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Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
31
August 2009
Issue No. 71
The Program for
Hydro-meteorological Disaster Mitigation in
Secondary Cities in Asia (PROMISE), funded
by USAID/OFDA, commenced from October 2005.
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. Components of the program
consist of capacity building in
hydro-meteorological disaster risk
reduction, risk management advocacy,
networking and dissemination initiatives,
and city demonstration projects in selected
countries. Through consultations with a
number of ADPC partners, six cities highly
vulnerable to hydro-meteorological disasters
were selected for implementing demonstration
projects on disaster mitigation by urban
communities – Chittagong (Bangladesh),
Hyderabad (Pakistan), Jakarta (Indonesia),
Dagupan (Philippines), Kalutara (Sri Lanka),
and Da Nang (Viet Nam).
For the online version, click
>> here
(available online on 4 September 2009).
In this Issue:
PROGRAM ACTIVITIES for July to
August 2009:
This August 12, 2009, Dagupan
City was awarded the national-level Kalasag
Award for disaster preparedness. Dagupan
City was the demonstration site of PROMISE
in the Philippines. The award was presented
by the President of the Republic of the
Philippines on behalf of the National
Disaster Coordinating Council and Department
of the Interior and Local Government. The
citation reads:
In recognition of its people-driven local
governance, providing vast opportunities for
a well-prepared and people-empowered
community.
Dagupan City's nationally and
internally-funded disaster mitigation
projects anchored on the local
socio-economic development efforts and plans
are testaments of an exemplary leadership of
the local government.
These commendable efforts earned them not
only this recognition but also the greater
unquantifiable benefit of providing security
and peace of mind for their people that
Dagupan City is and will always be a
community that is resilient and safe from
disasters.
Read the official press
release
at:
http://www.pia.gov.ph/?m=12&r=&y=&mo=&fi=p090813.htm&no=17
In 2007 and 2008, the PROMISE
Philippines partners had won Kalasag Awards
at the regional level. Read about those
awards at:
http://www.adpc.net/v2007/Programs/UDRM/PROMISE/PROGRAM%20COMPONENTS/Component1/Awards/Default-Awards.asp
A.
From the Region
(1) 375,000 hit by floods in
Mindanao
(based on reports by IRIN and
Alertnet)
Floods triggered by heavy
monsoon rains that lasted almost one week
have killed at least a dozen people and
affected more than 375,000 on Mindanao
island in the southern Philippines. Troops
evacuated thousands from low-lying areas
where floodwaters had risen to about 3-4
metres in some areas, destroying crops and
property, as well as destroying schools
dikes and roads.
(2) Typhoon Morakot slams
into the Philippines and Taiwan
(based on reports by IRIN and
AlertNet)
Typhoon Marakot hit the
Philippines on 5 August, causing floodwaters
to breach a dyke near the coastal town of
Botolan, displacing several thousands. The
Philippine Air Force rescued dozens of
villagers stranded on rooftops as the water
flowing down the main highway leading to
Botolan, a town on Luzon's west coast,
washed away houses, vehicles and farm
animals, officials and survivors said. said
the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC).
Marakot gathered strength as it moved out of
the Philippines and moved into Taiwan over
the weekend.
The typhoon was Taiwan’s
worst one in 50 years that killed an
estimated 500 people, severed 248 road
segments and caused T$12.2 billion in
agricultural damage. It moved slowly over
Taiwan and triggered widespread landslides.
Taiwan officials now face widespread
criticism because even though rescue efforts
involved 181,000 personnel and saved more
than 8,200 people, President Ma Ying-jeou is
under fire for perceptions that he didn't
respond fast enough. Authorities have also
started seeking causes for the worst
landslide, which buried the southern Taiwan
village of Hsiao Lin, likely killing more
than 300 as houses were flattened in what
became a valley of mud and rocks. After
declining foreign non-monetary aid days
earlier, Taiwan was expecting the arrival of
a CH-53E helicopter, the U.S. military's
biggest and heaviest, on Monday to help with
disaster relief. More than 60 countries
have donated about T$68 million ($2 million)
in cash as well as other relief supplies.
(3) Philippine Congress
debates Disaster Management Bill
(based on a report by IRIN)
The proposed bill is one of
several measures that the Philippines has
announced to boost preparedness. If
Congress will pass the measure, municipal
governments will be required to allocate at
least 5 percent of their budgets to disaster
risk management. Other measures include a
project to map flood and landslide prone
areas, and improve forecasting and early
warning systems.
(4) Flash floods wreak havoc
in northwest Pakistan
(based on reports from IRIN
and UNOCHA)
At least 20 people were
killed and hundreds of houses destroyed or
badly damaged after heavy monsoon rains on
16 August triggered flash floods in the
Mardan and Swabi districts of Pakistan's
North West Frontier Province (NWFP).
Estimates of the impacts put deaths at 27,
houses destroyed between 400 to 450, and
about 70,000 to 80,000 people affected in
the region.
(5) Japan scientists develop
high-yield deep water rice
(based on a report by AP)
A team of Japanese scientists
has discovered genes that enable rice to
survive high water by growing longer stems.
The team, primarily from the University of
Nagoya, called their discovery the SNORKEL
genes, and reported that the accumulation of
the plant hormone ethylene activates the
SNORKEL genes, making stem growth more
rapid. When the researchers introduced the
genes into Japanese 'Japonica' rice that
does not normally survive in deep water,
they were able to rescue the plants from
drowning. Motoyuki Ashikari, who headed the
project, said his team plans to create a
flood resistant long grain rice in three to
four years for use in countries such as
Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh and
Cambodia.
(6) Asia Pandemic Situation
Updates
B. Calls for Submission
(7) Call for Projects: Planet
Action – Fighting the Climate Crisis
Planet Action provides
satellite imagery, geographic information
and technology support to local projects
that investigate and assess climate change
issues focusing on human issues, drought and
desertification, water resources, forestry,
biodiversity, oceans, ice, and awareness.
This year, Planet Action will support
additional projects while following up on
current projects and their results on the
ground. Join them in fighting the climate
crisis! Project submission deadline:
September 30, 2009. For more information,
go to:
http://www.planet-action.org/web/134-call-for-projects.php.
(8) Call for Book Proposals:
Environmental Hazards Series
Springer Books is accepting
proposals for a far-reaching book series
aimed at reflecting and promoting the
interdisciplinary nature of hazards and
disaster research. Manuscripts should bring
new knowledge and insight to hazards, risk,
and disaster issues; integrate natural
science, social science, engineering, and
other disciplinary viewpoints; and be
accessible to a broad range of readers in
academia, government, and the private
sector. For a full description of the
series and information on how to submit a
proposal, contact Series Editor Thomas
Birklandtom_birkland@ncsu.edu, or view
an informational flyer on the series at
http://www4.ncsu.edu/~tabirkla/documents/ENHAFLYER.pdf.
C. Conferences and Courses
(9) Regional Practitioners’
Workshop on DRR in Asia and the Pacific –
Phuket, Thailand: 15-17 September 2009
The Asian Disaster
Preparedness Centre (ADPC) and International
Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies, Southeast Asia Regional Office (IFRC
SEARO) is organizing the workshop for 15 to
17 September 2009 in Phuket, Thailand. This
workshop aims to equip disaster risk
reduction practitioners with knowledge on
how to build community resilience and expose
them to innovative initiatives on
undertaking community based disaster risk
reduction measures and strengthening
community preparedness for response. The
European Commission, Humanitarian Aid
department-ECHO is also funding the
workshop.
(10) 10th
International Conference on Structural
Safety and Reliability – Osaka, Japan:
September 13-17, 2009
Organizers: International
Association for Structural Safety and
Reliability. This conference provides the
opportunity for scientists and engineers to
share knowledge, experience, and information
on structural safety and reliability.
Special emphasis will be placed on advanced
technologies, analytical and computational
methods of risk analysis, damage assessment,
social aspects, and urban planning.
(11) 10th Regional
Training Course on Flood Disaster Risk
Management – Bangkok, Thailand: 6-17 October
2008
Organizer: Asian Disaster
Preparedness Center (ADPC). The course is
an integrated approach to developing flood
risk reduction strategies that involve
engineering, settlement, development, public
administration, and community-based land use
planning with environmental consideration.
This multidisciplinary treatment of flood
problems and flood risk management gives a
holistic view of the situation and
preparedness needs. Case examples of various
national and local responses will be
presented. For more information, please go
to:
http://www.adpc.net/v2007/Downloads/2009/Aug/FDRM%20for%20web%20use%20for%20email.pdf
D. Useful Resources
(12) Manual for the Public
Health Management of Chemical Incidents:
WHO, 2009
Found at:
http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241598149_eng.pdf
(13) Forced to Flee, IRIN,
2009
IRIN Films is pleased to
announce the launch of “Forced to Flee” – a
powerful series of short films about
internal displacement. Around the world
tens of millions of people have been forced
to leave their homes. Some have been driven
out by conflict, some by natural disaster.
Some have been displaced in the name of
development, others by climate change. Find
the films at:
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=85512
(14) Climate Literacy Guide
Recent clamor about climate
change has left many average citizens
scratching their heads about what it all
actually means. Now there’s a guide to help.
Climate Literacy: The Essential Principles
of Climate Science provides clear,
accessible information about climate
science, the possible impacts of climate
change, and adaptation and mitigation. The
guide—created with the help of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the
American Association for the Advancement of
Science, and others—is aimed at starting
conversations and helping communities and
teachers communicate climate science.
(15) Damage, Loss and Needs
Assessment: An introduction for staff of the
Asian Development Bank: ADB, 2009
http://mms.adb.org/e-Notification/url.asp?ID=18714&DOCID=18249
(16) This month in Asia’s
disaster history
On 15 August 15 1950, 1950
Assam - Tibet earthquake struck the Indian
plate with a magnitude of 8.6. The epicenter
was actually located near Rima, in Tibet,
but the earthquake was destructive in both
Assam and Tibet. At least 780 people killed
and many buildings collapsed in eastern
Tibet. In the Medog area, the village of
Yedong slid into the Yarlung Zangbo
(Brahmaputra) River and was washed away.
About 70 villages were destroyed in the Abor
Hills in Assam, mostly by landslides. Large
landslides blocked the Subansiri River, but
the natural dam broke apart eight days
later, creating a wave 7 m high that flooded
several villages and killed 536 people. The
quake was felt as far away as Calcutta.
Seiches were observed in many lakes and
fjords of Norway and in at least 3
reservoirs in England. The editorial from
The Hindu published on 21 August 1950
read in part:
“From the reports coming in
after the partial re-establishment of
disrupted communications, it is clear that
there has been, in addition to much loss of
property, some loss of life too and Islands
have disappeared into the Brahmaputra. The
rumblings of the first, tremendous shock are
still being felt and heard. The movement of
the 1897 Assam `quake was vertical and such
is likely to be the case this time too.
Geologically, the Himalayas are much younger
in age than the Deccan plateau and are still
apparently in the process of settling down.
To political problems clamouring for
solution has now been added the task of
relief and rehabilitation and the sympathy
and help of all India will go to those who
have suffered in this frontier province.
Steps have been taken to rush food and
medical aid to the affected areas and the
Government and voluntary agencies will have
their hands full. They deserve very support
in the form of money and material that the
people of India can give.''
Read more about the
earthquake here:
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