For thousands of farmers at Gosaba in the Sundarbans the coming monsoon  does not hold out any hope as they continue to battle the extreme  salinity of the soil caused by cyclone Aila two years ago.Adding to their agony is the lack of manpower as the area has experienced large scale migration since the natural calamity. 
 The island-dotted tidal region, which falls in the world’s largest  delta, has no industry and the people largely depend on agriculture,  salt water pisci-culture and collection of forest produce as their  livelihood given the area’s unique topography of tropical rain forests  and innumerable rivers. 
 A visit to Chhoto Mollahkahli and Kumirmari panchayat areas in coastal  Gosaba block, which forms the southernmost tip of the Sundarbans,  reveals the plight of people faced with the environmental wreck caused  by the devastating cyclone in May, 2009. 
 The area had experienced devastating floods as the ill-maintained mud  embankments gave way allowing saline water of Vidyadhari river to gush  in for miles and remain stagnant for over a month. The saline water also  flooded the sweet water ponds killing a large variety of fish thereby  affecting the livelihood of a large number of people of the riverine  area. 
 The soil usually turns more fertile after a flood but the stagnant  waters have spelt disaster and increased salinity of the soil, so much  so that paddy could not be grown for the past two years, inhabitants of  the area said. Paddy is grown twice a year in Sundarbans but the rabi  crop this year was a failure as the yield was extremely low. 
 Efforts to control the salinity had been made by both government and  civil society but the problem is still huge. South 24 Parganas District  Magistrate Narayan Swarup Nigam said the problem of salinity was being  sought to be tackled by promoting fresh water conservation. Small ponds  to store rain water have been dug in villages of Basanti and Gosaba  blocks. 
 “There have been efforts to restore the environment by the Sundarbans  Development Board but in Gosaba coastal area the problem of salinity  exists,” he said. 
 “Soil tests funded by European Commission Humanitarian Aid (ECHO) had  found that the salinity had reached a depth of about five feet in most  areas. This has hit paddy cultivation in the Rabi season this year too,”  says Mr Subroto Biswas of Bagmari Mother and Child Development Mission  (BMCDM). 
 The organic and chemical anti-salinity treatment had, however, helped in  a fair yield of winter vegetables this year for which BMCDM provided  seeds and pesticides. “This was because roots of winter vegetables do  not penetrate beyond two feet but paddy cultivation needs stagnant water  and this causes the salinity to resurface,” says Mr Biswas. 
 The area presents a curious picture of flourishing trees which grow in  tidal areas and totally dry and bleached mango, jackfruit and other  trees, which died after the waters receded.The situation can improve if there is heavy rain this year. But even if  there are heavy rains, paddy cultivation would be difficult as majority  of the men of the area have migrated to far off cities like Bangalore,  Delhi, Mumbai and even the Andaman Islands to work as daily labourers,  say the villagers. 
 “I wish to cultivate paddy in the field adjacent to my house but I  cannot find anybody to till the land. It has become impossible to cut  down a tree, prepare the ground for vegetables or repair a roof as there  are simply no men to do it,” says Sumitra Mondal, a housewife of a  former zamindar family at Chhoto Mollahkhali. 
 The women who are left behind face tremendous hardship. The situation is  pathetic at Kumirmari, where many of them still live under temporary  shelters made of HDPE polythene sheets as the government grants to  rebuild their houses are still to reach them. 
 The displacement and hardship has also led to trafficking of young  women, though most of the villagers are not willing to speak openly  about it. Mr Biswas, who has been working in the area since a week after  the cyclone and is one of the most recognised faces, recounts that he  had personally helped in rescuing four local girls from brothels in  Pune, Bangalore, Pune and Patna with the help of police. 
  “At least 20 girls were trafficked from the coastal Gosaba area which comprise 23 villages,” he says. 
 Development projects which could have helped the people have been few and far between, says Shamsul Alam Khan, BMCDM secretary. 
 Mr Biswas blames the lack of technical knowhow and the laid back  attitude of the panchayat heads at Gosaba for the situation. “In some  areas there has been remarkable change but in the majority, the  panchayats have simply failed to take any initiative to get MGNREGA  projects sanctioned.” 
Courtesy : The Hindu

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