The government’s reconstruction policy after Typhoon Morakot struck in August  last year was a far bigger disaster than the natural calamity because it is  leading to the extinction of Aborigines, Lituan Takilulu, convener of the  Indigenous Peoples Action Coalition of Taiwan, said  yesterday.
“Aborigines will never be able to return home. They are  compelled to live in separate places. We are on our way to extinction,” Lituan  said at a forum held by the Taiwan Association of University Professors on the  eve of the first anniversary of Morakot.
Lituan, a Rukai priest, said  Aborigines are not scared of natural disasters, because “disasters are part of  the lives of Aborigines,” adding that the most important problem facing  Aborigines was that “people are dispersed” and “connections with fellow tribe  members are cut off.”
About 72 percent, or 13,911, of the 19,191 people  in 6,316 households were living in areas deemed “unsafe” by the government after  it investigated 291 sites in the wake of the catastrophe. Of these, 7,484 people  in 2,433 households resettled in permanent houses, while 11,707 in 3,883  households remained at their original place of residence.
Government  officials cited statistics to rebut allegations of forced relocation while  continuing to reason with Aborigines to move out of their mountain villages,  saying that “migration is the best way to avoid the consequences of climate  change,” as President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) has said.
Lituan said Aboriginal  victims were compelled to leave their hometown within one week of the typhoon  and asked to decide within a short period whether to resettle in permanent  houses.
“More than 80 percent of Aboriginal victims signed up for  permanent houses, [but did so] when they had no idea about the conditions in  their villages. Some tribe members then found safe places in their villages and  wanted to go back, but they were not allowed to,” Lituan said.
There also  was no financial support for Aborigines who wished to rebuild their homes in  their original villages, he said.
“Some people borrowed money from  friends to buy land to resettle,” Lituan said.
The government’s  reconstruction policy was to force Aborigines to relocate in permanent houses,  which not only made Aborigines leave their lands, but will also compound the  breakup of Aborigine families, he said.
If people establish their own  families through marriage or other means, they can’t live in the community,  where the number of houses are limited, and must move out, becoming separated  from their families, Lituan said.
Elan Pavavajung, a Paiwan tribe member  who produced a documentary on how Aborigines living in Davalan, Sandimen  Township (三地門), Pingtung County, dealt with the disaster, said older Aborigines  blamed widespread deforestation and reforestation by the Forestry Bureau and  road-widening for the catastrophe.
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/08/08



 









