| A year after an earthquake pummelled
Kashmir, the scars refuse to heal. The signs of disaster linger and
the general mood is one of discontent.
On October 8, a temblor measuring 7.6 on the Richter
scale, epicentred 125 km off Srinagar near Muzzafarabad, destroyed
large parts of Uri, Tangdhar and Teethwal in Baramullah and Kupwara
districts respectively.
It claimed 1,400 lives on the
Indian side and 75,000 across the border.
The government announced a compensation package under
which buildings were classified as "fully and partially damaged".
While Rs 1 lakh each was sanctioned for houses
razed to the ground, the partially-dam aged homes were allocated Rs
30,000 each.
In addition, Rs 30,000 was sanc- tioned for the construction
of temporary sheds and an incentive of Rs 5,000 announced for every
family, who built their sheds on time.
Official estimates cited 14,818 structures, including
houses, government buildings, places of worship, schools and hospitals
as "fully damaged" and 92,048 as "partially damaged".
The authorities, so far, have disbursed nearly Rs
187 crore in Baramulla district and Rs 50.03 crore in Kupwara.
During his visit to Tangdhar and Teethwal recently,
chief minister Ghulam Nabi Azad instructed the administration to
distribute the remaining aid in one go.
"People affected by the earth- quake should
be able to rebuild their homes before the onset of winter,"
he told the authorities.
But the prospect seems unlikely. "What should
have been done in April this year still remains a promise with winter
round the corner," villagers lamented.
Resentment is simmering. Villagers have decided to
observe October 8 as a black day and are rally ing against the government
in pub lic places.
They allege that relief and rehabilitation agencies
have been partisan in aid distribution.
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Seventy-year old Mohammad Yousuf Bhat of Gharkote
village said his house was
"completely damaged", but he was offered
relief for "partial damage".
"I returned the cheque and demanded my due share.
But till date, I have not received anything," he told the Hindustan
Times. The remains of his ruined house testify his claim.
Residents of Gwalta, Nambla, Kamal Kote, Navanrunda
and Dhani Syedain village in Uri also alleged discrimination in
relief.
"The Gujjars have been given preferential treatment
while the Pahadis and Kashmiri-speaking people were cold-shouldered,"
said Arshad Hussain of Gwalta village.
"We were given free ration for three months,
but nothing more. They government has been selective,"chorused
Sikandar Shah and Mohammad Bashir Kataria of Kamal Kote.
"The State Vigilance Organisation (SVO) is probing
the allegations and a departmental inquiry is underway," sub-divisional
magistrate (SDM) Bashir Ahmad Dar said.
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