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supported by
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Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
30 June 2006 Issue No. 36
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 implementation
of city demonstration projects are expected to
commence during April to June 2006.
PROGRAM ACTIVITIES
for June and July 2006 :
-
BANGLADESH
- BDPC has selected Young Power in Social
Action for its partner organization and has
met with them several times to discuss the
PROMISE project. BDPC has selected volunteer
Change Agents as well as members of Ward
Disaster Risk Management Committees and held
four sensitization meetings to raise
awareness of the vulnerability issues of the
wards selected for the project. Wards
covered by the sensitization meetings are 8,
9, 11, 16, 20, 26, 32 and 36.
-
PAKISTAN
- AKPBS,P has set a Disaster-based Risk
Management Training for July 1 and 2, 2006.
Participants will come from Hyderabad and
adjoining districts like Thatta and Badin.
AKPBS,P has also selected and begun
coordinating partner organizations such as
the Red Crescent Society and the Sindh
Agriculture and Forestry Workers
Coordination Organization (SAFWCO).
-
PHILIPPINES
- CDP has begun setting up the parameters of
the design for a Disaster Information
Management System in cooperation with the
Dagupan GIS office. CDP is working with
Dagupan's Technical Working Group (TWG) to
set up the calibrated flood markers for an
Early Warning System in the 8 pilot
barangays. The system will use an indigenous
flood marker system wherein members of the
community mark flood height and duration and
speed of the rise of the flood level.
Community consensus will be the basis for
setting preparedness activities to flood
levels (alert level, preparation to
evacuate, when to evacuate, critical level).
With the advice of CDP, the TWG agreed to
pursue on the institutionalization of
Dagupan Disaster Safety Day every July 16 as
part of Public Awareness of Disaster
Preparedness. The project received media
coverage in the local papers. Next month,
the CDP will be involved in the preparations
for Disaster Safety Day and the Early
Warning Systems workshops.
-
SRI LANKA
- Sarvodaya has been meeting with the
Disaster Management Committee of Kalutara
district to brief them on
hydro-meteorological risk mitigation and on
PROMISE. The workshop for Kalutara was set
for June 29 and 30 at the Municipal Council
and Divisional Secretary of Kalutara
Municipality. They also hosted an ADPC
project review mission. Sarvodaya met with
the National Building Research Organization
(NBRO) and the Sri Lanka Institute for Local
Governance to discuss the conduct of the
workshop for Kalutara Municipality. In July,
NBRO will work with Sarvodaya to do hazard
mapping. On July 14, Sarvodaya will hold a
workshop on PROMISE for all Kalutara
stakeholders, including the departments for
urban planning, irrigation, environment, and
meteorology.
-
VIET NAM
- CECI conducted a Participatory
Vulnerability Assessment and a baseline
Household Vulnerability Survey in Cam Le
District. They also hosted an ADPC technical
mission for: (1) developing a case study of
the impact of the tourism development in Son
Tra District upon the vulnerability of local
fishermen, and (2) assistance in developing
an flooding vulnerability information
system. On June 15, CECI held the Inception
Workshop with the People's Committee of Da
Nang and reported the results to the
committee. The workshop was covered by both
television and print media. A preliminary
urban planning survey was also made. Next
month, this survey will be consolidated with
the PVA and the household survey.
Back to Top
A. FROM THE REGION
(1) UN gives emergency food aid to
drought-hit Nepal, June 21, 2006, Nepal
The United Nations World Food Programme has
started distributing emergency food to more
than 225,000 people in central and western
Nepal hit by the worst drought in decades.
Read the Reuters article here:
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/DEL296002.htm
(2) Tornado and torrential rains in Kalutara,
June , 2006, Sri Lanka
Sarvodaya reports that a small tornado hit
Kalutara on June 18, 2006. There was total
damage to 3 houses and partial damage to 10
houses. The Sri Lanka government distributed
LKR 20,000 per house with total damage, and
LKR 10,000 per house with partial damage.
Sarvodaya also reports that there was heavy
rain (75mm rain fall) in the upper stream of
Kaluganga river. The water level of the
river reached 18 feet and 6 inches and it
affected the downstream communities of
Mathugama, Bulathsinghala, Agalawatta, and
Wallallavita. (Also based on an article from
The Lanka Sun, June 21, 2006.)
(3) GVP Volcanic Activity Report, June 2,
2006, Indonesia
A pilot reported observing an ash plume that
was emitted from Raung, one of Java's most
active volcanoes, on 2 June at 1625h.
Scientific information can be found here:
http://www.volcano.si.edu/reports/usgs/index.cfm?content=archive&year=2002&week=may_29-4_02#raung
(3) USGS Preliminary Earthquake Report, May
26, 2006, Indonesia
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National
Earthquake Information Center preliminary
report on the magnitude 6.3 earthquake in
Java, Indonesia, on May 26 can be found
here:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/eqinthenews/2006/usneb6/.
Back to Top
B. CALLS FOR SUBMISSION
(5) Call for Papers: Natural Hazards Review
An upcoming special issue of "Children, Youth
and Environments" will advance scholarly and
applied knowledge regarding the experiences of
children in disasters. "Children, Youth and
Environments" is an interdisciplinary and
peer-reviewed journal with a multidisciplinary
audience of researchers, policy makers, and
professionals in 143 countries around the world.
The special issue will help scholars and
practitioners gain insight into the unique
vulnerabilities and special capacities of
children by exploring what disasters do to
children and youth, what is done on their
behalf, and what they do for themselves.
Special issue authors will examine children's
experiences in disasters, while elucidating
linkages between disasters and the larger
social, economic, political, and cultural
contexts in which these events occur. Here
disasters are broadly defined as extreme
natural, technological, or intentional
human-caused events. Manuscripts that are
international in scope and address the
consequences of disasters for children in the
developed as well as the developing world are
encouraged. Innovative theoretical, empirical,
or methodological manuscripts from various
disciplinary perspectives will be considered for
inclusion in the special issue.
Potential contributors should submit a one-page
abstract to Lori Peek (lori.peek@colostate.edu)
by September 15, 2006. After evaluation of the
relevance of the abstracts to the special issue,
a number of authors will be invited to submit
full manuscripts to the journal for peer review.
For more information, contact Lori Peek,
Department of Sociology, Colorado State
University, B-237 Clark Building, Fort Collins,
CO 80523; (970) 491-6777;
lori.peek@colostate.edu;
http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/.
.
(6) Call for Abstracts: 3rd Annual GIS
Conference in Kuwait: February 9-21, 2007
The third Annual GIS Conference is calling for
abstracts for the premier GIS event in the state
of Kuwait. Conference topics include: emergency
response, natural resources management, GIS and
environmental modeling, environment and natural
hazards, planning and community, urbanization
effects on the working landscape, water
resources, remote sensing and data acquisition.
Papers for oral presentations will be accepted
based on single-page abstract submitted in Word
to:
papers@gulfgis.com. Authors should provide
name, their position and their affiliation in
the abstract. For more information visit:
http://www.gulfgis.com.
Back to Top
C. CONFERENCES AND COURSES
(7) GMOSSS Summer School, Salzburg, Austria:
October 01-08, 2006
Organizer: Centre for GeoInformatics (Z_GIS) at
Salzburg University
The GMOSS (Global Monitoring for Security and
Stability, International Summer School 2006 is
dedicated to the theme of "Human Security:
People - Homes - Infrastructure".
For more details and information about the
Summer School, please refer to
http://www.sbg.ac.at/zgis/gmoss/ss2006/.
Participants must fill in an application form
which is available on this website.
(8) Regional course on Earthquake & Tsunami
Vulnerability Reduction focusing on the use of
spatial geodata, Bangkok, Thailand: 24 October
to 6 November, 2006
Organizers: Asian Disaster Preparedness Center,
Asian Institute of Technology and the
International Institute for Geo-Information
Science and Earth Observation, with funding
support from The Netherlands Government and the
United Nations Development Programme. For
detailed course information and course
application form, please visit
http://www.itc.nl/education/refresher_courses/2006/thailand.asp.
For any queries regarding the course, kindly
contact Dr. Mark van der Meijde< vandermeijde@itc.nl
>, ITC Course Coordinator or Mr. N.M.S.I.
Arambepola < arambepola@adpc.net > ADPC-UDRM
Director.
There are 20 available fellowships for
participants from Asia but preference in
selection will be given to ITC alumni, to
include all related expenses such as travel,
accommodation, insurance, excursion and course
fees. UNDP will provide a few fellowships for
those institutions who will be willing to
institutionalize the course at national level.
Interested applicants and ITC alumni must
complete and submit the application form
directly to Ms. Christie Agema < agema@itc.nl >
or by fax to +31 (0) 53 487 4336. Deadline is
before 15 August 2006. All applicants will be
informed on the selection outcome before 1
September 2006.
(9) 3rd Annual GIS Conference in Kuwait:
February 9-21, 2007
Organizers: ProMedia International and Kuwait
GIS
The conference will provide opportunities to
share knowledge with an audience of diverse
industry professionals looking for high-quality
information that will help maximize geospatial
information. For more information visit:
http://www.gulfgis.com.
Back to Top
D. USEFUL RESOURCES
(10) ADB Preliminary Yogyakarta and Central Java
Earthquake Damage and Loss Assessment: June 15,
2006
This report presents a preliminary assessment of
the damage and losses caused by the earthquake.
The assessment used the international standard
methodology for measuring disasters. The report
can be found here:
http://www.adb.org/Documents/Reports/Damage-Loss/default.asp.
(11) EQNET: Java, Indonesia, May 27, 2006
This Earthquake Information Network (EQNET) has
a list resources with information on the
earthquake, found at:
http://128.205.131.100:591/archives/java_052706.htm.
(12) ISDR Disaster Reduction Library
The United Nations International Strategy for
Disaster Reduction (ISDR) has a library with
more than 10,000 items, including books,
reports, articles, monographs, and serials on
the various aspects of disaster risk reduction.
Newsletters, CDs, videos, and DVDs are also
available. Some online resources are available.
The library website is:
http://www.unisdr.org/eng/library/lib-index.htm.
(13) ISDR Guidelines for Reducing Flood Losses
This publication aims at providing
decision-makers with a range of options to
consider for reducing losses associated with
flooding. The link to the executive summary and
PDF of the document is found here:
http://www.unisdr.org/eng/library/isdr-publication/flood-guidelines/isdr-publication-floods.htm.
(14) ISDR and CRED 2005 disaster statistics
The ISDR and the Belgian Université Catholique
de Louvain's Center for Research on the
Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) have online
access to their official figures of the number
of disasters in 2005, found here:
http://www.em-dat.net/figures_2005.htm.
(15) International Disaster Charter online
satellite images resource
The charter aims at providing a unified system
of space data acquisition and delivery to those
affected by natural or man-made disasters
through Authorized Users. The website of the
charter has links to satellite images made
through the charter, including the May 27, 2006
Java earthquake, the February 17, 2006
Philippine landslide, and the October 18, 2005
Kashmir earthquake. The links to images can be
found at:
http://www.disasterscharter.org/new_e.html.
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