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Disaster Mitigation  
in Asia 
								
								31 
								October2009 
								Issue No. 73 
								
									
									
									This newsletter is published 
									through 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. 
									
									
									In this Issue: 
									
										- 
										
										
										From the Region  
										- 
										
										
										Calls for Submission  
										- 
										
										
										Conferences and Courses  
										- 
										
										
										Useful Resources   
									 
								 
								
								
								
								A. 
									From the Region 
								
									
									
									(1) Philippines survives 
									pummeling by back-to-back (-to-back-to back) 
									typhoons 
									
									
									(based on reports from 
									Alertnet, CNN, IRIN, NDCC, and Philippine 
									Daily Inquirer) 
									
									
									Beginning from the end of 
									September to the end of October, the 
									Philippines endured four typhoons that 
									entered its area of responsibility.  Typhoon 
									Ketsana (local name “Ondoy”) had unleashed 
									severe flooding in Metro Manila and 
									surrounding provinces on September 26 that 
									affected more than three million people and 
									resulted in 300 deaths.  However, relief 
									operations for Ketsana had to be combined 
									with disaster preparedness activities for 
									supertyphoon Parma (local name “Pepeng”, as 
									the meteorological agency PAGASA gave 
									repeated warnings that Parma was “a very, 
									very severe typhoon”. 
									
									
									Philippine President Gloria 
									Macapagal Arroyo ordered the forcible 
									evacuation of residents at risk on October 
									2, and imposed price controls on 
									construction materials, the mass 
									distribution of drinking water, the release 
									of over one million packets of instant 
									noodles, and for the state weather bureau to 
									report any sudden rise in water levels in 
									dams and reservoirs near Manila.  Typhoon 
									Parma first hit northern Luzon, caused 
									widespread floods and landslides, killing at 
									least 16 people and displacing over 85,800 
									(go here to view a map generated by NASA of 
									the typhoon track and rainfall from Parma:
									
									http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=40687).  
									It devastated the agriculture sector in 
									Luzon, raising food security concerns.  The 
									UN launched a flash appeal on 7 October for 
									over US$74 million for the Philippines (http://ochaonline.un.org/humanitarianappeal/webpage.asp?Page=1811), 
									to fund priority projects for food, drinking 
									water, sanitation, shelter and household 
									items. 
									
									
									Unfortunately, the 
									Philippines was plunged deeper into crisis 
									on 9 October after heavy rain brought on by 
									tropical storm Parma resulted in widespread 
									flooding in the northern provinces and 
									forced authorities to release water from 
									near-bursting dams (click here to see a map 
									of the flooded areas:
									
									http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/satelliteimages/UNOSAT/f4f7f12d 
									
									666fa69502ac3121d2c474c9.htm).  The 
									Philippine government and international aid 
									and relief agencies both rushed evacuate 
									people and to pre-position supplies, 
									equipment, food and other relief items 
									before the third typhoon Lupit (local name “Ramil”) 
									made landfall on 22 October; even the Maoist 
									rebels declared a unilateral ceasefire in 
									areas hit by the first two typhoons. 
									
									
									Lupit 
									in the Philippine language of Tagalog means 
									“cruel,” but fortunately did not hit Luzon 
									directly given that the death toll of 
									Ketsana and Parma had already reached 850 
									people, more than 185,000 people were still 
									living in evacuation centers, and the 
									estimated cost of damage was about USD 700 
									million.  However, the preparations were put 
									to good use for the fourth typhoon Mirinae.  
									Its local name is “Santi”, French for “a 
									pious person”.  It passed through the 
									country as people were travelling to their 
									home towns for the Catholic religious 
									observance of All Saints Day on 1 November 
									and All Soul’s Day on 2 November.  Only 16 
									people were reported dead, as Santi hit 
									Manila with heavy rain, flooding, and washed 
									away shanty houses near the coast.  
									
									
									(2) Floods in India affect 5 
									million 
									(based on reports from Alertnet and 
									Reliefweb) 
									
									
									Low pressure area over the 
									Bay of Bengal caused heavy rains in the 
									states of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh (A.P) 
									since 30th Sept. 2009 resulting in a state 
									of emergency in both the states. The flood 
									situation is reportedly the worst in 
									decades, resulting in losses of homes, 
									crops, and infrastructure worth over 220 
									billion rupees (about 4.6 billion USD).  In 
									Karnataka, the death toll reached over 190 
									people, while more than 65 people dies in 
									Andhra Pradesh and more than a million 
									people had sought shelter in 100 relief 
									camps.  
									
									
									(3) Floods and landslides in 
									Nepal 
									
									
									(based on a report by IRIN) 
									
									
									Several events of flooding 
									and landslides triggered by late rains that 
									occurred in early October had killed more 
									than 60 people were killed, displaced some 
									4000 people, and affected 25,000 families.  
									Read the OCHA situation report here:
									
									http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWFiles2009.nsf/FilesByRWDocUnid 
									
									Filename/EDIS-7WSRT9-full_report.pdf/$File/full_report.pdf.  
									
									
									(4) UN Flash Appeal for Laos 
									
									
									The UN launched a flash 
									appeal on 22 October of 10,153,872 USD after 
									Typhoon Ketsana brought devastating floods 
									to Laos, hitting some of the nation's 
									poorest and most vulnerable people.  Typhoon 
									Ketsana made landfall in Laos on 29 
									September, killing 17 people, affecting 
									another 178,000, and damaging 20,000 
									hectares of rice and crop fields.  Read more 
									here:
									
									http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/EDIS-7WZPVM?OpenDocument#.  
									
									
									(5) University of Mindanao 
									donates one telemetric system 
									
									
									(based on a report by The 
									Mindanao Times) 
									
									
									A RATHER low-profile event in 
									October went largely unnoticed as 
									everybody’s attention was caught by the 
									typhoons barreling through the Philippines.  
									On October 8, the Research and Publication 
									office of the University of Mindanao donated 
									one telemetric system device to the Central 
									911 to serve as an early warning device for 
									the communities surrounding the Davao River, 
									the largest body of water in Southern 
									Mindanao.  The whole project cost P1.3 
									million but the initial results were 
									positive enough so that the city government 
									earmarked a budget to buy more telemetric 
									devices to be installed in key points of the 
									Davao River.  Read more about it here:
									
									http://www.mindanaotimes.com.ph/?p=4181.  
									
									
									(6) ADB pledges support for 
									disaster-stricken countries 
									
									
									The Asian Development Bank 
									has announced pledges of a three-million USD 
									grant for relief assistance for Indonesia, 
									and support for emergency relief efforts for 
									the Philippines (three million USD) and 
									Samoa (one million USD).  Read more about it 
									here: 
									
									
									
									(7) New Philippine Law on 
									Climate Change 
									
									
									On 23 October 2009, President 
									Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo signed Republic Act 
									No. 9729, or the Climate Change Act of 2009, 
									“AN ACT MAINSTREAMING CLIMATE CHANGE INTO 
									GOVERNMENT POLICY FORMULATIONS, ESTABLISHING 
									THE FRAMEWORK STRATEGY AND PROGRAM ON 
									CLIMATE CHANGE, CREATING FOR THIS PURPOSE 
									THE CLIMATE CHANGE COMMISSION, AND FOR OTHER 
									PURPOSES.”  The act declares that it is the 
									Philippine State’s policy to provide “full 
									protection and the advancement of the right 
									of the people to a healthful ecology in 
									accord with the rhythm and harmony of 
									nature”.  Within this policy is the 
									intention to stabilize the concentration of 
									greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, 
									integrate disaster risk reduction into 
									climate change programs and initiatives.  
									The act calls for the creation of: 1) a 
									Climate Change Commission; 2) a Framework 
									Strategy and Program on Climate Change; 3) a 
									National Climate Change Action Plan; and 4) 
									a Local Climate Change Action Plan.  Read 
									the full text at:
									
									http://tonyocruz.com/?p=2536.  
									
									
									(8) India NDMA guidelines on 
									certifying disaster management concerns in 
									projects 
									(based on a report from the Times of 
									India) 
									
									
									The Indian National Disaster 
									Management Authority (NDMA) has issued 
									guidelines for the Ministry of Finance to 
									require all ministries and departments to 
									certify that local disaster vulnerability of 
									a particular project has been addressed.  
									Each project in a natural hazard prone area 
									will have disaster prevention or mitigation 
									as a pre-condition, and the project document 
									has to reflect as to how the project 
									addresses those conditions.  
									
									
									(9) Indian Ocean Tsunami 
									Warning Drill 
									(based on reports from Alertnet, BBC and 
									Reuters) 
									
									
									The Indian Ocean now has its 
									own early warning system, which was tested 
									in a United Nations-backed simulation 
									exercise on 14 October by eighteen 
									countries.  The drill simulated the 2004 
									quake off the coast of Sumatra.  National 
									tsunami information centers have been set up 
									across the region, along with buoys on the 
									ocean surface and several deep in the sea to 
									detect abnormal wave movements. Alerts are 
									also sent out by radio, television, SMS 
									messages and other methods.  For an 
									informative article on how the tsunami 
									warning system works,  
									go to:
									
									http://www.alertnet.org/db/an_art/59567/2009/09/28-122125-1.htm.  
									
									
									(10) CNN Investigative 
									Report: Tsunami warning funds squandered in 
									American Samoa 
									
									
									Public records show that the 
									Department of Homeland Security had awarded 
									millions of federal dollars in grants for 
									disaster preparedness here, including the 
									construction of an island-wide siren warning 
									system. However, all the federal funding was 
									frozen in early 2007 after DHS inspectors 
									found that the local American Samoan 
									government had been diverting millions of 
									those dollars for its own uses. The CNN 
									investigation came to a single conclusion 
									that the earthquake-triggered tsunami in 
									September was in many ways a man-made 
									tragedy.  Read the report  
									here:
									
									http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/10/27/asamoa. 
									
									tsunami.warningsystem/index.html?eref=rss_world. 
								 
								
								
								
								B. Calls for Submission 
								
									
									
									(11) Call for Presentations: 
									20th World Conference on Disaster 
									Management 
									
									
									Organizers: WCDM and the 
									Canadian Centre for Disaster Preparedness.  
									Presentation abstracts are now being 
									accepted for the 20th World Conference on 
									Disaster Management to be held June 20-23, 
									2010, in Toronto, Canada. Submissions should 
									be related to this year’s theme: “Twenty 
									Years of Progress—Are We Prepared to Face 
									Future Challenges? Emergency Management and 
									Business Continuity Working Together.” The 
									deadline for submissions is 6 December 
									2009.  Information on topic streams, 
									submission guidelines, selection criteria, 
									and speaker compensation can be found on the 
									online submission site here:
									
									http://www.wcdm.org/.  
									
									
									(12) Call for Participation: 
									6th U.N. Day for South-South 
									Cooperation Global South-South Development 
									Expo 
									
									
									Organizer: Special Unit for 
									South-South Cooperation United Nations 
									Development Programme.  On 19 December 2009, 
									the UNDP will hold the Global South-South 
									Development Expo will be held at the World 
									Bank Main Complex in Washington, DC from 
									December 14-17, 2009.  The GSSD Expo is a 
									platform for developing countries and their 
									development partners - including donor 
									agencies, organizations of the United 
									Nations system, and private-sector and civil 
									society organizations - to showcase their 
									evidence based South-South development 
									solutions.  Both individuals and 
									organizations are encouraged to register and 
									nominate solutions in four focal areas: (1) 
									South-South and Triangular Cooperation; (2) 
									Climate Change and Environment; (3) Health; 
									and (4) Food Security.  For further 
									information, please contact the Secretariat 
									through: Special Unit for South-South 
									Cooperation United Nations Development 
									Programme, 304 East 45th Street, New York, 
									NY 10017 Tel. 212-906-6944 Fax. 
									212-906-6429;  
									email:
									
									gssdexpo.secretariat@undp.org,
									
									www.southsouthexpo.org. 
								 
								
								
								
								C. Conferences and Courses 
								
									
									
									(13) MapIndia 2010 
									
									
									Organizer: GIS Development.  
									The 13th Annual International 
									Conference and Exhibition on Geospatial 
									Information Technology and Applications is 
									accepting abstracts for its upcoming event 
									on 19 - 21 January at Epicentre, Gurgaon, 
									India.  It has a visionary theme 'Defining 
									Geospatial Vision of India'..Deadline for 
									abstracts is 24 October 2009.  For more 
									information, go to:  http://www.mapindia.org/2010/conference/theme.htm.  
									
									
									(14) GIS for Disaster Risk 
									Management (advanced course) – Bangkok, 
									Thailand: 7 - 18 December 2009 
									
									
									Organizer: Asian Disaster 
									Preparedness Center (ADPC).  The course GIS 
									for Disaster Risk Management (an 
									introductory course) – Bangkok, Thailand: 11 
									- 22 May 2009 
									
									
									Organizer: Asian Disaster 
									Preparedness Center (ADPC).  The course 
									provides an excellent opportunity for 
									professionals and practitioners to obtain 
									essential skills and knowledge in GIS and RS 
									and their current application in disaster 
									risk management. Participants will gain 
									practical and technical knowledge on the 
									uses of GIS and RS in disaster prevention, 
									preparedness and emergency response.  The 
									course is co-organized with the 
									International Institute for Geo-information 
									Science and Earth Observations and the Asian 
									Institute of Technology.   
									For more information, please go to:
									
									http://www.adpc.net/v2007/Downloads/2009/Sep/GIS2/GIS4DRM-II_2009_Web.pdf. 
								 
								
								
								
								D. Useful Resources 
								
									
									
									(15) 
									
									Forced to Flee, IRIN, 2009 
									
									
									IRIN 
									Films has two additional films for “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/filmtv.aspx.  
									
									
									(16) Small Islands, Big 
									Impact, TVEAP, 2009 
									
									
									In a short new film released 
									online for the International Day of Climate 
									Action on 24 October 2009, President Nasheed 
									calls climate change both a global human 
									rights issue and a security threat to small, 
									low-lying island nations such as the 
									Maldives.  The film was produced by the 
									regional media foundation TVE Asia Pacific (TVEAP) 
									in collaboration with COM+ Alliance of 
									Communicators for Sustainable Development. 
									It is based on an exclusive interview 
									President Nasheed recorded recently with 
									TVEAP's Director Nalaka Gunawardene.  Access 
									the film at:
									
									http://tiny.cc/SIBI.  
									
									
									(17) Republic Act No. 9729, 
									the Climate Change Act of 2009, Congress of 
									the Philippines 
									
									
									
									http://tonyocruz.com/?p=2536  
									
									
									(18) This month in Asia’s 
									disaster history 
									
									
									On 7 October 1968, 
									precipitation ranging from 500 to 1000 mm 
									caused floods in the Darjeeling area, and 
									unleashed about 20,000 landslides and 
									killing thousands of people in West Bengal.  
									These landslides occurred over a three-day 
									period. The 60 km hilly highway from 
									Siliguri to Darjeeling was cut off at 92 
									locations by landslides, resulting in total 
									disruption of the road transportation 
									system.  Read more about it at: 
									
								 
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