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3 years of
freedom without land and schooling is not real freedom! |
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by
Birgitte Lind Petersen, Information and Documentation Advisor,
BASE Bardiya
Ex-kamaiyas’ life still impoverished and
insecure
The ex-kamaiyas and landless from Sri Lanka
camp in Kailali district (156 households) have just been evacuated
as their camp was flooded and several houses completely destroyed.
The army threw lassoes to rescue people from their homes which
most of all looked like ship wrecks in a lake. Many suffer from
diarrhoea, pneumonia and encephalitis, which are fatal to ex-kamaiyas
due to their unstable shelter and lack of treatment. Not least the
little child that was born one day prior to evacuation. BASE, Red
Cross and District Development Committee try to help with a little
food (chewra) and medicine, but there is no overall strategy by
the government for how to solve this problem that is growing day
by day…
On the 3rd anniversary, of their
freedom, Friday the 2nd Saaun (18th July)
the former kamaiyas still need to struggle for their rights to a
descent life. Many of them lack the most basic needs and rights
and as they say ‘without land and education we will never be truly
free’.
MS’s partner BASE supports the ex-kamaiyas,
especially through the significant ‘Education for Freedom’
project, which is economically supported by Danish high school
students through Operation Day’s Work (OD).
Without identity cards, no basic needs
Three years after the Kamaiyas – bonded
labourers - won their freedom many are still without the identity
cards that formally acknowledge them as ex-Kamaiyas and ensure
them rights to get land and other rehabilitation support. Without
cards they cannot get land, they have no access to health and
their children do not get education.
And the ex-kamaiyas need basic support. Since
they left their landlords three years ago ex-kamaiyas have had to
work hard to survive. Many live in illegal camps placed in
inaccessible places far from towns with work opportunities.
Without land or money, the camp life provides very poor living
conditions.
Serious health situation
Health is a vast problem in the camps. Many
camps still lack drinking water and furthermore, there are no
health posts nearby and people do not have money either to travel
or buy medicine, let alone considering hospital.
Another health threat is the harsh climate in
Terai affecting the fragile camp life. Last winter many ex-kamaiyas
died from the devastating cold, 52 people in Bardiya district
alone, as they lack proper clothes and shelter. Right now during
the monsoon many camps get flooded and the small houses are not
strong enough to bear through the rough weather. This and the hot
and humid climate in general further brings a lot of diseases,
such as diarrhoea, pneumonia, typhoid and encephalitis for which
the ex-kamaiyas have no opportunities, let alone money, to get
treated.
In Saantinagar camp, a permanent camp located
by the highway the situation is severe. A large signboard informs
about the support the camp has got, among other things a health
post and a school. However, these public services are not to be
found and in literally every household we visited some or all
family members are very ill with high fewer and headache. None of
them have can afford transport to the health post in Baansgathi.
The situation is similarly critical in several camps and without
any treatment even normal diseases become fatal.
Education (not) for all
Another substantial distress for the ex-kamaiyas,
particularly in the temporary camps, is that their children cannot
go to school, as government schools are often hours walk from the
camps. And nothing is provided for them where they live. They
cannot get any educational support as long as they are living
illegally on government land.
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Self-help schooling
In
a few camps they have build their own school but they are hard
to run without government provided teachers and money. In
Laaungawhaa camp in Bardiya the children did not receive any
education until recently when the ex-kamaiyas applied for
support from an NGO to build their own school. It is a mud
house with two small rooms. The school offers class one and
two, taught by voluntary teachers from the camp who have
themselves only completed third/fourth class. Every month the
254 households contribute each 1 rupee and a little rice if
possible for the teachers’ salary. However, until now the
teachers have not been paid and teaching is very irregular.
The quality of the education is very low, a boy from the
second class shows his torn books but is not able to read or
tell about the content. This is hardly surprising, as the
teachers have lived their lives as bonded labourers.
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A new generation of children risk being
marginalized and deprived of education, which is so vital if they
should have opportunities to actively control their own lives.
Right to be an ex-kamaiya
The process of getting identity cards is a
delicate one. The landlords have to identity their former Kamaiyas
and authorise the application letters in order for it to be
approved by government. This procedure creates immense obstacles
for many ex-kamaiyas who literally fled when their freedom was
announced and for all those (which was the majority) who had very
bad relations with their landlords and thus are sure not to get
help from them. Also those who were thrown out when the landlords
had to pay a daily minimum of 80 rupees cannot really go back for
documentation.
Almost 7000 ex-Kamaiyas have received identity
cards in Bardiya district and a certified right to land and
rehabilitation. These ex-kamaiyas are supposed to automatically
get land, economic support for house building and instalment as
well as skill training according to the land reform office.
However, many are still waiting for their support.
Furthermore, outreach and flexible schooling
programmes, health posts, water pumps and other amenities are only
available for certified ex-kamaiyas. However, many have waited
three years now, and for those around 7300 people in Bardiya who
only registered last year several years may pass before they know
whether they actually get authorised as real ex-kamaiyas and can
expect to get land.
The predicament of support
There is currently a vast dilemma in the
approach to support ex-kamaiyas. The government only support those
who have been through the strenuous process of acquiring identity
cards and the NGOs do not dare to support those ex-kamaiyas living
in illegal camps as they risk colliding with the government.
Furthermore, the coordination internally between government
agencies such as Land Reform Office, District Development
Committee and District Education Officer as well as between these
agencies and the NGOs is very weak.
In Kailali, all the ex-kamaiyas from an illegal
camp in the forest were recently removed and their houses
destroyed. They now live under simple plastic covers, without
walls or any other protection on land that is flooded and scarce.
Governmental frost protection laws overruled the responsibility of
supporting the ex-kamaiyas.
It is extremely critical since these people who
are living in the vacuum between achieving their legal freedom and
living in real freedom, are among the absolutely most poor and
vulnerable in the country. Nonetheless, support is directed by
rigid rules and arbitrary logic instead of by needs.
Freedom for Education project
OD, MS-Nepal and BASE’s ’Education for Freedom’
project aims specifically to support the children of ex-kamaiyas.
However, as a main objective of the project is working within the
government schools and therefore to hand over the responsibility
after a while and furthermore to promote a general uplift of the
primary education in Nepal, it becomes complicated to support
education in the illegal camps. Nonetheless this is where the
situation is most critical.
In Saailahi camp in Bardiya they have built
their own little school, but as they have no money to pay a
teacher they asked the DEO for help. They were however, rejected
as they do not live in a permanent settlement. They have lived in
this camp for three years now and the children are paying the
price for these doubtful principles of the state.
BASE supports ex-kamaiyas with advocacy for
identity card and right to get the land on which they live, in
order to be able to have the government providing primary
education in these camps. This is not enough however. The
government aims to guarantee ‘Education for All’ and we must
ensure that it really encompasses all, also the poor and
marginalized citizens who have neither identity cards, land or
home. It ought to be possible to find interim solutions whereby
also children who happen to live in illegal camps get their right
to education fulfilled.
Empowerment and recycled demands
In order to carry out the ‘Education for
Freedom’ project many other issues also need to be advocated for
and there are valid reasons for the ex-kamaiyas to raise their
voices three years after liberation and fortunately the ex-kamaiyas
are being vocal.
When they won their freedom the movement was
heavily supported by NGOs, especially BASE. Today the ex-kamaiyas
have formed their own organisation Mukta Kamaiya Digo Bikaas
Kamaasu in Bardiya (and two in Kailali) and they arrange their own
freedom day rally and celebrations. These people who have lived
their whole life in slavery are getting empowered.
Looking back at the claims asserted in the
massive ex-kamaiya rally carried out in Kailali one year after the
freedom was won there is still a lot to fight for. Although some
have got land and housing, for most ex-kamaiyas the demands are
the same as two years ago (last year there was no rally due to
emergency):
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Identity
cards – also for the women
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Free
Education
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Facilities
for health, food and drinking water
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Land for
all – 10 khataa per family
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Wood and
economic support for house building
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Minimum
wages for all
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Official
acknowledgment of the Freedom Day, as a holiday
On Friday the ex-kamaiyas in Bardiya submitted
a memorandum to the Ministry of Land Reforms with these demands
during their rally. This week (4.-9. Saaun) they have sit-down
strikes in front of the District Development Office and the Land
Reform Office (in Kailali and Bardiya, the two districts housing
the vast majority of ex-kamaiyas) in order to direct attention to
their problems. They are sleeping outside without plastic, without
food and without any extra cloth wherefore BASE is supporting with
basic necessities from its emergency fund. Furthermore, BASE helps
plan each day’s activities with the responsible ex-kamaiyas.
Ex-kamaiyas’ problems are clearly not solved
after freedom was declared. They still face numerous difficulties,
which are often interlinked. Hence, MS and BASE need to work on
multiple levels to support ex-kamaiyas even though the main focus
is on education. The social reality implies that land rights,
identity cards and interim educational support are among the
issues we will also have to work with for the ‘Education for
Freedom’ to be a success!

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