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Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
30 November 2007
Issue No. 53
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
October to December
2007 are implementing the
small-scale mitigation projects for each
city, planning for the conduct of national
courses, and development of case study
material.
PROGRAM ACTIVITIES
for November and December 2007
-
BANGLADESH – BDPC conducted a
day-long workshop on the Role of Media in
Disaster Risk Management on November 21.
This workshop aimed for orienting 22 media
participants, from both electronic and print
media, on community-based disaster risk
management practice, and develops strategies
for the involvement of media in support of
the community action. The workshop was held
at Hotel Pavillion, East Nasirabad,
Chittagong. As a follow up to the review
meeting with City Corporation officials on
the progress of implementation of small
scale mitigation projects, Mr. Abu Sadat,
assistant engineer of CCC, provided the
technical drawing of the latrine for the
school cum shelter and revised the cost
estimation for the project ‘Improvement of
drainage system to address the problem of
water logging’. Mr. Arambepola with a team
of ADPC met with Mr. Rezaul Karim, city
planner of CCC, on November 14 to discuss
about the forthcoming city level workshop in
Chittagong with the aim to develop city
disaster management plan. A follow up
meeting between Mr. Reza and PROMISE-BD team
was held on November 20 to discuss the
conduct of the event. Mr. Reza advised the
team to seek permission from the honorable
acting City Mayor to grace the event as a
guest of honor and to request him to kindly
agree the proposal. PROMISE-BD team held
two meetings with the respective school
authority and the school disaster management
committee for developing school disaster
management plan for the pilot school. They
have identified the connecting roads from
the nearby community towards the school for
designing safe evacuation route. The roles
and responsibilities in different phases of
disaster will be identified in succeeding
meetings with the members of the SDMC. A devastating cyclone called ‘Sidr’ hit the
coastal district of Bangladesh in the night
of November 15 to 16, causing extensive
deaths, damage to assets including the
dwelling houses and standing crops of the
field. The meteorological department hoisted
warning signal number nine on November 13,
and the PROMISE-BD team maintained regular
contact with the Cyclone Preparedness
Program (CPP) focal person and disseminated
the news to the change agents (CAs). Just
after the warning signal, the CAs in
cooperation with the respective Ward
Commissioner office started announcing
requesting the community people to move to
the cyclone shelter. Dry food was
distributed by them among the people who
took shelter. After the cyclone the CAs took
active part in emergency response. The Ward
disaster management committee and some of
the CAs went to the southern part of the
country and are still working there.
-
PAKISTAN – PROMISE-Pakistan team
continued preparations for the consultative
workshop in December 2007 that is designed
to develop the city action plan. The
updates on the report on ‘Participatory
Hazard Mapping and Vulnerability and
Capacity Assessment’ are still under
process.
-
PHILIPPINES – The City Council
pursued the initiative of drafting a City
Ordinance on having an Emergency Operation
Center. The PROMISE team followed up and
commented on the Draft of the Ordinance 367
authored by Councilor Farah Decano; the
proposed ordinance will institutionalize a
24-hour Emergency Operation Center (EOC)
office for the City with regular staff and a
physical facility, and to officially adapt
the DRM and CDCC Manual drafted by the TWG.
TWG had a meeting on November 23, 2007 to
discuss the updates regarding the following:
case studies for ADPC on early warning
systems; case study on Barangay Mangin CBDM
for Oxfam GB (with video documentation on
the first week of December), updates on the
recently concluded barangay election, CBDRM
orientation for the newly elected officials,
and small-scale mitigation projects for the
high-risk communities. Ms. Luneta of CDP
shared the PROMISE CBDRM and COPRAP
experience for Plan Timor Leste Staff. There
usual hazard is conflict related but due to
the upcoming rainy season the IDP camps
might experience flooding which the
Philippines have very rich experience on.
Presentations on the CBDRM PROMISE Dagupan
experience provided rich information for the
participants, especially on child-oriented
participatory risk assessment and planning.
-
SRI-LANKA – Sarvodaya held a cluster
meeting was held on November 8to discuss the
future activities for establishing an EOC
for Kalutara. The aims and objectives of
the discussion was explained by Ms Priyanka
Mudalige and the present status of the
existing EOC is explained by Captain
Sanjeewa Samaranayake. A SWOT analyze was
done to analyze the gap to be bridged when
working towards the well established EOC
from the prevailing situation. Present at
the meeting from DMC Kalutara were Mr. A.
Karunanayake, Coordinator, Cpt. Sanjeewa
Samaranayake, Assistant Coordinator, and
U.D.R Jayasoma; present from PROMISE-SL were
Ms. Priyanka Mudalige, Ms. Hansika
Hemanayake, and Mr. Menake Wijesinghe,
Project Director. GPS Locations were taken
in flood affected areas of Kalutara on
November 21 and 28 with the support of NBRO
and the Irrigation office of Kalutara. The
GPS readings will be given to Dr. Nandalal
for further improvement of the flood model.
Training programs for craftsmen and
contractors on construction rules in
disaster prone areas were held on November
27 and 30 at Kalutara. 2nd program on
Governance and Disaster Risk Reduction was
held from 12th to 16th of November, 2007
under the same agreement which was made
between SLILG and Sarvodaya Community
Disaster Management Centre. PROMISE-SL and
the Sri Lanka Institute of Local Government
held the National Training Programme on
Governance and Disaster Risk Reduction for
26 participants who are working in local
government institutions of Kalutara, SLILG,
Sarvodaya and the National Building Research
Organization.
-
VIETNAM – CECI and the Construction
Department are revising and finalizing the
guidelines on safe construction techniques.
Work has begun on the small-scale disaster
mitigation projects. Detailed design and
cost estimates are developed and being
checked by CECI. Some of emergency
facilties such as life jackets, life buoys,
helmets, hand loudspeakers were delivered to
emergency rescue team of wards and sections.
Those equipment were delivered in time to
help the community be better prepared to the
second largest flood that ever happened in
the central region of Vietnam (at some
places, water level were approximately that
of the historic 1999 flood). Preparations
continue for the drawing competition on
Disaster Preparedness and living Environment
Protection for 4th and 5th grade pupils of
school in the three project wards. A
meeting was held with the Educational
Department of Cam Le district and five
primary schools of the three wards
participating in the training. The plan for
the competition was finalised. The
competition will be at school and district
level, and around 400 pupils will
participate in the competition scheduled for
early December 2007. The website for
Promise Vietnam is now under development.
A. FROM THE
REGION
(1) Typhoons Mitag and Hagibis in Southeast
Asia
(based on reports from AlertNet and NDCC)
Thousands of people were evacuated from
coastal areas of two northern Philippine
provinces after Typhoon Mitag changed course
overnight and veered north. The storm, with
winds of 175 km per hour (108 mph) at its
centre, hit the provinces of Isabela and
Aurora on November 25. Authorities in both
provinces ordered evacuations of coastal
areas and barred fishermen from going to
sea. At least four people had been killed
in Bicol in rains on the periphery of the
typhoon system, radio reports said. Before
the typhoon changed its course for the
north, disaster officials had a preemptive
evacuation of over 160,000 people from their
homes in Bicol, where volcanic mud from the
slopes of Mount Mayon can trigger lethal
landslides. Although the typhoon was likely
to miss the region, officials said they had
still not allowed the evacuees to return
home. The casualties numbered 31, with 21
missing including two pilots involved in SAR
operations.
Mitag comes less than a week after tropical
storm Hagibis, which killed 13 people in the
country before heading across the South
China Sea to Vietnam. Typhoon Hagibis
damaged some PhP 21 million worth of
infrastructure, crops and property in
Central and Eastern Visayas. The Regional
Disaster Coordinating Council in Central
Visayas (RDCC 7) report released Thursday
said the region-wide damage to
infrastructure cost P17.56 million. Hagibis
proceeded to pass over several south-central
Vietnam provinces, disrupting the coffee
harvest and endangering fishermen, officials
said on Saturday. Nearly 31,000 people were
evacuated to safety. Hundreds more
fisherman from China, Vietnam and the
Philippines were stranded on the Nansha
Islands, a group of islets, reefs and sand
banks also known as the Spratlys.
Sovereignty over the islands is contested.
Vietnam asked nearby countries to give
shelter to thousands of its fishermen from a
tropical storm now nearing the Spratly
archipelago in the South China Sea.
(2) Cyclone in Bangladesh, November 15
(based on reports from AlertNet, ReliefWeb
and USAID)
Cyclone Sidr hit Bangladesh on November 15
with winds of up to 250 kph and triggered a
5-meter storm surge. Over 600,000 people
were evacuated from the coasts, 200,000 of
which were in Cox’s Bazar. Chittagong and
Mongla ports suspended operations on
Wednesday and moved ships to safer areas,
while Chittagong airport suspended flights
and moved planes away. All schools and
colleges in Chittagong and other towns in
the storm's path were been shut. In spite
of preparations, about 3,500 people died.
Thousands of people lost their homes and
relief was not able to reach all survivors
in time due to a lack of coordination in the
field. Diarrhea and other diseases broke
out in some affected districts. IFRC has
raised an appeal for USD 22.2 million to
assist the Bangladesh Red Crescent Society.
The funds will be used to provide affected
individuals and families in nine districts
with immediate relief, shelter, health,
water and sanitation and early recovery
assistance, as well as support for future
capacity building and disaster risk
reduction. USAID has pledged USD 10 million
in Food for Peace assistance, and USD 14.4
million in emergency funds, commodities and
transportation to assist relief efforts in
Bangladesh.
(3) Iraq dam collapse?
(based on a report from the BBC)
BBC News Online reported that the largest
dam in Iraq is at risk of collapsing,
potentially unleashing a 20-metre (65-foot)
wave of water on Mosul. It says U.S.
officials told Iraqi authorities in May to
make Mosul Dam a national priority, as a
catastrophic failure would result in a
"significant loss of life". A $27m
U.S.-funded project to help shore up the dam
has made little or no progress, according to
a report by a U.S. watchdog which says
reconstruction has been dogged by
mismanagement. A serious collapse would
jeopardize Mosul's 1.7 million residents and
could cause flooding along the Tigris River
all the way to Baghdad. To access the US
SIGIR report, go to:
http://www.sigir.mil/reports/quarterlyreports/Oct07/Default.aspx.
(4) Building Byelaws of Mangalore City
Corporation
The Building Byelaws (Building Codes) of
Mangalore City Corporation are being
reviewed. The draft byelaws based on the
recommendations of the Technical Committee
Report on revising the Building Byelaws for
Mangalore City are available for public
scrutiny. On reciept of comments from the
stakeholders within the limits of the City
Corporation and revised, if required, the
new Byelaws (Codes) would come into force 90
days from publication. Contact Mr. Sanjeev
Santhosh at
mailto:sanjeev.santhosh@undp.org for
more information. The revised Byelaws
(Codes) are available at the website of the
Mangalore City Corporation at
http://www.mangalorecity.gov.in and the url
for the document is
B. CALLS FOR SUBMISSION
(5) Call for Papers: “International
Conference-Workshop on the 17 February 2006
Guinsaugon, Landslide”
The University of the Philippines Diliman (UPD)
is calling for papers on disasters due to
landslides in the Philippines for the
“International Conference-Workshop on the 17
February 2006 Guinsaugon, Landslide”. The
conference will take place in Tacloban City,
Leyte on April 28 to 30. The
post-conference workshop and fieldwork will
be on May 1 & 2, 2008, in St. Bernard,
Southern Leyte, Philippines. The
contributions should be on other aspects of
landslide disasters including hazard and
risk assessment, monitoring and warning
systems, structural and non-structural
mitigation methods, community-based
landslide risk management practices,
capacity building and public awareness, and
land use planning. Preference will be given
to studies of Philippine landslides or those
that are applicable to the Philippine
setting. The conference is organized in
cooperation with Mayor Rico C. Rentuza of
St. Bernard, Southern Leyte and the
University of Waterloo, Canada, will be
organizing the The conference is an activity
under the Asian Program for Regional
Capacity Enhancement for Landslide Impact
Mitigation (RECLAIM). To download the
conference documents,
more>>
(6) Call for Papers: 5th International
Conference on Information Systems for Crisis
Response and Management (ISCRAM 2008)
Organizers of a special academic session on
"Virtual Teams and Virtual Communities in
Emergency Preparedness and Response" have
issued a call for papers. The 5th
International Conference on Information
Systems for Crisis Response and Management (ISCRAM)
2008 conference will be held in Washington,
DC, on May 4-7, 2008. Papers are invited
that provide data from studies of the use of
virtual teams or virtual communities in the
design or use of emergency management
information systems, with data collection
methods ranging from laboratory or field
experiments to qualitative case studies.
Papers are due December 21, 2007. Details
on paper submission and the complete call
for papers can be found at
http://www.iscram.org
C. CONFERENCES AND COURSES
(7) 2nd Asian Ministerial
Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction – New
Delhi, India: November 7 to 8, 2007
ADPC partnered the 2nd Asian
Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk
Reduction from 7-8 November 2007 in New
Delhi, organized by the Ministry of Home
Affairs in India. The theme of the
conference was ‘Development without
Disasters’, one of the goals of which was to
review the implementation of the Hyogo
Priorities of Action in Asia in the context
of various initiatives taken by national,
regional and international bodies and
governments during the past two years.
ADPC, represented by a high-level
delegation, led a pre-conference Event 04 on
“Meeting the Challenges of Disaster Risk
Reduction in Communities and Cities:
Building on Good Practices in the Asian
Region” on 6 November. Presentations were
made on two sub themes: Lessons Learnt from
Disaster Risk Reduction Programs and
Strengthening Community Resilience in Asia
and Promoting Urban Risk Reduction and
Strengthening Resilience in Cities. For more
information,
more>>
(8) Cities on Volcanoes 5 (COV5) – Shimabara,
Japan: November 19-23, 2007
Cities on Volcanoes (COV) is a forum for
volcanologists, city planners, authorities,
and businesses to meet and discuss the
effects of volcanic eruptions on society,
infrastructure, and economic development,
and ways to mitigate these effects. In
addition to highlighting recent
volcanological research, COV5 focused on
volcanic crisis preparedness and management
in densely populated areas. The conference
was hosted by the City of Shimabara and the
Volcanological Society of Japan (VSJ). More
information is at
http://www.citiesonvolcanoes5.com/.
D. USEFUL RESOURCES
(9) Social Development Website, ADB, 2007
The Asian Development Bank has developed a
new website of resources on social
development. Social development is a
cross-cutting approach to development that
promotes policies and institutions in
support of greater inclusiveness and equity
in access to services, resources and
opportunities, greater empowerment of poor
and marginalized groups, and greater
security to cope with the chronic or sudden
risks, especially for the poor and
marginalized groups. The site has links on
social protection, a concept that refers to
policies and programs designed to reduce
poverty and vulnerability by promoting
efficient labor markets, diminishing
people's exposure to risks, enhancing their
capacity to protect themselves against
hazards and interruption/loss of income.
The social development site can be found
here:
http://www.adb.org/SocialDevelopment/default.asp,
while the social protection site can be
found
here:
http://www.adb.org/SocialProtection/default.asp.
(10) Updated World Map of the Köppen-Geiger
Climate Classification, Peel et al., 2007
Although it is now over 100 years old, the
Köppen-Geiger system of climate
classification is still widely used by
teachers and researchers. Developed in the
1800s, it assigns the climate at any
particular location to one of five general
categories (tropical, arid, temperate, cold,
or polar) and adds subdivisions based on
annual temperature and precipitation. Murray
C. Peel, a geographer at the University of
Melbourne in Australia, has updated system
and produced a new global climate map based
on data from more than 4,200 weather
stations that have been collecting
precipitation and temperature data for at
least 30 years. According to the new map,
the most common climate type by land area is
Hot Desert (14.2% of total land area),
followed by Tropical savannah (11.5% of
total land area). Peel, Brian Finlayson and
Tom McMahon published an article on the
updated system. The abstract, full paper,
and the updated map as an image file (.jpg)
and as a raster file (ArcMap), can be
downloaded for free at:
Also available at this site are files
containing the precipitation and temperature
variables for all stations used in the
construction of the updated map.
(11) World Report on Road Traffic Injury
Prevention – WHO, 2004
The World report on road traffic injury
prevention is the first major report being
jointly issued by the World Health
Organization (WHO) and the World Bank on
this subject. To download the document,
more>>
(12) Country Focus 3: Indonesia
This section is a focus on online resources
on the countries under the GUGSA project or
PROMISE program, both funded by USAID. The
countries that will be featured are (in
order): Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Nepal,
Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand
and Viet Nam. Here is a list of online
resources on Indonesia:
· Indonesia
Country Study under the Good Urban
Governance in South Asia project funded by
USAID-Indonesia:
more>>
· Safer
Cities 10: Creating earthquake
preparedness in schools, August 2004:
· Standard
Operation Procedure for Urban Disaster
Management in the Municipality of Bandung,
March 2000:
· PDR-SEA
document on Policy and Institutional
Arrangement for Disaster Management in
Indonesia, 2001:
· ISDR
Profile of Indonesia:
http://www.unisdr.org/eng/country-inform/Indonesia-general.htm
· AlertNet’s
profile of Indonesia:
http://www.alertnet.org/db/cp/Indonesia.htm
· CHRR’s
natural disaster profile of Indonesia:
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/chrr/research/profiles/indonesia.html
· REDAT
profile of Indonesia:
http://www.redat.be/CountryProfile/Indonesia/indonesia_over.html
· ADB
Portal on Indonesia:
http://www.adb.org/Indonesia/default.asp
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