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Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
31
Mar 2009
Issue No. 66
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, five project
countries were selected in 2005 for
implementing demonstration projects in a
highly vulnerable city with recent history
of hydro-meteorological disasters –
Bangladesh, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri
Lanka, and Vietnam. The projects in
Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Vietnam were
finished by June 2008. The projects in the
Philippines and Sri Lanka were given
supplementary activities, while a project in
Indonesia began in February 2008. The main
activities from January to March 2009 are:
development of early warning systems, set up
of emergency response system, disaster
management planning for selected schools,
and networking for DRR.
PROGRAM
ACTIVITIES for March to April 2009:
-
INDONESIA – PROMISE ID
continued to work on developing guidelines
for mainstreaming DRR and risk management
into the city development plan.
-
PHILIPPINES – PROMISE RP
organized on March 3 an orientation on “DRR
in the Education Sector in the Philippines”
for the heads of the Dagupan City Division
of the Department of Education, Culture and
Sports. The orientation was attended by
school principals and the TWG. They agreed
to have a DRR workshop for the primary and
secondary teachers in Dagupan City in May
2009, with the aim to orient teachers on
basic DRR concepts, organize DRR groups per
school, and produce DRR action plans for
schools. The discussion of the orientation
was reported at the Education Cluster
meeting on March 9. Ms. Mayfourth Luneta
presented the PROMISE RP activity on
mainstreaming DRR in the Education Sector at
a training for Maldivian teachers on the
same topic last March 23-27. Other
networking activities for the month are: (1)
sharing the Oxfam GB documentary on Barangay
Mangin at the Forum on Women and Climate
Change on March 11, highlighting what women
are doing in DRR; (2) participating in the
Hyogo Framework for Action Monitoring by
getting Dagupan’s partners in all sectors to
answer the HFA monitoring tool; and (3)
organizing a Tsunami Preparedness
Orientation for Dagupan City on March 31,
with active participation by the TWG, the
Region 1 Disaster Coordinating Council, and
the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and
Seismology. Activities for next month
include: Bangladesh Study Tour to Dagupan
City, preparation for the DRR workshop for
Dagupan schools, and a meeting with the RDCC
for Preparation of Northern Luzon DRR net
Workshop.
-
SRI LANKA – NBRO, the PROMISE
SL partner, held a workshop on March 19 with
community representatives for reviewing
proposals for drainage projects, and for
prioritizing the same. About 50
participants came representing their
communities; other participants included
government representatives, members of
Kalutara Urban Council, the Mayor of
Kalutara, officials of the Disaster
Management Centre in Kalutara, and
representatives of Sri Lanka Red Cross.
A.
From the Region
(1) Locust outbreak in Yemen
(based on a report from IRIN)
Yemen’s Agriculture Ministry reported a new
locust outbreak in the southern governorate
of Shabwa, when a field team discovered on
18 March that immature locusts were
spreading over a 40-hectare area.
Fumigation is the response to manage the
infestation to prevent their migration to
summer breeding areas.
(2) Diarrhea outbreak in
Dhaka
(based on a report by IRIN)
High temperatures and power outages have
combined to lower the availability of safe
drinking water, and resulted in an unusually
early outbreak of diarrhea across Dhaka,
Bangladesh. Compared with the same period
of last year, the number of patients has
trebled. Diarrhea is one of Bangladesh's
main health concerns; it is responsible for
about 9% of deaths among infants under 12
months old, 10% of deaths among the
under-fives, and infant and child mortality
rates due to diarrhea is at almost 100
children a day.
(3) Dam collapse in Indonesia
(based on reports by PROMISE Indonesia,
AlertNet and IRIN)
An earth dam built in 1933 by the Dutch
colonial government had burst on March 27,
releasing a 1.5m3 wall of water
that killed 98 people and destroyed eight
houses. The spilled water caused heavy
damage to 319 houses, two schools and a
mosque. At least 2,000 people were moved to
four evacuation centers; 115 people are
still missing. Situ Gintung dam in
Tangerang, Banten Province collapsed around
4:30 AM, although the community near the dam
had already seen the sign of dam failure at
about 2 AM. Unfortunately, only a few of
people were evacuated in time because most
people were asleep. Over time, there had
been a reduction in the lake’s extent from
31 hectares to 24 hectares. Before the dam
failure, there had already been the
appearance of cracks and pipe erosion in the
dam; these combined with the narrowing of
the lake and unusually heavy rain that
lasted three days before the event.
B. Calls for Submission
(4) Call for Abstracts: Best
Practices Booklet on Geo-information for
Risk and Disaster Management
The Joint Board of Geospatial
Information Societies and UN-SPIDER jointly
invite contributions to a "Best Practices
Booklet on Geo-information for Risk and
Disaster Management" based on the knowledge
and experience of experts, to outline the
potential uses of the Geo-Information
Technologies to governmental, institutional
and operative decision makers all over the
world. Articles should be short enough to
be read during a coffee break, addressing
one or more of the disaster types and
technologies listed: 1) disaster types:
geophysical (earthquake, tsunami,
volcano, mass movement, severe storm, flood,
fire, drought, extreme temperature),
biological (epidemic, insect
infestation, vector diseases), and
technological/societal (pollution,
industrial facilities failure, terrorist
attacks, traffic break down and accidents);
2) technology used: data collection
technology (sensors and products),
data processing (systems for real-time
monitoring/tracking, prediction and
simulation), data management and analysis
(spatio-temporal, image, moving objects and
point clouds databases), data access and
sharing (SDI, Web portals, command and
control systems, Net-centric systems,
ontology/semantic-based applications,
context-aware search), data visualization
(Web visualization, VR environments,
dedicated systems). Abstracts should not
exceed 400 words and should outline a
successful application, including data
acquisition, information extraction and
dissemination, and a clear statement of the
benefits and further potential of the
practice described as compared to classical
methods. Submit abstracts by 30 April 2009
as an email attachment to Prof. Piero
Boccardo (piero.boccardo@polito.it).
C. Conferences and Courses
(5) 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.
Extensive exercises and simulations provide
an insight into how GIS and RS tools are
applied in these fields, and the benefits
and solutions that can be presented. 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/May/01_GIS_for_DRM[1].pdf.
(6) 4th
Mainstreaming Disaster Risk Reduction in
Local Governance – Manila, Philippines: 25 –
29 May 2009
Organizer: Asian Disaster
Preparedness Center (ADPC). The overall
objective is to develop a cadre of local
government professionals sensitive to issues
presented by the recurrent hazards. The
course intends to increase their knowledge,
as well as of other stakeholders, on urban
governance and disaster risk management to
be responsive to the needs of vulnerability
reduction, and to create opportunities for
mainstreaming risk reduction as a component
of urban governance. For inquiries, contact
Mr. Falak Nawaz,
tedadpc@adpc.net, or Mr. Amit Kumar,
amit@adpc.net.
D. Useful Resources
(7) Bangladesh Quarterly
Economic Update
http://mms.adb.org/e-Notification/url.asp?ID=18714&DOCID=16767
(8)
A Billion Hungry People,
Oxfam, January 2009
Oxfam published a briefing
paper on the impact of the global recession
and other drivers that are reducing people’s
access to food. To download the paper, go
to:
http://oxfam.intelli-direct.com/e/d.dll?m=234&url=http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/policy/conflict_
disasters/downloads/bp127_billion_hungry.pdf.
(9)
Rethinking Disasters, Oxfam,
2008
This report addresses draws
on Oxfam's experience in preparing for and
responding to disasters across South Asia.
Its topics include: consequences of poor
policies and inaction; environmental
challenges caused by climate change;
disaster risk reduction; and recommendations
for the future. The report is part of a
series of papers that seeks to educate the
members of public about issues on
development and humanitarian policy issues.
To download the report, go to:
http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/policy/conflict_disasters/
downloads/oxfam_india_rethinking_disasters.pdf.
(10)
PROMISE Online IEC Materials
A new webpage of PROMISE
features IEC materials developed under the
different city demonstration projects. The
online materials include the following:
-
2007
Pocket Calendar (Bangla)
-
Oxfam GB video
documentary "Strength in Numbers: The
Barangay as Building Block", 2008 (in
two parts; with links to YouTube)
-
Bookmark, 2007 (Filipino)
-
Picture book, Disaster
Preparedness and Living Environment
Protection, 2008 (Vietnamese)
-
Poster, Flood- and
Typhoon- Resilient Construction
Principles (Vietnamese)
Visit the page and download
the resources at:
http://www.adpc.net/v2007/Programs/UDRM/PROMISE/PROGRAM%20COMPONENTS/Component1/IECMaterials/Default-IECMaterials.asp.
(11) Online Resources Series
on Natural Hazards
This new section is a focus
on online resources on the hazards that are
of special interest for urban disaster
management. The hazards that will be
featured are (in order): tropical cyclones
(a.k.a. cyclone, typhoon and hurricane),
drought, flood, landslide, earthquake and
technological hazards. Here is a list of
online resources on technological hazards
that can interact with natural hazards (such
as tropical cyclones, floods, landslides and
earthquakes):
-
EM-Dat technological
hazard disaster profile database access
page:
http://www.emdat.be/Database/DisasterProfile/profile_disasters.php?period=1900%242009&disgroup=group&dis_type=%27Industrial+Accident%27%2C%27Miscellaneous+accident%27%2C%27Transport+Accident%27%24Technological&Submit=Display+Disaster+Profile#top10lists
-
SAARC brief on fires:
http://saarc-sdmc.nic.in/fire.asp
-
IFRC webpage on
technological hazards with useful links:
http://www.ifrc.org/what/disasters/about/types/technological
/industrial.asp
-
ADPC, “Lao Urban Fire
Risk Assessment Mapping in Luangprabang
City,” December 2004:
http://www.adpc.net/audmp/library/firerist/LPB-complete.pdf
-
ADPC, “Lao Urban Fire
Risk Assessment Mapping in Pakse City,”
December 2004:
http://www.adpc.net/audmp/library/firerist/PSK-complete.pdf
-
ADPC, “Lao Urban Fire
Risk Assessment Mapping in Vientiane
Capital,” December 2004:
http://www.adpc.net/audmp/library/firerist/VTE-complete.pdf
-
ADPC, “Fire Risk
Assessment in Vientiane Lao PDR,”Regional
Workshop on Best Practices in Disaster
Mitigation, 2002, pp. 97 to 102:
http://www.adpc.net/audmp/rllw/default.html
-
Technical and human
aspects of historic rockslide dammed
lakes and landslide dam breaches,
Bonnard, 2006:
http://www.preventionweb.net/english/professional/
publications/v.php?id=5515
-
Safer Cities 9: Reducing
fire Treats to Home: Piloting
Community-based Fire Risk Assessment in
Ban Hatsady Village, July 2004:
http://www.adpc.net/AUDMP/library/safer_cities/9.pdf
-
Safer Cities 11: Towards
Technological Hazards Risk Reduction in
Ahmedabad: School as effective
institutions for disaster awareness and
preparedness, December 2004:
http://www.adpc.net/AUDMP/library/safer_cities/11.pdf
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