15 Feb 2022

Tonga PM counts mental health 'cost' of disasters

3:49 pm on 15 February 2022

Tonga's Prime Minister Hu'akavemeiliku Siaosi Sovaleni says his island nation is trying to rebuild the lives of its people and not just its infrastructure, in the wake of the devastating volcanic eruption and tsunami.

Tonga's Prime Minister Hu'akavameiliku

Siaosi Sovaleni says his people are still struggling in the aftermath of the disasters. Photo: Kaniva Tonga

In an exclusive interview with the BBC, the prime minister said his people are still struggling to get over the traumatic experience.

The devastation from the tsunami and the volcano is thought to have damaged about 18.5 percent of Tonga's GDP, which the Tongan leader called "a big hit".

And while the financial costs are piling up, the mental health cost for his people is also formidable.

"Most of their houses were destroyed. The main thing is to actually make sure they are safe," he said.

"But relocation comes with its own challenges. It's not an easy choice - trying to decide whether you stay in a vulnerable place or move to a very new place - leaving behind all the memories. We're looking at whether we relocate them over here, or rebuild where they were.

"We recognise that even though we might start rebuilding some of the houses like next month or so, the mental side of it will take a bit longer."

It's only been a few months since he was appointed to the top job. Within weeks, he had to face a crisis on an unimaginable scale.

Reliving the moment, the Tongan leader seemed visibly shaken by his memories.

"We were at home that night, and you know that explosion was like nothing - I mean I haven't heard something like that. It was terrible - and then all of a sudden, it was nightfall."

According to Nasa, the volcanic eruption in Tonga was hundreds of times more powerful than the atomic bomb the US dropped on Hiroshima during World War II.

The eruption "obliterated" a volcanic island north of the Tongan capital Nuku'alofa, the agency said.

Tonga says more than four-fifths of the population has been affected by the tsunami and falling ash.

"Going through the tsunami that night…moving from daylight to darkness, in over half an hour because of the ash fall, we recognise that's a problem," he said.

A grab taken from footage by Japan's Himawari-8 satellite and released by the National Institute of Information and Communications (Japan) on January 15, 2022 shows the volcanic eruption that provoked a tsunami in Tonga.

Photo: AFP / National Institute of Information and Communications

Covid-19 cases rising

The Tongan leader is also grappling with an outbreak of Covid cases, which have stalled recovery and foreign aid efforts.

The prime minister was adamant that the Covid-19 cases had not come from foreign aid deliveries, as has been previously reported, but from the port instead.

The first shipment of aid sent to Tonga by New Zealand community members and businesses is finally being unpacked after completing mandatory quarantine on Tongatapu.

The first shipment of aid sent to Tonga by New Zealand community members and businesses being unpacked at its destination. Photo: Aotearoa Tonga Relief Committee

He added that the strict containment measures the island nation has taken to prevent Covid-19 cases from rising is taking a toll on relief efforts.

"Right now we have 139 Covid cases, that's over the last week," he told me.

"It would have been nice to actually have those extra hands…to actually help us with some of the efforts," he said. "It definitely has some effect on how we are supporting the affected communities."

One of the countries that has been offering assistance, besides the US and Australia, has been China, which this week is sending warships with aid.

Tonga owes more than $100 million in debt to China - a small amount for many countries, but for the poor Pacific island state, it's a fortune.

"We are discussing how we can move forward addressing the debt we have not just with China, but also our developing partners," he said.

- BBC

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