Otago Daily Times

Building skills

Female masons are helping to build stronger homes in quakehit Nepal, reports Arun Karki, of the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

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FEMALE masons are helping to build stronger homes in quakehit Nepal. The Skills for Reconstruc­tion project is teaching Nepalis in quakehit areas how to build disasterre­silient houses, and in the Makawanpur district, a third of trainees have been women.

ON a recent summer morning, Suntali Rai was busy counting and stacking zinc sheets as she prepared to lay them on the roof of the house she had started building a month earlier.

If it didn’t rain, she planned to finish the roofing in a couple of days. Within a week, she should be done with the tworoom concrete house, she said.

Then her family would finally be able to move out of their wrecked wooden home, which has been almost uninhabita­ble since an earthquake shook the country three years ago.

‘‘Sometimes we don’t sleep, [but] rather keep our eyes open for the entire night when there happens to be heavy rainfall, because the rainwater keeps coming inside the house,’’ Rai (28) said.

‘‘We can’t stay here any more.’’

Rai’s house in Raigaun, a village in Makawanpur district, nearly 200km southeast of Nepal’s capital Kathmandu, has been standing only precarious­ly since April 2015.

That is when a 7.6magnitude earthquake killed about 9000 people and left more than 785,000 families homeless in one of the world’s poorest nations.

The Government set up the National Reconstruc­tion Authority (NRA) to fix or rebuild the homes of all affected residents by 2020.

But progress has been slow, in part due to a lack of materials and skilled labour, with thousands of men leaving the country each week to look for work, according to the United Nations.

Tired of waiting for someone else to build her a safer home, Rai enrolled in a 50day mason training course through the Employment Fund, a programme run by the nonprofit Helvetas Swiss Inter-cooperatio­n Nepal.

When she was done, she joined with four other course graduates to build her family a new house. This time, it is designed to stay intact if another earthquake hits.

Launched in 2015 and due to end in 2020, the Skills for Reconstruc­tion project teaches Nepalis in earthquake­hit areas how to build disasterre­silient houses.

The aim is to help ease the country’s labour shortage while also arming participan­ts with masonry and carpentry experience they can later use to find jobs in constructi­on.

In Makawanpur district, a third of trainees have been women.

For many of them, learning masonry has allowed them to break free from traditiona­l roles of farming and caregiving and finally make an income of their own.

‘‘So far, I have built 15 other houses in neighbouri­ng villages and earned 250,000 rupees ($NZ3238), which I will spend on house furnishing­s and paint,’’ Rai said.

Designs for life

The training project is jointly financed by the Nepalese Government, the Swiss Developmen­t Cooperatio­n and Britain’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

Since its launch, it has trained almost 9000 people in the 14 districts most severely affected by the earthquake and most vulnerable to future climate disasters, Sujan Dhoj Khadka, technical coordinato­r at the Employment Fund, said.

Trainees have rebuilt more than 3000 houses in 10 of those districts.

In the other four, limited access to remote areas and a shortage of skilled labourers to run the training programmes had stalled reconstruc­tion, Khadka said.

‘‘I have seen that there are women who receive training who are mostly illiterate. Some can only write their names,’’ Khadka said.

‘‘However, they are still able to apply the acquired technical skills in constructi­on work, like measuring area, length and height.’’

Many of the new homes have been built using housing grants from the NRA. In Makawanpur district, about 33,250 families are eligible to receive grants of 300,000 rupees each, paid out in three tranches.

In order to be eligible for a grant, new houses must adhere to one of 34 seismicres­ilient designs published by the NRA, Bhupendra Aeri, a civil engineer with the agency, said.

Most of the houses destroyed by the earthquake across rural Nepal were made using traditiona­l materials of wood and stone, with no pillars for support.

The designs prescribed by the NRA for new buildings are more likely to withstand earthquake­s. Builders can choose from a range of materials, techniques and layouts —from a twostorey structure made of steel and bricks to a tworoom home constructe­d from rubble, mud and wire.

‘‘People here have mostly followed the one or tworoom model homes,’’ Aeri said.

Anyone living close to a river must rebuild at least 20m away from the riverbank to avoid flood waters reaching their homes during rainy season.

Some families in remote areas the mason training programme could not reach had rebuilt their homes without following the NRA’s building codes and criteria, he said.

The NRA would not provide a second or third tranche of the building grant to such beneficiar­ies.

Slow progress

Jagat Bahadur Lama, a local leader of Makawanpur who is helping families get housing grants, said another factor slowing reconstruc­tion efforts was lack of land ownership certificat­es.

He said 68 families from three wards in Raigaun had not received even the first tranche of their housing grants because they had no documentat­ion to prove they owned the land they lived on.

Despite the Government’s land reform programme that began four decades ago, up to a quarter of the population still has no legal right to land, according to the UN’s Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration.

‘‘The families should be given grants based on where they have been living for many years,’’ Lama said.

‘‘It is not a very hard job to verify their residentia­l status locally.’’

As Nepal slowly rises from the rubble, many people who have gone through the mason training say their new homes come with a renewed sense of safety and stability.

Kanchhi Rai, a resident of Raigaun who recently graduated from the training programme, is almost finished building a tworoom house to replace one damaged in the earthquake.

She had help from her carpenter husband, who calls it their ‘‘dream home’’.

‘‘I think I have laid a strong foundation,’’ Kanchhi Rai said.

❛ I think I have laid a strong foundation

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 ?? PHOTO: THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION ?? Practical skills . . . Kanchhi Rai cleans up the grass around the home she and her husband built recently in the village of Raigaun, Nepal.
PHOTO: THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION Practical skills . . . Kanchhi Rai cleans up the grass around the home she and her husband built recently in the village of Raigaun, Nepal.

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