October 09, 2006

One year on for Pakistan

BELOW IS A REPORT I RECIEVED FROM THE INTEGRATED REGIONAL INFORMATION 
NETWORK (IRIN) A SERVICE I SUBSCRIBE TO AND WOULD RECOMMEND TO ANYONE ELSE
WISHING TO HEAR OTHER VOICES THAN THOSE LOUDLY TRUMPETED BY OTHER NEWS
OUTLETS.

One year after the worst natural disaster in Pakistan’s 59-year history, which
left 75,000 people dead and another 3.5 million homeless, progress on earthquake
recovery has remained slow and many reconstruction programmes are facing a
funding deficit.

People in the affected areas have begun the slow process of rebuilding their lives but
reconstruction efforts are being held backby a host of administrative difficulties and
a continuing information gap between the authorities and the survivors, aid workers say.

“Survivors have begun rebuilding their homes, communities and livelihoods. But, the
rebuilding process has, so far, been very patchy, slow and complex,” Farhana
Faruqi Stocker, head of international aid agency Oxfam, said in the Pakistani
capital, Islamabad.

“People need to be clearly informed about thefinancial and technical support
they are entitled to and the guidance on building earthquake-resistant homes
must be easily available and understandable,” Stocker explained.

Private housing suffered the most extensive damage from the 8 October earthquake
last year, which ripped through parts of Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and
Pakistani-administered Kashmir.

Some 600,000 rural and 30,000 urban housing units were affected across a 30,000 sq km
mountainous terrain, covering nine districts and 4,000 villages, according to the revised damage
assessment of the Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority (ERRA). Initial
estimates put the number of homes to be rebuilt at 400,000.

Under ERRA’s housing reconstruction grant, some 422,777 owners have already received money –
a quarter of whom have started rebuilding, according to ERRA.


Building Back by 2009

On Thursday, speaking at ERRA’s first annual review conference, Pakistani President Gen Pervez
Musharraf promised that 80 percent of the reconstruction work in quake-hit areas would be
completed by 2009, with housing units finished by December 2008.

He added that the addition of 200,000 homes, following a revised assessment, has
increased the overall cost of reconstruction.

“The cost of US $3.6 billion calculated earlier for the reconstruction phase has now increased to
$4.4 billion, creating a shortfall of $800 million,” Musharraf said.

He appealed to the international community and philanthropists to bridge the
funding gap.

Funding gaps in Early Recovery Plan

The lack of funds is also hampering efforts to get sectors such as health and education
up and running again.

In May, the United Nations and ERRA launched an Early Recovery Plan (ERP) to bridge the
gap from relief to reconstruction in the country’s quake-affect north. The total cost of the plan
was revised from an initial $190 million to $255 million.

“As of the end of August, in total, some $161 million had been mobilised, leaving a funding gap of $94
million,” Shoko Noda, a recovery coordination advisor at the UN Integrated
Office of the Resident Coordinator (UNORC), said in Islamabad.

The ERP, covering a 12-month period from May 2006 to April 2007, charted concrete
proposals in eight sectors, including education, health, water and sanitation, housing, needs of
vulnerable groups, disaster risk reduction and coordination.


However, many of the sectors have been facing a serious funding crisis. The health sector has
received less than 50 percent of the total $40 million
needed to fund its programmes.

“A serious crisis for health of vulnerable people could occur if the coming winter were to be
severe – as some predict it to be,” Noda said.

The other least-funded sectors include water and sanitation, housing and support to vulnerable people.

The annual review report of ERRA, released on Thursday, noted: “The pledges made in the donors’
conference in November 2005 did not materialise through the Government of Pakistan as envisaged
earlier; rather funding was being channelled directly through implementing NGOs working in various
sectors with communities on the ground.”

Missing quality education

While some progress is being made in the provision of the basic needs of shelter, food and
drinking water and rehabilitation of infrastructure, education experts feel the  education sector
is missing out.

More than a million schoolchildren were affected by the quake and around 8,000 schools were
destroyed or damaged across the affected region.

While thousands of children spent the last year without proper education in tent schools,
education experts estimate they will have to face many more years without proper classrooms.

Saima Anwer, education director at the Pakistani branch of UK-based charity Save the Children
said: “It will take five to seven years to rebuild the education system, meaning some children will
never get to attend a real primary school.”

“So far bureaucracy, a lack of commitment and insufficient funding for the education sector has meant
that the permanent reconstruction of schools has been extremely slow and in some places
non-existent. School enrolment rates have also plummeted,” Save the Children-UK said in a statement.

“Despite the problems they face, children and teachers walk for hours through difficult terrain every
morning to get to school. But inadequate shelter, lack of water supplies and sanitation facilities,
shortage of teachers and learning material – all provided for a poor learning environment,” Anwer said.

“But, even after an emergency, every child has the right to a quality education. We think they deserve
the same enthusiasm from the government to give them back a safe and conducive learning environment
by stepping up the pace of rebuilding," she added.

Nevertheless, reconstruction and recovery has never been easy.

“When we look at Japan, which is the world’s 2nd largest economy, it took five years to rebuild
140,000 homes after the 1995 quake in Kobe. Obviously, the Pakistani government does not have that
wealth, technical expertise, institutional framework and experience to deliver faster than Japan,”
Oxfam’s Stocker said.

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

IRIN photos and articles of the Asia earthquake impact are available to media and members of the
humanitarian community free-of-charge. Articles can be accessed at www.IRINnews.org. Full-sized
images suitable for publications can be downloaded directly from the public photo
library:www.irinnews.org/photogallery/iringallery .  To search for appropriate photos select 'Pakistan'
under the Country search dropdown box.


New photos and articles are added daily.

October 05, 2006

Gifts of wind and rain

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No climbing of trees , just bending down as I walk with rain dripping off brim of hat and hem of waterproof jacket and trousers to find pockets buldging with bounty so much so that after a few days container is full enough to make the scales smile.

It's so easy to walk with head down with a scowl on ones face as the wind beats rain stingingly into ones face but at this time of the year it is easier to be thankful to the wild weather for bringing to my feet such gifts as cob nuts to be transformed hopefully into delicious treats for the dark days approaching when the light of the summer will be found in an inconspicuous nut forced to the muddy ground by rain and wind and gratefully scooped up into pocket by one rather damp woman and two delighted muddy dogs.

The pastels and paper are definitely in mind for capturing the feeling of these nuts and the mess on the kitchen table attests to experiments with paper mache so maybe there will be other bounty found in this home besdies the obvious delight of sweet nuts in days to come.

Expanding and creating beyond the obvious seems the message of these nuts for me and feels like a message for this life at this time which is the real gift the wind and rain brought me.


(the photos are not good, lack of light, eyes that are not so good at present and lack of camera skill combine to not translate into anything but a sketchy record)

October 03, 2006

Food Fractals

There are mathmaticians and scientists and then there is a cabbage. Playing with the new camera - old, scond hand and limited if the truth be known, is encouraging further looking and sometimes offers me a moment of clarity even possibility of seeing something in a very different light.

The Earth produces such a bounty at this time of year here in the northern hemisphere that often the sense almost reek from the overload and it can be that gifts of sight sound touch taste and smell are hardly acknowledged let alone given a moments thought ot attention.

Learning to hold the camera as steady as I may, finding the distance for bringing something into focus and framing what I see to give me some sense of what I am feeling as I look at the object seems a very good practice for all other areas in my life.

Holding the camera with as little shake as possible when tripod is not to hand or possible to use involves becoming aware not only of the angle I am looking at the object but becoming aware of what angle my body is at, the rate of my breathing, the solidity of my placed feet and the possibility for holding the angle, breath and foot holds without taking concentration off the object seems a way to approach much else in my life.

My photos are not very good as yet but practice may make them more likely to be as least less blurred and  maybe eventually even clear. In the practice comes understanding and ability and sometimes what I might call skill, though what others might call it would almos certainly be open to interpretation:0)

As I stood trying to get a picture of a cabbage these thoughts flitted through my mind but much more than this was the awareness that in the simple act of trying I was gaining so much more.

Through each day letting a string of beads run through my fingers is way to become aware of what ngle I am seeing my world, where I have planted my feet, how my breath changes the shape and stillness of my body and thinking and I am brought to an awareness often that I am gaining so much more than what obviously delights my senses.

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For a beautiful photo of the whole cabbage and glorious closeups plus an explanation of its scientific/mathmatical sense then you need to go here

October 01, 2006

Beginning in the continuing

After an absence of many months the return here is tentative but will hopefully build into a regular rumination and exploration of my ‘spiritual practice’ through the use of found or created objects; using what is held in my somewhat cluttered home, which is more resource bank than homes and gardens spread, or that I come across in the geographical world I travel through which in the main is one formed by a thirty mile radius from my front door with more often travelled pathways being less than ten miles from my door and the most often travelled being the within 200yds of my door.

A small world creating a small life but from this travellers point of view it offers infinity in each moment and my only response comes from the understanding that this finite life can communicate with infinity in the moment if I have an open heart and mind ready to express and discover through creativity of living and being.

I recently added a small element to my camera possibilities, which has encouraged me to begin to explore up close. I am not sure where this will take me, it feels like an adventure I just need to step forward in to and the challenge is to really see hear and touch the landscape both internal and external and translate that from image into word and object whatever that might be.

Each expression and exploration a means to discover ways and means to reawaken, realign and recommit my life to living and my living to life and in all to try and reflect a little light.

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Landscapes it seems are about having both eyes and heart in tune to feed mind and spirit and discover reality for my self.

April 16, 2006

Tolerence(3)

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Soft pastel on A2 cartridge. The image created for the week 13th March to 18th March whilst considering the words - Liberal spirit, Democratic spirit, Resilience, Toughness, Humanity, Sympathy.

Because of life beyond the screen this image has sat waiting to be posted so through the magic of typepad I am dating it for Sunday though it is now Wednesday. This matters not a jot as long as the work continues as far as I am concerned and that does continue but I am using this as a reference for myself too so will be inserting the backlog of other images over the coming week hoping to be in physical space here where posting will coincide with Sunday Tuesday and Thursday come May:0) I am thinking to post all the weekly contemplation pieces for March and most of April by the 30th so that come first Sunday in May there is less of a gap between work completed and work posted here.

April 09, 2006

Tolerence(2)

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The image created for the week 7th March to 12th March on A2 cartridge paper using soft pastel.

The words of this week that I considered as I created the piece of work were - Long suffereing, Stoicism, Forbearance, Kindliness, Unprejudiced, Unbigoted.

Cathy commented on the first weekly image I posted to say it felt as if a safe place was coming into being on the evidence of work being posted or words to that effect. Maybe the work and the posting of it is more of a safe place already in being  just the small matter of me walking through perceived fire and raging torrent to  stand in its midst. I loved the  'wrested from high energy  forces that flirt on the frontiers of chaos' image Cathy conjured up  now that would be something to try and put down on paper:0)  Probably just too involved in the wresting but one day may be.

Till then I find minutes have become hours as I reach for colour and shape to express the reality that I find when I spend time quietly considering words and their message for me and the understanding they offer for the next step as I make it.

The posted representations of my work tend, I feel, to somewhat lift the colour, brighten and take away the depth and layers in the work, my poor photography but I'm working on it. They are vibrant, full of life but are probably not as garish or bright as they may appear on screen but what do I know I'm just the mark maker:0)

April 04, 2006

Aid

Each day one of the things I try to do is to consider one word, to discover its meaning for myself on that day. I have a different word for each day of the year which tie in with the monthly focus words. Year in year out the words stay the same but my reading and understanding of them does not. In the morning my consideration is aided by pen and paper as I try to just put down the first thoughts that come to the surface as I am contemplating the word. In the evening I sit once more and consider the word and my day and doodle shape and colour that reflect word and day.

This year I was given a small box containing a selection of magnetic words which are intended for a fridge but felt they needed to be used in another way. I found a sheet of metal and layed out all the words and began to play a little finally I discovered that trying to make phrases or even meaning was heightened by the small selection of words and began to try and express the daily word in a few words as well as a few paragraphs.

This has now metamorphised into an aim to complete a postcard every day. The postcards are 8"X5". I use felt tips, crayons, paint and collage in a mix or as one medium, whatever I find suggested as I consider the word and what my hands/eyes can manage.I have kept the magnetic word format because it helps me focus.

Each week I put the seven postcards into a handmade envelope. 

I think the 52 filled envelopes I will end up with at the end of the year will be put in to the mail, left on benches I sit on, given in offertory boxes or such like but that is yet to become clear.  For the moment it is just another way of listening.

From now until the end of the year - mine which ends 31st of October, I hope to put a postcard here once a week. Given the fluid nature of life beyond the screen here setting days for posts is always something that is done with sense that it's just a pointer not demarkation line that cannot be crossed hence the Tuesday post is actually being posted on Wednesday as yesterday was a 4&9 day which meant a drive to a large shop where I could buy the file cards I transform in to my postcards. I would really like to use heavier card but I use what I can find that my budget can stretch to.

The postcard below was made using felt tip pens

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April 02, 2006

Tolerence(1)

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This is the image I created for the week of the 28th February to March 6. It is A2 in size and I've used soft pastels.
The word for the month of March is Tolerence and during this week the words I considered were harmony, acceptance, humanity, patience, sympathy, endurance, clemency. Out of my consideration came words and small doodles which when brought together in my mind as I looked at the blank piece of A2 cartridge paper became the image above.

Endeavouring to make known to myself what has been discovered, what may have changed or be in transition towards transformation is one of the reasons I do this, another is basically I can do no other if I am to feel in any way that I am honouring the path I tread and the Earth I engage with as carefully as I may.

Out of thought and images created comes understanding and that is all I could ever wish for.

March 26, 2006

Landscapes of My Life

I had thought to start posting the weekly image I create from my consideration of the daily word but on further reflection have decided that I will start that next Sunday so I each image will be a month on from their inspiration which will give me some space to continue to create the next months with fresh eyes and clear mind.

I did not begin the weekly images until March of this year till then consideration of the daily word in notes put in a small pad plus postcard size doodles of day were the elements but during February I  began to consider the shapes and colours I see when each daily word is presented to me and decided this was an expansion of this practice that needed to be approached practically. As it stands at the moment each Sunday I aim to put the shapes and colours together in a whole.  This will mean a 52 page 'book' for the year , there are other strands to this I feel but am not clear as yet what but I certainly see the  book being similar to the wallpaper sample books with a handle to carry it and bolts through the 'spine' to hold it all together. I loved those books when I was a child all that colour and texture I suppose.

So instead of not posting an image here today I place another pastel. It is part of a group of work that I'm doing to try to open up how it is to live my life with vertigo and other 'differences'.

All the works I am creating for this project are snapshots on a journey that never finds arrival destination just many stopping and shuddering to a halt viewing points but as a group may just open a small window on living this life.

This picture I've called Landscape of  Vertigo.

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The mount around the picture is not fixed permenantly as this is just the first stage for this piece of paper but I thought the mount might help viewers see it a little clearer. It's soft pastel on cartridge paper and at present measures 30"X26"

Working with fragments is what I feel I do and often the fragments need to be further fragmented so that a wholeness may be built from that. This is certainly what is happening with this project which is bubling gently and progresses slowly but surely. I will probably post further 'excerpts' from this project over time but the total sum of the piece will almost certainly not be seen here till after the beginning of my New Year which begins in November.

October 17, 2005

Straight path curving

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I sent no postcards, wrote no letters about the people and places I was seeing, did not collect souvenirs nor suntan for that matter but it's  certainly been time of exploration, discovery and mapping.

The 'captains log' is full of the mundane and ordinary of a small every day life lived extra-ordinarily with only the moment to stand in and on. There are notes of the weather in heart and mind, statements of fact and fiction all mixed up into a whole that as yet I only discern a small element of.

This weBlog came into being because it felt way to share a particular strand of the creativity I call my life. I am told by some people that you have to be special to be 'a creative' 'an artist' but then I am someone who embraces solitude and silence in laughter and song knowing that there are no special people for all life is extra-ordinary and nothing could be more special than that.

Continue reading "Straight path curving" »

The sleeping blogs - snoring but accessible

My Photo

November 2007

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
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4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  

Weekly contemplation

  • Tolerence(3)
    Weekly consideration of the daily 'thought' words, brought to life in shape and colour as expression of these words and the word of the month. I did not begin the weekly images until March of 2006 till then consideration of the daily word in notes put in a small pad plus postcard size doodles of day were the elements but during February I began to consider the shapes and colours I see when each daily word is presented to me and decided this was an expansion of this practice that needed to be approached practically. As it stands at the moment each Sunday I aim to put the shapes and colours together in a whole. This will mean a 52 page 'book' for the year , there are other strands to this I feel but am not clear as yet what but I certainly see the book being similar to the wallpaper sample books with a handle to carry it and bolts through the 'spine' to hold it all together. I loved those books when I was a child all that colour and texture I suppose. Like my childhood wallpaper books by unscrewing the the hinge/spine, pages will be able to travel from book to wall though unlike the selotape or blutac that was used to attach the patterns to my walls these pages will get at the least black mounts and could be framed glazed and hung as art.... but then I thought the pages of the wallpaper books were art and in truth one of my favourite places to go to this day is the V&A Museum in London and spend hours drooling over the samples of fabulous hand printed papers for walls which sometimes happened to be fabric too.

Today for today

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    This began with an invite to submit 16 Artist Trading Cards on the theme TODAY. I went off on a tangent and didn't produce 16 ATC's but 18 concertina 'books' appeared.

Landscapes of my life

  • Landscape of Vertigo
    The works I am creating for this project are snapshots on a journey that never finds arrival destination just many stopping and shuddering to a halt viewing points but as a group may just open a small window on living this life. This is an ongoing piece of work with no deadline but I aim to have the first body of work in some sort of order by New Year - my new year which begins November 2006

Another part of 'me'

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