Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Life goes on' - Panama islanders relocated as sea level rises

EUR -
AED 4.104356
AFN 76.945527
ALL 99.231336
AMD 432.618629
ANG 2.010722
AOA 1036.726011
ARS 1074.130668
AUD 1.641363
AWG 2.011392
AZN 1.900177
BAM 1.955432
BBD 2.252676
BDT 133.324923
BGN 1.955432
BHD 0.420421
BIF 3234.291666
BMD 1.11744
BND 1.441629
BOB 7.70955
BRL 6.162794
BSD 1.11569
BTN 93.249161
BWP 14.748226
BYN 3.651213
BYR 21901.820514
BZD 2.248877
CAD 1.517204
CDF 3208.169723
CHF 0.949813
CLF 0.037598
CLP 1037.43487
CNY 7.880073
CNH 7.870134
COP 4641.826925
CRC 578.891117
CUC 1.11744
CUP 29.612155
CVE 110.244264
CZK 25.088083
DJF 198.672632
DKK 7.466731
DOP 66.967404
DZD 147.657227
EGP 54.142816
ERN 16.761597
ETB 129.466549
FJD 2.459263
FKP 0.850996
GBP 0.838761
GEL 3.050454
GGP 0.850996
GHS 17.539701
GIP 0.850996
GMD 76.544228
GNF 9639.186978
GTQ 8.624378
GYD 233.396101
HKD 8.706365
HNL 27.675794
HRK 7.597486
HTG 147.212311
HUF 393.517862
IDR 16941.281656
ILS 4.226062
IMP 0.850996
INR 93.284379
IQD 1461.525104
IRR 47035.835678
ISK 152.262759
JEP 0.850996
JMD 175.28703
JOD 0.791704
JPY 160.715782
KES 143.92293
KGS 94.131451
KHR 4531.147742
KMF 493.181817
KPW 1005.695207
KRW 1488.976663
KWD 0.340898
KYD 0.929725
KZT 534.90939
LAK 24636.366177
LBP 99910.008054
LKR 340.395975
LRD 223.13803
LSL 19.586216
LTL 3.299509
LVL 0.675928
LYD 5.298004
MAD 10.818165
MDL 19.468338
MGA 5046.050895
MKD 61.603413
MMK 3629.400954
MNT 3797.060466
MOP 8.955716
MRU 44.337661
MUR 51.26838
MVR 17.164402
MWK 1934.436154
MXN 21.694872
MYR 4.69883
MZN 71.34836
NAD 19.586216
NGN 1831.986636
NIO 41.062277
NOK 11.71496
NPR 149.198937
NZD 1.7912
OMR 0.429669
PAB 1.11569
PEN 4.181813
PGK 4.367179
PHP 62.188869
PKR 309.994494
PLN 4.274599
PYG 8704.362807
QAR 4.067535
RON 4.972493
RSD 117.064981
RUB 103.380555
RWF 1504.017111
SAR 4.19314
SBD 9.282502
SCR 14.578258
SDG 672.172563
SEK 11.365705
SGD 1.442953
SHP 0.850996
SLE 25.530486
SLL 23432.148605
SOS 637.580078
SRD 33.752303
STD 23128.748217
SVC 9.762164
SYP 2807.601005
SZL 19.593315
THB 36.793946
TJS 11.859769
TMT 3.911039
TND 3.380564
TOP 2.617155
TRY 38.124254
TTD 7.588573
TWD 35.736828
TZS 3045.827114
UAH 46.114226
UGX 4133.222587
USD 1.11744
UYU 46.101329
UZS 14197.329642
VEF 4047984.459863
VES 41.096936
VND 27494.606824
VUV 132.664701
WST 3.125996
XAF 655.833645
XAG 0.035881
XAU 0.000426
XCD 3.019937
XDR 0.826844
XOF 655.833645
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.723102
ZAR 19.477937
ZMK 10058.30169
ZMW 29.537444
ZWL 359.815167
  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

'Life goes on' - Panama islanders relocated as sea level rises
'Life goes on' - Panama islanders relocated as sea level rises / Photo: MARTIN BERNETTI - AFP

'Life goes on' - Panama islanders relocated as sea level rises

Alberto Lopez prepares breakfast with water lapping at his ankles. The day began with rain, and his ramshackle home on the Panamanian island of Carti Sugtupu was flooded, not for the first time.

Text size:

Lopez is one of 1,200 Indigenous residents of the island being relocated to the mainland, as sea level rise due to global warming threatens to permanently devour their ancestral home.

The community is the first in Panama to be displaced by climate change.

Since Monday, residents have been packing and moving their belongings by boat to the Nuevo Carti (New Carti) settlement built for them by the government in the Guna Yala Indigenous region on Panama's Caribbean coast.

On the island, Lopez lives in a small house with a dirt floor, no toilet, and only intermittent electricity.

In preparation for the move, his family is stacking clothes and other meager belongings on a small table at the front door, along with cleaning supplies and a Bible.

Their destination, Nuevo Carti, boasts houses that each have two bedrooms, a living and dining room, kitchen, bathroom and laundry -- all with potable water and electricity.

Each house is about 41 square meters (441 square feet) on a plot of 300 square meters, and there are common cultural spaces and facilities for disabled people.

The conditions are undoubtedly better, but the community has mixed feelings nevertheless.

"We are sad because if this island disappears, a part of our heart, of our culture, disappears with it," said Lopez, who was born on Carti Sugtupu 72 years ago.

As a child, he fished there, as do most islanders, and worked in the fields on the mainland.

His mother sent him to study in Panama City, where he lived for more than 30 years before returning home.

"I came back because my heart wanted me here, and this house is the one my family left me," Lopez told AFP.

"My grandmother, my grandfather and my aunt died here... it's not going to be the same, but I have to move on because life goes on," he added.

- 'A brutal change' -

On Carti Sugtupu, the size of five football fields, Lopez and his fellow islanders lived in overcrowded conditions with few basic services.

They use communal toilets with pieces of timber laid down as seats.

The community lived off fishing, the harvesting of starchy crops like cassava and plantains, traditional textile production, and some tourism.

Their homes flooded on a regular basis, and the government expects that by 2050, Carti Sugtupu will be completely under water, along with several other islands in the archipelago of 350, only 49 of them inhabited.

All are between 50 centimeters (19 inches) and one meter (about three feet) above sea level.

Scientists say climate change is causing sea levels to rise, mainly due to meltwater from warming glaciers and ice sheets.

President Laurentino Cortizo said recently the government was studying which other communities may have to be moved next.

On Monday, the first day of the mass transfer, police helped the community move their belongings to their new homes.

At a small pier, the officers helped load furniture, buckets of clothes, plastic chairs, some appliances and a stuffed animal for the 15-minute boat trip.

"I am sad to leave this house," said Idelicia Avila, 42, adding: "We are moving because there's no room for us here" on the island.

Nuevo Carti was erected by the government at a cost of $12.2 million, transferring ownership to the community.

Lopez will live in house number 256 with three sisters and a daughter.

He hopes to grow crops such as pumpkins, cassava, pineapples or bananas to sell, and is already planning where the furniture and appliances will go -- and even contemplating a possible extension to his new house.

"Here we have everything to bathe... there (on the island) we don't have that," he said as he showed AFP around his new bathroom.

"Of course, everyone is happy, but it's a brutal change."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)