Sunday, March 27, 2005

Tsunami may have killed up to four times as many women as men - Oxfam surveyed

Up to four times as many females as males may have been killed in the tsunami according to new research released today (Saturday, three months since the tsunami).

The figures are released as part of a report showing the impact of the tsunami on women. The sex imbalance is shown in stark terms by new figures in the report:

Oxfam surveyed eight villages in two districts of Aceh, Indonesia for this report.

• In four villages in the Aceh Besar district, out of 676 survivors only 189 were females. Male survivors outnumbered female survivors by almost 3 to 1.
• In four villages in North Aceh District, out of 366 deaths, 284 were females. Females accounted for 77% (more than three quarters) of deaths in these villages.
• In the worst affected village, Kuala Cangkoy, for every one male that died, four females died, or in other words, 80% of deaths were female.

In Cuddalore district, the second most affected district in India, almost three times more women were killed than men, with 391 women killed, compared to 146 men. In Pachaankuppam village the only deaths were those of women. In Sri Lanka too, information from camp surveys suggests a serious imbalance between the number of men and women killed.

More women appear to have been killed by the tsunami for a variety of reasons. These include women staying behind to look for their children (who they were often looking after when the wave hit) and women being less likely to know how to swim or climb palm trees. In Aceh women have a high level of participation in the labour force, but the wave struck on a Sunday when they were at home and the men were out running errands, or were out at sea (where the waves were less ferocious) or working in the fields. Women in India were close to the shore, waiting for the fishermen to come in with their catch. In Sri Lanka in Batticoloa District when the tsunami hit it was the hour women on the east coast usually took their baths in the sea.

The Oxfam data also reveals other aspects of how the tsunami has taken a particular toll on women. These include examples of:

• Women experiencing verbal and physical harassment by men in camps and settlements and fearing sexual abuse in the packed resettlement sites
• Women already being pressured into early marriages.
• Women in particular are being hit by the loss of income and inability to access cash, with some women at risk of sexual exploitation and forms of dependency from which they will find it hard to recover.