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Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
30 April 2007
Issue No. 46
The Program for
Hydro-meteorological Disaster Mitigation in
Secondary Cities in Asia (PROMISE), funded
by USAID/OFDA, commenced from October 2005.
Through consultations with a number of ADPC
partners, five project countries have been
selected – Bangladesh, Pakistan, the
Philippines, Sri Lanka and Vietnam – for
implementing demonstration projects in each
country in a highly vulnerable city with
recent history of hydro-meteorological
disasters. Other components of the program
consist of capacity building, risk
management advocacy, networking and
dissemination initiatives in the selected
countries. The objective of the program is
to contribute towards reduction of
vulnerability of urban communities through
enhanced preparedness and mitigation of
hydro-meteorological disasters in South and
Southeast Asia. The main activities from
April to June 2007 are: local-level skills
training, planning for the conduct of
national courses, and implementing the
small-scale mitigation projects for each
city.
PROGRAM ACTIVITIES
for April and May 2007:
· BANGLADESH
– BDPC conducted two
ward-level CBDRM courses during the
reporting month at Wards 40 and 9. The
emphasis of the course is on community risk
assessment and the development of community
action plans for reducing their
vulnerability. With the assistance of BDPC
and the respective Ward Disaster Risk
Management Committees of each ward, three
trained change agents (CAs) facilitated each
of the courses. Two action plans were
developed as course outputs.
BDPC conducted a school
awareness event under the school safety
program on April 19 at the South Potenga
City Corporation High School in Ward 41. The
main purpose of this event was to create
awareness about the importance of having
school disaster management plan. There were
around 500 participants coming from
students, teachers, members of the school
management committees, and representatives
from different Community Based
Organizations. Sessions included
presentations on the activities planned for
school safety program, hydro-meteorological
hazards, vulnerabilities of school buildings
and students during disaster, and measures
for school disaster risk. Next months
activities are the conduct of CBDRM and
school awareness events in other wards.
· PAKISTAN
– AKPBS(P) shared the updated
hazard and vulnerability study with the Sub
District Nazim (Administrative) Latifabad
Hyderabad and DCO Hyderabad. In the same
meeting, the DCO was requested to support
the PROMISE targeted communities through
Citizen Community Boards (CCBs). PROMISE
Pakistan conducted feasibility studies and
needs analysis for the demonstration
projects. In consultative meetings with
communities and local NGOs, options were
identified for the demonstration project
interventions. Possible projects include
earth filling in the low-lying
colonies/areas, communal latrines, storm
water drains, rehabilitation of pumping
stations will be executed. The community
will be mobilized to contribute in kind to
the construction/ installation work of demo
projects.
Under the capacity building
component, Ms. Mahrunnisa, Assistant Program
Officer, attended the first regional course
on hydro-meteorological risk assessment and
community preparedness, organized by ADPC in
Thailand. AKPBSP organized an orientation
session for the members of Disaster
Management Committees to orient the members
on the roles, responsibilities, and
coordination mechanism in the committee.
Finally, on April 21, PROMISE Pakistan
organized a school festival in High School
Hali Road Hyderabad. Lectures on the
Disasters, PROMISE and role of students in
the preparedness activities were delivered
to the students.
· PHILIPPINES
– CDP and Dagupan City’s
Technical Working Group (TWG) reviewed the
draft CDCC Manual, shared their CBDRM
experience with another city, and are
continuing preparations for upcoming
emergency drills. In a workshop on April
10, the TWG and the Country Project
Coordinator Ms. Luneta scrutinized and
agreed upon the structure of the CDCC and
the early warning and monitoring system.
On April 11, the TWG headed
by Mr. Robert – Erfe Mejia the Deputized
CDCC Officer and Mrs. Emma Molina the Focal
person of Dagupan PROMISE Project along with
Ms. Mayfourth Luneta the Project Coordinator
met with the City Mayor Rey Bautista and
discussed about the prevalent DRM practice
in Baguio, after which the actual sharing of
CDCC’s followed. Baguio CDCC and the
Emergency Medical Services explained their
structure and usual work for DRM especially
on Emergency Services. Then Dagupan also
shared their experience on Disaster Risk
Management highlighting the Disaster
Preparedness through Capability Building of
the communities and the City.
On April 12, the TWG held a
workshop with representatives of the eight
pilot barangays to review the barangays’
early warning and evacuation plans for the
coming drill. The TWG members were assigned
to the eight barangays to facilitate the
small group discussions to look into the
plans and see what is lacking and what needs
to be improved. The selected sites for the
flood markers were also reviewed and noted.
In the afternoon there was an orientation
for Bantay Dagupan (network of civic
volunteer organizations) and for PATRIMA
(tri- media network of Dagupan City) on the
PROMISE Philippines project and on the Drill
scheduled for the last week of May. The
project Coordinator facilitated the meeting
and asked the commitment of the group not
only for the drill but for disaster
preparedness for the city. There was an
inventory on what the organizations can
offer (like vehicles, manpower, skills).
On April 18, the TWG and CDP
met with Ms. Maris Palencia, the emergency
drills consultant. They discussed the
initial drill plan and the scope and area of
the drill. The next step for next month
will be a table top exercise along with the
use of two-way radios to see the
communication flow within the 8 barangays as
well as in the city, then the actual drills
for Dagupan City.
Next month’s activities are
the emergency drill, preparations for
Disaster Preparedness Day on July 16,
preparations for various events on public
awareness and sharing of DRM experiences,
and preparations for the advanced training
on Medical First Response.
· SRI-LANKA
– Sarvodaya continued
organizing communities towards establishing
a networking meeting of collaborating
volunteers of the Early Warning System from
communities upstream and downstream of
Kaluganga River in the cities of Kalutara
and Rathnapura.
· VIETNAM
– CECI conducted four CBDRM
training classes the at the community level
(section clusters) in the three of the most
vulnerable wards identified in the PVCA.
Almost a hundred persons representing
community representatives such as head of
sections, representatives of community based
organizations attended the three-day
training on CBDRM where they were
familiarized with key concepts and produced
a disaster preparedness plan for their
section clusters. Identified change agents
(local trainers) also joined and facilitated
these training classes.
The house construction
program contributed by CECI to the PROMISE
Viet Nam project was going into its final
stages. Some follow up was being done to
incomplete houses. This month one more
household was selected, bringing the total
houses rebuilt in Cam Le district to 22
houses. Technical surveys for house design
and cost estimate was completed. The final
design drawing and cost estimate were
expected to be available early the following
month. Finally, work is continuing on
developing the guidelines and a poster for
safer house construction techniques.
A. FROM THE
REGION
(1) ADPC signs
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the
Department of Mineral Resources of Royal
Thai Government, 24 April 2007, Bangkok
This Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) confirms an
understanding describing the terms of
collaboration between ADPC and DMR on areas
of common interest to both parties and
exchange of knowledge & information in the
fields of geological and geo-technical
hazard risk management in general and the
Asian Program for Regional Capacity
Enhancement for Landslide Impact Mitigation
(RECALIM) implemented by ADPC, in
particular. The MOU was signed between ADPC
Executive Director a.i. Dr. Bhichit
Rattakul and DMR, Director General, Mr.
Apichai Chvajarenpun.
(2)
Landslides hit Kyrgyzstan and
China, April 2007
(based on reports from AlertNet)
Mudslides caused by heavy
rains have hit southern Kyrgyzstan on April 17 and 22. More than 300 homes
were damaged, many households are affected
by floods, and evacuations were carried out
in some places. The second mudslide
occurred on the night of April 22 in Jalalabad province.
In China, a landslide caused
by rain hit Heyuan in Guangdong province on
April 26 that killed three people. Sudden
torrential downpours in Guangdong destroyed
more than 1,300 houses and forced 20,000
people from their homes, the official Xinhua
agency reported late on Tuesday.
(3) Holiday flash floods kill
37, 14 April 2007
(based on reports from The Nation,
Bangkok Post, Reuters)
The death toll in a flash
flood that swept away holidaymakers in
southern Thailand reached 35. About 100
people were swimming in the Prai Sawan,
Sairung and Lam Lok waterfalls in Trang
province, when the flash flood hit. The
flash floods, triggered by heavy rains,
swept over the waterfalls, the Health
Ministry's Relief Centre said. Most of the
victims were swimming below the Sai Roong
and Prai Sawan falls during a long weekend
holiday for the new year Songkran festival.
The dead included thirteen children. The
waterfalls are a popular destination for
local families at holiday times. The
governor announced that flood-warning sirens
will be installed at Trang's Sairung and
Prai Sawan falls. Meanwhile, the weather
bureau forecast heavy downpours for many
areas in the lower South, and told residents
of Phang Nga, Phuket, Krabi, Trang and Satun
to brace for flash-floods. In Satun,
Governor Kwanchai Wongnitikorn ordered
officials to inspect all waterfalls in Khuan
Don, Khuan Ka Long and Langu districts as
well as Ma Nang sub-district to check their
safety.
(4) Quake in Solomon Islands,
2 April 2007
(based on reports from AlertNet and OCHA)
A powerful South Pacific
earthquake of at least 8.0 magnitude sent a
tsunami wave into the Solomon Islands
archipelago. The Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center in Hawaii placed the quake's centre
350 km (220 miles) north-west of Honiara
when it struck at about 6:40 a.m. (2040 GMT
on Sunday). The initial tremor was followed
around seven minutes later by a second one,
centered further west, of magnitude 6.7,
USGS said.
The water measuring around 3m
high in places has completely wiped out a
number of the coastal communities, caused
substantial damage, triggered a series of
landslides on Mono Island, left many
homeless, damaged schools, and left many
without access to clean water after the
water tanks collapsed falling down the
hill. Fifty-two people were killed and some
are missing. Aerial surveillance shows that
the worst-affected areas are the southern
coast of Gizo, Simbo Island and the central
southern coast of Choiseul between Moli and
Posarae and Sasamungga.
(5) Flooding in Afghanistan
(based on reports from BBC)
Avalanches and floods have
killed 88 people in Afghanistan in mid
March. Hundreds of homes were destroyed
after heavy Late-winter rain and melting
snow combined to trigger floods and
landslides in the mountain valleys in the
south western interior. The river breached
embankments for several nights, flooding
more houses and forcing families to evacuate
to higher ground. In several parts of
Afghanistan whole villages were washed away
as the waters inundated 19 out of 34
provinces. The UN estimates over 20,000
people across the country have been
affected. Afghanistan has been suffering
from drought for most of the past decade so
that despite the damage, the majority of
Afghans have welcomed these heavy rains and
are looking forward to a good year for
farmers.
B. CALLS FOR SUBMISSION
(6) Call for abstracts: 6th
Annual International Conference and
Exhibition on Geographical Information
Technology and Applications
This year’s MapAsia
conference will have the theme “Maponomics
– Economic Growth Thorough Geo-Information
Technology”. The conference aims to promote
discussion on two-pronged economic growth
backed by application and usage of GIT.
This type of approach to economic growth
enables the expansion of economic activities
in a given community thereby raising living
standards of individuals and second, that
aids private industry to reap more benefits
through geo-technologies and adding to the
countries’ national income. Multiple
aspects of GIS-linked economic growth would
be the part of deliberations at Map Asia
2007. Technical sessions include Disaster
Management, Health and Human Services, Land
Information Systems, Marine and Coastal GIS,
Natural Resources Management, and Urban and
Town Planning. Deadline for abstracts is 15
May 2007. For inquiries, contact Saurabh
Mishra, +91-981-0668329,
papers@mapasia.org.
To submit an abstract online,
click here:
http://www.mapasia.org/2007/submitabstract.htm.
C. CONFERENCES AND COURSES
(7) Call for Applications:
IAEM Scholarship
The International
Association of Emergency Managers awards
scholarships to full-time students pursuing
any level of degree in emergency management
or a closely related field, and the
association is now requesting applications.
The application is due 16 May 2007, can be
downloaded
here:
http://www.iaem.com/resources/scholarships/documents/
2007scholarshipapplication.pdf.
(8)
Workshop on the Physics of Tsunami, Hazard
Assessment Methods and Disaster Risk
Management – Trieste, Italy: 14-18 May 2007
Organizer: The Abdus
Salam International Centre for Theoretical
Physics. This workshop will relate the
evaluations of flood hazards to the
protection of nuclear installations and
other critical infrastructure facilities.
Different methods of hazard analysis will be
assessed, as will experience of the Indian
Ocean Tsunami and flooding events in nuclear
facilities. For more information, click
here:
http://www.ictp.it.
(9) River Basin Management
2007 – Kos, Greece: 23-25 May 2007
Organizer: Wessex
Institute of Technology. The conference will
communicate recent advances in the overall
management of riverine systems, including
advances in hydraulic and hydrologic
modeling, environmental protection, and
flood forecasting. To learn more,
visit:
http://www.wessex.ac.uk/conferences/2007/rm07/.
D. USEFUL RESOURCES
(10) ‘Social aspects and
stakeholder involvement in integrated Flood
Management’ by the World Meteorological
Organization, 2006
The main
objective of the publication is to help
understand full range of social issues
involved in flood management and the need
for stakeholder involvement in IFM and to
help make society more resilient to flood
risks while recognizing and deriving
benefits from floods. The publication is
primarily aimed at flood managers, but it
also provides information useful for
policymakers, river basin managers,
practitioners, civil society, NGOs and
national, state, district and local
government officials responsible for
integrated flood management (IFM). The
multidimensional nature of flood management
options is presented as stemming from
constraints, risks, uncertainties and
conflicting objectives. Disaster management
options are proposed as not only fulfilling
technical criteria but should also address
broader socio-political issues. The
publication can be found here:
http://www.adpc.net.
(11) “Tsunami Risk Reduction
Strategies for Urban Planning and guidelines
for construction’ by the Italian Ministry
for the Environment, Land and Sea and the
Asian Disaster Preparedness Center, 2006
This handbook
is aimed at reducing the risks caused by
tsunamis using appropriate urban and
construction planning strategies. It seeks
to promote site analysis methodologies based
on hazard assessments, vulnerability
assessments, and evacuation time. It
provides specific guidelines for urban
planning, construction design and tsunami
engineering.
The
publication can be found here:
http://www.adpc.net.
(12) SL Indian Ocean tsunami
warning project
(based on reports from The
Sunday Island)
LIRNEasia and Sarvodaya conducted a
community disaster warning pilot project
evaluating the suitability of ICT in the
last mile of a national disaster warning
system for Sri Lanka and its possible
extension to other developing countries.
Addressable satellite radio sets were found
to be the best alerting technology. Java
enabled mobile phones which has a wake up
siren came next. The GSM based remote alarm
device developed locally by Dialog Telekom,
MicroImage and University of Moratuwa
followed closely that has both light and
siren. Findings of this project were
discussed by community leaders and
international experts at a workshop on
"Sharing Knowledge on Disaster Warning with
a Focus on Community-Based Last-Mile Warning
Systems" at the Sarvodaya Headquarters in
Moratuwa last March 28. International
Development Research Centre of Canada had
funded the project launched in January 2006.
The project simulations had
been carried out in 32 villages with various
kinds of communications equipment providing
features such as early warning wake-up,
addressability and provisions of information
in three languages (English, Sinhala and
Tamil). Difficulties had been experienced
in communicating disaster warning to
villages when mobile and fixed CDMA telecom
networks were not functioning in conflict
conditions. Also, the importance of not
leaving newspapers on top of sensitive
electronic equipment which can overheat and
shutdown had been noted. The VSAT based
warning system had not run well in the
tests. The project objective was not to
declare a winner among the technologies, but
to find out how they could be improved to
perform reliably in the difficult conditions
of Sri Lankan villages. The findings are now
in the hands of developers who are making
improvements to the equipment so that they
will perform better in Sri Lanka and in
other countries interested in these
applications.
(13) “Natural Disaster
Reduction” by Sinha, 2007
This book by Dilip Kumar
Sinha uses the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami as
a starting point to analyze the dynamics of
disasters in South East Asia, the effects of
climatic changes and geographical conditions
in the region, the development of early
warning systems and the principles of risk
management in an era of globalization. The
book has illustrative case studies and
diagrams, and can be useful for institutions
of risk management, government organizations
and NGOs.
(14) ADB Annual Report 2006
The Asian
Development Bank's Annual Report 2006 is now
available. It presents the year's
activities and includes a feature on ADB’s
40th anniversary. The financial highlights
include: US$7.4 billion approved for 80
loans for 67 projects; and US$5.7 billion
disbursed during 2006, up from US$4.7
billion in 2005. The operational and
institutional highlights include: its first
private sector projects in Azerbaijan and
Kazakhstan; core sectors identified for
future assistance are road transport,
energy, urban infrastructure, rural
infrastructure, education, and financial
services; a new medium-term strategy to
guide ADB operations up to 2008; and a new
regional cooperation and integration
policy. The report is found
here:
http://www.adb.org/Documents/Reports/Annual_
Report/2006/default.asp.
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