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A global
'national security' issue lurks at Bangladesh's border
By LISA FRIEDMAN
BHOMRA, Bangladesh -- A high, heavily reinforced barbed
wire fence cuts a jagged line through an otherwise empty
field of tall grass and tamarind plants here. Climate change
didn't bring this fence, but it is providing a fresh reason
for its existence and ongoing expansion. On this side of
the fence, rising sea levels caused by climate change are
beginning to inundate low-lying Bangladesh. Scientists estimate
that by midcentury as many as 15 million people could be
displaced.
On the other side of the fence, India isn't
taking any chances. Already alarmed about illegal immigration,
it is nearing completion of about 2,100 miles worth of high-tech
fencing along its long and porous border with Bangladesh.
"Bangladesh is a country that could provide more climate
refugees than anywhere else on earth," said Isabel
Hilton, an environmental commentator whose London-based
nonprofit promotes climate change dialogue in China and
throughout Asia. "What that fence says to me is, wherever
those people are going to go, they're not going to India,"
Hilton said.
The prospect of international migration is
a touchy subject in Bangladesh. But for national security
experts, it's the most feared global consequence of climate
change. As warming temperatures deplete water supplies and
alter land use, military analysts warn, already-vulnerable
communities in Asia and Africa could descend into conflicts
and even wars as more people clamor for increasingly scarce
resources. A distant issue, or today's problem?
Research on how climate change might spark conflict is still
in its infancy, and it often tends to be thin and speculative.
Indeed, a growing body of international conflict experts
say the threat is greatly overblown. Nevertheless, the international
security argument has become a sharp weapon in the arsenal
of climate change activists who want a global emissions
treaty.
Just last month, Lord Nicholas Stern, the
eminent climate change economist, warned that failing to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions could bring "an extended
world war."
But in Bangladesh, where most of the country
is less than 20 feet above sea level, many analysts say
leaders appear caught between wanting to ring alarm bells
about climate change and a desire to avoid the touchy and
seemingly unresolvable issue of migration. India claims
that about 5 million Bangladeshis already are living there
illegally, while Bangladesh officials say the numbers are
wildly exaggerated. The issue is a constant source of tension
between the nations. Climate change isn't helping.
"This question of migration to India
is one of the topics that is a heated debate in our country,
because we believe people are not moving to India,"
said Abdul Kalam Azad, a senior research fellow at the Bangladesh
Institute of International and Strategic Studies. He and
others describe climate migration as a distant issue earning
an inordinate amount of media hype.
Rabab Fatima, South Asia representative for
the International Organization for Migration, said the political
sensitivity has led to a dearth of studies on what climate
change will mean for migration patterns in Bangladesh. "The
country is not yet prepared to know how to deal with it,"
she said. The prevailing attitude, she said, is that "climate
change is a big problem. Migration is a big problem. Let's
not link it. Let it happen in the next generation."
'We are in trouble here'
In the border village of Harinagar, on the
other hand, cross-border climate migration is an everyday
cause of stress and concern. Almost every person in this
cluster of mud and thatch homes has a relative who has illegally
crossed the Ichamati River to find work in India. Shushanto,
27, said her brother decided last year that he could no
longer support his family by casting the river for shrimp
fry. He left for India with his wife and child, and a few
months later Shushanto's parents joined them. The men do
construction work in the town of Gauramganagar, outside
Kolkata.
"We are in trouble here. If the water
comes up, we will have to move, as well," said Shushanto,
who lost part of her home in a September flood. "I
don't really want to go, but if the situation arises where
I have to go, that's where we'll go."
Villagers readily acknowledge that in this
region, which is so close to the border that Indian SIM
cards work in Bangladesh cell phones, families have always
traversed nations. After all, they share language and customs
with their neighbors in India's West Bengal. Bangladesh
officials insist that they haven't detected any new dynamic
in such back-and-forth border crossings. "Even their
tigers traverse the same territory," said Azad. "Given
the fact that there's a porous border, there could be some
possibility that people are moving to India, but moving
for a job and coming back." Some villagers agree. Shumitra,
whose two sons moved to India last year for work, said she
believes they will return to Harinagar "when there
is work." Others say they're not so sure.
Gaurpodomando, 35, whose uncles, brothers
and father are living in the same town of Gauramganagar
in India, said his family has stopped talking about when
they might return home. Instead, he said, his brothers are
pushing him to join them in India. Shushanto said she doesn't
expect her brother to come back to Harinagar. And even Shumitra,
looking longingly at a photograph of her sons and insisting
that her sons will come home soon, admits she's prepared
to give up her life in Bangladesh.
"They'll be back," she said of her
boys and sighed. "But if it doesn't work out for us
here, then we'll have to go there." India sees coastal
flooding as 'a national security issue' India, for its part,
sees climate change bringing multiple threats. Rivers feeding
both Bangladesh and Pakistan pass through India, but threaten
to dry up because of melting glaciers. Meanwhile, the country
can barely handle demands for resources from its own citizens
and argues that it shouldn't have to accept the victims
of a problem caused by the industrialized world.
"If one-third of Bangladesh is flooded,
India can soak in some of the refugees, but not all,"
Retired Air Marshal A.K. Singh, the former commander of
India's air force, told a London conference recently. "Low-lying
coastal area flooding is a national security issue."
So far, about 1,600 miles of border fencing
has been completed, with the work scheduled for completion
by March 2010. India maintains that its purpose is to protect
the country against smuggling and terrorism as well as illegal
immigration. But its fence -- much like the one the United
States is building along the Mexican border -- has provoked
bitter debate.
"For the countries that build fences,
it's not really a way to control immigration but a way to
reassure the electorate," said Francois Gemenne, a
research fellow at the Institute for Sustainable Development
and International Relations in Paris. "They're more
symbolic than really an effective immigration tool."
But Cleo Paskal, an associate fellow at the
Royal Institute of International Affairs in London, said
the prospect of large-scale migration from Bangladesh represents
a real threat to India, and it's one the West should take
seriously. "There are a lot of countries that would
like to see India weakened," like China and Pakistan,
Paskal said. She argued that if Bangladesh is destabilized
by climate change, Islamic radical elements are more likely
to prey on vulnerable communities. That, she said, could
easily lead to more deadly attacks like the one in Mumbai,
India, earlier this year.
An 'adaptive capacity' at work
Bangladesh officials, meanwhile, say the fence
and everything it represents are just distractions. The
country needs to build embankments, they say. It needs cyclone
shelters and rice research. And it needs to address the
already explosive internal migration to its capital city,
Dhaka, an issue that rarely makes it into dramatic climate
change reports.
"Prevention isn't sexy," said Omar
Rahman, president of the Independent University, Bangladesh,
in Dhaka.
"We shouldn't close our eyes to the possibility
of [mass migration] happening, but I don't think it should
distract from more immediate needs," he said.
Niels Veenis, first secretary for water management at the
Embassy of the Netherlands in Bangladesh, said he sees some
signs of progress. A participatory water management project
in parts of the country, he noted, has been helping communities
wrest infrastructure maintenance out of the hands of underfunded,
undermanned central governments and into their own hands.
As to the larger threat of mass migration,
Veenis said, "The threat is there. If you don't manage
the threat, then yes, you're looking at a very dire situation.
But Bangladesh has been given the natural tools to do something."
Paskal, of the Royal Institute, said Bangladesh, by pouring
money and research into new ways to deal with climate change,
is actually protecting the world from conflict.
"We need a stable India, and [climate
migration] has the potential to destabilize India,"
she said. "If we try to put pressure on India to take
in refugees, we're undermining our credibility in India's
eyes." But, Paskal said, Bangladesh "is a nation
of serious, hard-working people. It is their adaptive capacity
that is cushioning us from some of the worst impacts."
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