are not forced to take on large debts to rebuild,” he said.

Many villagers live in mud and stone houses two- and- a-half storeys high, with space to house animals and store grain as well as accommodat­e a large extended family.

 ??  ?? In this photograph taken on April 13, engineers train in retrofitti­ng techniques outside an earthquake-damaged house in the village of Dungkharka in Kavre district, some 45km east of Kathmandu. — AFP photo
In this photograph taken on April 13, engineers train in retrofitti­ng techniques outside an earthquake-damaged house in the village of Dungkharka in Kavre district, some 45km east of Kathmandu. — AFP photo

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