Thinking About Nicaragua Retirement?
Courtesy José Adan Silva
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True the cost of living is lower in Nicaragua than Costa Rica, but you
should read this if you are thinking of moving there.
The forces of nature are
giving Nicaragua no respite. After the hurricane that
devastated the country’s northeastern Caribbean coast
in September, weeks of torrential rains have claimed
lives and caused economic damages, and now the Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is warning of
famine.
Hurricane Felix ploughed into the country’s northern
Atlantic region on Sept. 4, leaving a death toll of
102, with 130 people still missing, and 220,000 people
homeless. Economic losses were estimated at 900
million dollars, and crops in the area were completely
wiped out, according to the national system for
disaster prevention and relief (SINAPRED).
The government was seeking international aid when
another natural disaster hit. Heavy rains fell for 50
consecutive days, starting before hurricane Felix, and
flooding large areas on the Pacific side of the
country in the north and south. The administration
declared a state of national disaster on Oct. 19.
"This is worse than Mitch," said President Daniel
Ortega, referring to the damage caused by the
hurricane in October 1998 that killed over 3,000
people, left 700,000 families homeless and caused
damages to the tune of between 1.5 billion and two
billion dollars.
SINAPRED estimates that as a result of the rains,
216,000 people have been forced out of their homes in
the departments (provinces) of Estelí, Madriz,
Chinandega, León, Managua, Masaya, Granada, Rivas,
Jinotega and Matagalpa, in the north and west of the
country. When the Grande river flooded the city of
Matagalpa in the department of the same name, eight
people died and 10 are still missing.
Incomplete civil defence reports mentioned total or
partial destruction of 22,000 homes, and the loss of
over 3,000 kilometres of roads and highways, including
eight bridges. Over the last week, the Nicaraguan
Institute of Territorial Studies (INETER) has recorded
rainfall of more than 100 millimetres a day.
Agriculture and Forestry Minister Ariel Bucardo said
that thousands of hectares of forests have been
devastated, as well as 143,274 hectares of rice, beans
and maize, the staple foods of the Nicaraguan diet.
Based on these reports, FAO representative in
Nicaragua Laura de Clementi warned of the possibility
of famine in coming months, unless the government
invests at least three million dollars in purchasing
seeds for sowing the next season’s harvest.
"If you don’t sow now, hunger will be rampant next
year," she said.
In Nicaragua the rainy season is from May to October,
and the dry season is from November to April.
De Clementi said that production conditions in the
rural areas which provide 90 percent of Nicaragua’s
food supply are dire. That is why she is calling for
seeds to be bought and distributed to farmers
immediately, "because in a few months people will be
asking for food."
De Clementi urged the authorities to buy food in the
short term, and called on the international community
to prioritise food aid.
Prior to the alert sounded by FAO, U.N. resident
representative Alfredo Missair had warned that the
vulnerability of people in the areas hit hardest by
the natural disasters would increase the already wide
gap between rich and poor.
The poverty gap has grown "alarmingly" over the last
five years, undoing all efforts to improve living
conditions for the 47 percent of the population of 5.4
million who live on less than a dollar a day, he said.
Even before the advent of hurricane Felix, the
northern Caribbean coastal region, home to more than
300,000 indigenous people, was already in a state of
poverty, malnutrition and economic inequality, he
said.
Eighty percent of the region’s population was already
living in extreme poverty, and a further 16 percent
were poor, according to the 2005 census.
In 2005, authorities declared a state of famine in the
indigenous communities living along the Coco river and
in the north of Chinandega, two of the areas that have
been hit especially hard now.
According to Vice President Jaime Morales, although
the international community has sent disaster relief
donations to mitigate the humanitarian crisis, the
rural areas are so "fragile, vulnerable and poor" that
the aid cannot make inroads into chronic malnutrition,
which affects up to 50 percent of the people in some
districts.
Managua Mayor Dionisio Marenco warned of the risk of
landslides due to flooding, and of the possible
collapse of the Augusto César Sandino international
airport owing to the river torrents that sweep down
from the hills surrounding the south of the capital
city.
"This is hardly a ‘natural’ disaster, because the
flooding is caused by merciless deforestation in the
mountains," said Marenco, who promised a municipal
plan to reforest the southern slopes of Managua, and
to build embankments to prevent flooding of the city.
Jaime Incer Barquero, a biologist and geographer, said
that unless the government implements a strategic plan
to curb environmental damage, the country could be on
its knees within a few years because of the effects of
global warming.
"Nicaragua is not to blame for the hurricanes and
storms, but it is responsible for the destruction of
its forests, which form a protective barrier. Rain
causes greater damage to land stripped of its trees
than to forested areas," the scientist said.
Before the September and October rains, the
authorities had launched a campaign to reforest 60,000
hectares of woodlands a year.
But now "this project has been suspended because of
the national emergency, since the entire state
apparatus is concentrating its efforts on overcoming
the crisis caused by the heavy rainfall," a government
statement said.
According to the Environment Ministry, in 1950 there
were eight million hectares of forest in Nicaragua,
compared to just three million hectares today.
U.N. agencies like FAO, the European Union, and
countries such as Norway, Venezuela, the United
States, El Salvador, Honduras and Cuba have sent
emergency aid.
Natural resources management expert Guillermo Bendaña
said that the challenge is not so much that of
obtaining aid for crisis relief, but "to see whether
it might be possible to get the country to stop
destroying its environment, because the greater the
extent of deforestation, the worse will be the soil
erosion effects of the rains," he told IPS. |