Tuesday, December 23, 2014

A SEQUEL TO ‘AS WATERS GONE BY’ BY BIDE ASOME

    To Anna (Dr. Bide Asome’s wife) and to the rest of Pa Lang’s surviving children I say ‘ashia’ for the enormous losses you have all suffered. I am truly sorry and you should all accept sincerest heartfelt sympathy from my family” Jackson Nanje
By Jackson W. Nanje
    Bide Asome summarizes his book, As Waters Gone By as, “a reminder of the fragility and resilience of human life in the face of disaster”. True, when confronted with disaster of the magnitude of the Limbe landslide and Flood, humans are basically defenseless and rendered insignificant. However, survivors become resilient by developing coping skills to deal with the aftermath of the disaster. This is what I gathered from the author’s summation of his work.   He is right to think of the book in this way. However, this writer of A Sequel to As Waters Gone By, after reading the excellently written book by Asome arrives at a slightly different conclusion---that of a chaotic government (of Cameroon), which operates without an Emergency Management Plan that ought to address disasters of any kind, if and when people are confronted by them. What is intriguing about the Cameroon government is that, one would think that after so many notable disaster occurrences in the country such as the violent Lake Nyos disaster that killed 1,700 people and more than 3000 livestock  some thirty (30) years ago, and the repeated Mt. Cameroon volcanic eruptions that has, on several occasions, chased inhabitants of Sanje, Batoke and Bakingili villages from their homes and equally destroyed farmlands, it should have been lessons learnt by the government of Cameroon to put in place a concise Disaster Management Agency to prepare for, and mitigate disasters, before and when they occur. Rather, a policy of wait-and do-nothing has been put in place. Good governance enables preparedness for disaster and not to react to it when it occurs.
     The Sequel lays emphasize on some of the boiling issues the writer eloquently writes about which, in my opinion, depict the ineffectiveness of the government of Cameroon that lacks the capabilities or the aforethought in enacting policies that would safeguard its people against disasters. We shall likewise take an in-depth look at the South West Region, which is situated on the coastline of the Atlantic Ocean and with rivers Ndian and Mungo and three mountains---Mt Cameroon (13354ft), Mt. Kupe Muanenguba (6772ft) and Mt. Rumpi (5801ft) with a notable history of volcanic eruption. Furthermore, we shall discuss the social issues or myths which the author writes about that almost sent the central character (Pa Lang) to early death (even though the governments’ inability to rehabilitate the victims was the primary cause of Pa Lang’s death years later) and explore ways (by way of education), of diffusing such myths which is quite pervasive in our primitive Cameroonian communities from ever reoccurring. It is here, too, that we shall discuss the merits of the book and suggest a pathway for Cameroon and the South West Region on ways that disaster can be mitigated, prepared for, and if they do occur, how the response team can respond to disasters and so too to rehabilitate the victims of disasters.
Dr. Bide Asome
(Author)
Scientists have always for good writers make. The late Peter K. Palangyo of Tanzania who wrote Dying in the Sun is one of such excellent writers who traded his profession as a biology lecturer for a successful career in fictional writing. I can see Dr. Bide Asome, a Pharmacist, making a similar career transition, trading medication for penmanship. Asome has captured the imagination of the readers in his first literary work by creating literary suspense throughout the book. As Waters Gone By is indeed a traveler’s handbook. It is difficult, even to those who do not have the appetite for reading, to shelve the book to engage in something else once they start reading it. There is intense curiosity to want to know what he has written in the next page and page after next. Asome’s fluidity and excellent penmanship reminds me of another excellent Cameroon writer, Mongo Beti, who wrote Mission to Kala. The language is simple and soft and the author is artful in bringing the storyline and language to an elementary level in order to enable 'the rolling stone to gather moss' to reverse the idiomatic expression of Publilius Syrus or for the general understanding and appreciation of his narratives.



The award-winning narrative by Bide ASOME
The main plot of As Waters Gone By is set in Limbe, Cameroon with subplots in Maryland, USA and Bu village in the North West Region of Cameroon. The disaster happened in Limbe, the news about the disaster was delivered to Pa Lang and children in the United States where they held memorial services and finally, Bu village was the place of Pa Lang and his wife’s birth; and, it was their final resting place. The writer begins the book with the protagonist, Pa Lang, traveling to the United States of America to visit his daughters, grand children and son-in laws for the first time ever with his wife intentionally staying behind to look after their other children. He was unaware of the misfortunes that nature had preserved for his family which, he was later accused of having used mystical powers (powers he never had) to wipe away his beloved family. Curious of bringing back new stories of the much talked about journey from United States of America to his wife when he returns to Cameroon, he was confronted with a problem which, the constant reflection of it was the ultimate cause of his own death.
     Families desperate for land to live and farm had built homes in the hills of Mabeta New Layout in Limbe and in total defiance of government building codes, exposing them clearly at risk of a possible disaster. However, an irresponsible, poorly-trained code enforcers at the Limbe City Council did nothing to enforce the code. Had the Limbe City Council enforced the building codes Pa Lang and several others would have been aware of the risks involved in building in the area. But they did not do so thereby exposing many hundreds at risk. When the heavy rains came through Limbe, it was evident that what many had thought (feared) about (of the land collapsing on the homes of residents in Mabeta New Layout) was indeed what happened. Most of the houses collapsed and many families lost their lives.
    One thing that we should all know is that human beings would settle even in high risk areas if they face no resistance from government authorities; however, this type of risky settlement patterns should be prohibited by an effective government which should be capable of assessing those risks and enforcing the necessary codes in the books. It is rather unfortunate and regrettable for the Limbe City Council authorities to blame its citizens for settling in vulnerable areas of the city when the council has the law on their side to prevent such risky settlements. The council is culpable or should be held responsible for exposing its citizens at risk.
                    Myth of the Bu People of the North West Region
     In a country like Cameroon, with hardly any known system of organization in place to inform, prepare and educate the population about the destructive nature of environmental hazards the natives will always seek solace in outdated and retrogressive beliefs that continue to plunge the society further into medieval ages. Ill-educated people, relying on their old redundant customs and traditions as a testament of justice for all have, in many cases, have been responsible for the faith of innocent people. Yes, it is absolutely true that Pa Lang was exonerated from charges that he’d killed members of his family who were clearly victims of the flood and landslide. They contend that he’d carefully planned this wizardry to leave his family behind (in Cameroon) and ‘escape’ to the United States of America while they perish behind. It is the belief that those who implore such mythical powers to kill members of their families do so because of their desires to get-rich-quick and usually, the killers themselves are hardly in the scene of the crime. What a backward way of castigating people of crimes they did not commit! Why would a man who has spent so much of his life-savings, to educate his children to some of the finest universities around the world, indulge into such acts against them? It completely defuses the thinking of Bu villagers, Pa Lang’s accusers.
     A man who’d suffered great loss was rejected and transformed into a caricature of human vice by his people who could have implored some degree of reasonableness by empathizing and sympathizing with his family and search for ways to rehabilitate them from their terrible loss. The ill-effect of over-reliance on superstitious beliefs continues to drench us into backwardness; and, it is the root cause for our lack of social progress. The response to disasters such as the Limbe landslide and flood is treated quite differently in developed countries. The lives of the survivors are considered the most important during and after a disaster. They usually always implore the last phase of the emergency management system, that is, rehabilitation of the victims to normalize their lives unlike what obtains in Cameroon, where accusation of “nyongo”or the use of mystical powers reigns supreme amongst village-thinking folks.
      As a way forward, the government should make considerable efforts to diffuse these unfounded myths which exist within our society by educating them about the causes of disasters and what should be done once disasters occur. It is the responsibility of the government to introduce disaster management courses in our high schools and universities which are centers for reformation.
The roles of the Cameroon and South West Regional governments in addressing Emergencies
     Why can the government of Cameroon and that of the South West  Region not look into the foreseeable future and put plans in place aimed at minimizing disaster re-occurrences all over the national territory, stretches my understanding of their approach of confronting this problem beyond belief. The emergency or disaster management has four phases worthy of any government’s keen examination and implementation: Mitigation, Preparedness, Response and Rehabilitation.
a)      Mitigation: What the Cameroon and the South West Regional governments ought to know is that, disasters can happen anytime and anywhere even in places least expected. It is therefore imperative for these governments to start preparing now as oppose to doing so after a disaster has occurred. Once disaster best practices are put in place, it reduces the likelihood of loss of life and property when disaster does occur. It also reduces the burden of the tax payers and other members of the community who are always the ones to shoulder the financial responsibilities of any disaster because the losses shall be minimal. And knowing that Cameroon and the South West Region have been too prone to disaster, best practices to minimize losses of life and property should be central in policy formation.
     There should be efforts made at establishing emergency management agencies in many of the vulnerable areas of the country and adequate funding should be given to such agencies.
b)     Preparedness: There is a thin line between preparedness and mitigation. While mitigation involves the putting of disaster mechanisms in place to reduce loss of life and property before disaster occurs, preparedness is how society’s coping mechanism ones disaster has occurred. Knowing that disaster can occur anytime and anywhere, the ability of how prepared the government and the people are to face it, is crucial? We know that in the Limbe landslide and flood disaster, just like the Lake Nyos disaster, the government and the people were not prepared for these disasters. Lessons learned?
     If any lessons have been learned by the Cameroon government and the regions where these disasters have occurred done to prepare the citizens from future disasters? Education is the least and the most potent effort governments can take to sensitize citizens who would be equipped with the necessary tools to prepare for it. Keeping adequate food supplies and fortification of their homes to withstand the adverse effect of disaster are some of the things that citizens can do if the government fails to take the first step to educate society.
c)      Response: This is the phase after the disaster has occurred. What do you do to rescue survivors or victims of a disaster and their property? It is a critical phase of any disaster. The author indicates on page 75 that, “during the Limbe disaster, it took over twenty-four hours for a disaster relief team to come from Douala, some fifty or more miles away.” He lamented by stating that, “more lives would probably have been saved had help come sooner." This is an indictment of the system in place in Cameroon which is vastly ineffective. The governments of Cameroon and the South West Region must set up emergency response agencies, equip and train the emergency response team on best practices to enable first responders to a disaster scene save lives and property. The benevolence of citizens is usually a vital addition to the emergency management first responder team; but the trained team of any government is vital.
     In As Waters Gone By, Asome chronicles the chaotic state of the makeshift response team to the Limbe landslide and flood disaster. It is important to underscore the importance of this makeshift team acting as first responders as the writer opined; however, such makeshift team can never substitute a well organized professional team if the governments had one in place. Professionals in any field are always the answer to many of our problems not untrained individuals who are littered all over the surfaces of Cameroon.   It is therefore the recommendation of this writer to the government of Cameroon and especially to the region of the South West, which is prone to disasters, to organize their priorities towards setting up an emergency management agency.  This is particularly critical to the South West Region which is surrounded with disaster possibilities (several mountains with fault-lines, the Atlantic Ocean, rivers Ndian and Mungo, lakes Muanenguba and Barombi and an Oil Refinery which may risk a combustible explosion).
d)     Rehabilitation: This is where the scars of the disaster victims ought to be handled by professionally-trained individuals hired and trained by the government. Citizens want to be assured that their safety shall be in good hands if they were to be victims themselves, tomorrow.
     The total cost to rehabilitate the Limbe landslide and flood victims was estimated at $3.000.000 (1.5bnfca). And huge sums of donations came from individuals and international relief agencies all over the world. There was also ten (10) additional new housing units donated by the Limbe based Oil Refinery company, S.O.N.A.R.A, as a genuine rehabilitation initiative to the victims. It is sad to know that of all these grandiose generosity by relief agencies, none of the victims benefited from it and no Limbe Council City authority in charge with the distribution has ever been questioned for misusing or stealing the funds meant for the victims to the consternation of the Cameroonian citizens and the world’s relief agencies. It is painful to even mention that, Pa Lang who was hit the hardest received a total sum of $540.00 (270.000fcfa) even though enough funds had been raised to take of him and others. Some received as little as $80.00 (40.000fcfa). A corrupt system and corrupt people at work! Even the housing units which were donated a couple of years later by the Oil Refinery company was refused the victims for reasons completely appalling to them. Yet, thieves of the Limbe disaster are still walking scot-free and the disaster victims have been dying one after the other of frustrations caused by governments that failed its survivors. It was the same faith suffered by the victims of the Lake Nyos disaster in the North West Region of Cameroon who recently received some exercise books from the government as compensation of the heavy losses they suffered thirty years later. A government shouldn’t be this cruel to its citizens.
     Thievery and misappropriations of funds of this magnitude by the Limbe City Council charged with the responsibilities of ensuring that disaster victims are properly rehabilitated as Asome stated in As Waters Gone By should not be accepted by any one. The government of Cameroon and that of the South West Region should establish an Investigatory Commission, to look into the issues and bring culprits of this gross misappropriation and thievery to face justice.
          What must be done to improve disaster management in Cameroon
     On page 75, the author did a remarkable job in providing some recommendations to the government of the South West Region especially on what must be done to somehow arrest disasters, prone to the region. He stated that since the region is vulnerable to flood, landslide and occasional volcanic eruptions, it is therefore imperative for the government:
1)     To establish a permanent presence of a local emergency management system in the region as this would be of tremendous benefit to the citizens of the city. This agency would identify and assess the potential risks to the local community, enforce building codes and zoning, and possibly provide an early disaster warning system to citizens.
2)     To establish academic courses on emergency or disaster management procedures in high schools and universities not only in the South West Region but in academic institutions throughout the land. Since mitigation, preparedness, response and rehabilitation are integral components of disaster management, it is imperative that these teachings are obtained in an organized system.
3)     To ensure that institutional corruption is contained by an established agency it is imperative to recruit professionals who will project a positive image of the new agency. Institutional corruption should be thoroughly investigated and culprits brought to justice. Like many Cameroon government establishments, accusations about corruption and corrupt practices are foundational and should be contained  
4)      By creating an emergency management agency throughout the country, it will reduce the likelihood of corruption and increase the possibility of accountability because picking people from street corners to assist in disaster management is the wrong way to handle any crisis. The street wanderers turn disaster personnel overnight, do not protect the lives and property; they are only there to loot as much as they can. It is the testimony from the author and several other investigative interviews conducted by Nanje School of Creative Thinking that there was gross misappropriation of donated gifts by these so-called volunteers.
5)     To ensure that the public is informed on emergency management safety methods, education should be rigorously pursued as an essential component of the system.
     The governments of Cameroon and that of the South West Region should study the critical issues that Asome raises in his award-winning As Waters Gone By and gradually look into ways of creating Disaster Management Agencies and provide full funding for the agencies.
To get a copy of this award-winning book by Dr. Bide Asome click the link below
https://www.amazon.com/As-Waters-Gone-Asome-Bide/dp/163268831X/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1511477414&sr=8-5&keywords=as+waters+gone+by




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