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Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
30
September 2009
Issue No. 72
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) Indonesia struck by
earthquakes
(based on reports from IRIN, Reuters and
BBC)
A powerful earthquake of
magnitude 7.3 struck Java on September 2.
At least 80 people died and at least 47
missing. The quake displaced 186,637 people
and damaged about 150,000 houses and other
buildings, according to the National Agency
for Disaster Management (BNPB). The quake
was felt strongly in Jakarta, shaking
buildings and sending residents fleeing
their homes and high-rise office towers in
panic. The quake struck 142km southwest of
Tasikamalaya, West Java, at a depth of
49.5km, according to geologists.
At the end of the month, a
7.9 earthquake struck at 1716 local time
(1016 GMT) on September 30, some 85km (55
miles) under the sea, north-west of
Sumatra’s provincial capital of Padang,
while the second quake was on land and
struck at 0852 local time (0152 GMT) on
October 1, about 225km south-east of Padang
at a depth of about 25km. There were no
immediate reports of damage from the second
quake. Hhowever the first quake brought
down many buildings including at least two
hospitals. Thousands are trapped under
rubble and at least 467 people were killed.
(2) Cholera deaths in
Afghanistan
(based on a report by IRIN)
The Ministry of Public Health
of Afghanistan reported 28 deaths from
cholera and/or acute watery diarrhea in the
past two months. Since there are strong
diagnostic similarities between the two,
health workers have difficulty in
distinguishing one from the other. Lack of
access to safe drinking water and sanitation
as well as poor awareness about personal
hygiene appear to be major causes of the
two.
(3) Typhoon Ketsana killed at
least 400 in Southeast Asia
(based on reports from IRIN, Reuters,
Philippine Daily Inquirer, Philippine
Star, BBC and CNN)
Millions of people are coping
with the aftermath of a typhoon that cut a
destructive path through parts of Southeast
Asia at the end of September, killing 400 in
the region. Tens of thousands of families
were affected in the Philippine capital
Manila and in at least 24 other provinces
and cities on the northern island of Luzon
on 26 September. The death toll is at 277,
and more than 40,000 people were moved to
evacuation centers as the storm caught
rescuers and emergency response teams
off-guard and the Philippine government to
appeal for international help. With wind
speeds of up 100 km per hour, the storm
dumped one month’s worth of rain in just six
hours over large parts of Luzon, including
Metropolitan Manila. The continuous heavy
rains forced authorities to release waters
from two dams just north of Manila that were
threatening to overflow. Government reports
said 101 people had died and 18 were missing
after typhoon Ketsana swept through the
central Vietnam late on 29 September,
affecting about 1.4 million people and
damaging or submerging more than 350,000
houses and sources of livelihoods..The
typhoon also left 11 dead in Cambodia.
(4) Tsunami in the South
Pacific
(based on reports by IRIN, Reuters and BBC)
On September 29, four
powerful tsunamis generated by a huge
undersea quake of magnitude 8.3 crashed into
the islands of the South Pacific. Some 20
villages were destroyed in Samoa and scores
flattened in nearby American Samoa.
Hundreds remained missing as the tsunamis
tested the early alert systems set up since
the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. The death
toll is at 135 in Samoa, 32 in American
Samoa, and nine in Tonga.
(5) Vietnam releases report
on sea level and storm scenarios
Last month, the Ministry of Natural
Resources and Environment (MONRE) issued a
set of scenarios for expected change in sea
level, severity of storms and other climate
change events to other ministries, as a
first step in ‘mainstreaming’ climate change
assumptions into long-range government
planning. The scenario-building work relies
on extensive historical data and the best
current estimates by the Vietnamese and
international scientific community. MONRE
Minister Pham Khoi Nguyen said they will
continue to update the scenarios, especially
on sea rise level, so that ministries,
sectors and provinces can take specific
actions to limit negative impacts of climate
change. Nguyen told reporters that in the
last 50 years, Vietnam’s average temperature
increased by 0.5-0.7oC while the sea level
rose by 20cm. Both trends have intensified
the impact of storms and floods. Access the
press release here:
http://www.presscenter.org.vn/en/content/view/921/27/.
(6) Anti-H1N1 flu measures
stepped up in Central Asia
(based on reports by IRIN and AFP)
Health authorities across
Central Asia have launched a series of
measures to tackle the spread of H1N1. The
Kazakh Ministry of Health is advising
Muslims not to do the `Hajj' pilgrimage to
Mecca this year because of the epidemic.
Schools could also be temporarily closed to
contain the virus. Some 171 people had been
quarantined in Astana and Almaty, but the
quarantines were lifted in early August.
In addition to public
awareness efforts, borders across the region
have become the focus of attempts to
minimize the spread of H1N1. The Kyrgyz
Health Ministry has drawn up an action plan
against the disease's possible outbreak;
thermal scanners have been introduced at Osh
and Manas airports in Kyrgyzstan and at
crossings with Kazakhstan, and border
personnel have been instructed to wear face
masks. Tajikistan has opened additional
medical centers at its northern airport and
railway station in Sughd Province.
Uzbekistan will check all `Hajj' pilgrims
before they leave and upon their return for
symptoms of H1N1.
Meanwhile, the People’s
Republic of China has approved a homegrown
H1N1 flu vaccine called Sinovac, and is said
to be effective after only one dose. This
vaccine is a potential major breakthrough,
as most experts had assumed that two doses
per person would be needed.
(7) Bangkok Climate Change
Talks
Some 2,500 participants are currently
attending the Bangkok Climate Change Talks,
from 28 September to 9 October; this
gathering is the penultimate round of
negotiations under the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change treaty (UNFCCC).
It aims to advance a negotiating text for
the deal ahead of the UN Climate Change
Conference in Copenhagen December, when 192
nations will try to sign off on the deal
before the 2012 expiry of the Kyoto
Protocol.
B. Calls for Submission
(8) Call for abstracts:
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.
(9) Call for Papers: ISCRAM
2010
Organizer: International
Systems for Crisis Response and Management.
Papers are now being accepted for the 2010
ISCRAM conference May 2-5 in Seattle. Full
research papers, works-in-progress, and
practitioner reports will be accepted.
Papers focusing on the conference theme of
how rapidly changing technology affects
crisis response are preferred, although any
work on crisis response and management
systems is welcome. More information,
including track descriptions, submission
guidelines, and a calendar of important
dates, is available here:
http://www.iscram.org/ISCRAM2010/ISCRAM2010_full_call_for_papers.pdf.
C. Conferences and Courses
(10) Strategic Approaches to
Sustainable Urbanization Course
–
Gangwon Province, Korea: 16 –
21 November 2009
Organizer: International
Urban Training Center. Registration is
still open for this course. Its objective
is to strengthen problem-solving and
policymaking abilities with better
understanding of the key environmental
challenges faced by cities and towns for
sustainable urbanization and their
inter-linkages with local economic and
social issues. Module themes include urban
environment and sustainable urbanization
concepts, and planning and management
instruments. For inquiries and to download
the application form, go to:
http://www.iutc.org.
(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)
CBDRM-TLC newsletter
CBDRM-Trainers
Learning Circle releases its first newsletter this September 2009. The
newsletter highlights the various accomplishments and activities of the TLC
program in the Philippines to date since the program started in 2007. The TLC
responds to the ongoing demand for evidence-based, context-specific, up-to-date
and applied CBDRM resources / tools for training, education and learning in
Asia. Within 2008 – 2009, the TLC Philippines works for and strengthens its
functionality, the publication of a gender-sensitive knowledge product, and the
institutionalization of CBDRR curriculum and programs in universities and
training institutions. You can download the newsletter here:
http://www.cdp.org.ph/pubs/tlc-newsletter-v1n1.pdf.
(13)
IRIN videos
IRIN, the
humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, has developed several new films. They have one set on the
profile of activists against AIDS (found here:
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=85824) and on climate change
(found here:
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=84716).
(14)
TVEAP Saving the Planet TV series
TVE Asia
Pacific (TVEAP) is delighted to announce the global release of its latest Asian
regional television series, Saving the Planet. The six-episode series
features outstanding efforts in education for sustainable development (ESD) in
South and Southeast Asia. The stories – drawn from Cambodia, India, Laos,
Nepal, the Philippines and Thailand – were selected through competitive public
nominations in 2007. Each 10-minute story is a self-contained documentary,
filmed on location by a local film crew with the participation of local
organizations whose work was being profiled. Saving the Planet is
available for broadcast, civil society and educational use anywhere in the
world. The entire series can be viewed on line at:
http://www.savingtheplanet.tv. Broadcasters may requests tape copies from:
sales@tveap.org. Educational and civil society users may directly order the
series on DVD from TVEAP's online film catalogue at
http://www.tveap.org/?q=buy_films.php.
(15)
UNOOSA/UN-SPIDER promotional movie on YouTube.
Produced
in April of this year, the movie tries to capture the essence of what UN-SPIDER
is all about. Additionally, it offers a brief overview of the disaster
management and space communities, depicting ways in which these two can be
brought together, with a peek at UN-SPIDER’s response following the Namibia 2009
floods. Moreover, it familiarizes the viewer with the unfolding version of the
UN-SPIDER Knowledge. Watch it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAnEZU5BIXM.
(16)
Free Landsat Scenes Go Public by the Million
The U.S.
Geological Survey opened its full Landsat archive to user access at no charge
last October 2008, and the response from across the nation and around the globe
has grown exponentially. Even the very oldest data in the archive, dating to
over three decades ago, is being downloaded at unprecedented levels – with
land-surface change detection emerging as a primary use of Landsat data.
Landsat 1 was launched on July 23, 1972, and subsequent Landsat missions have
continually acquired land-image data across the globe. Scientists, educators,
and the general public use these data for a wide array of activities ranging
from supporting disaster relief efforts to making agricultural crop assessments
to identifying sites for cell phone towers. Landsat scenes can be previewed and
downloaded through the USGS Global Visualization Viewer (http://glovis.usgs.gov/).
Additional information on satellites, sensors, data, and the Landsat Program,
which is managed by the USGS in partnership with NASA, can be found at the
Landsat Missions Web site here:
http://landsat.usgs.gov/.
(17)
Sahana Free Open Source Disaster Management Tool
The tool
has an easy-to-use interface, and has been successfully applied in the responses
to the Philippine mudslides, Sichuan earthquake, and the Sri Lanka tsunami.
Developed by Lanka Software Foundation, its features are: 1. Missing Person
Registry ; 2. Organization Registry; 3. Relief Request Management System; 4.
Camp Registry; 5. Volunteer Management; 6. Inventory Management; and 7.
Situation Awareness. For more details go to:
http://www.sahana.lk/node/12.
(18) Safer Cities 24: Learning
to Act Together: Disaster Mitigation in Hyderabad, Pakistan through
Collaborative Initiatives, 2009
This is a case study of
Hyderabad District in Pakistan that shows that flood disaster mitigation and
risk reduction can be the starting point for urban communities to act together
to resolve a common problem. To download, please go to:
http://www.adpc.net/v2007/Programs/UDRM/PROMISE/INFORMATION%20RESOURCES/Safer%20Cities/Downloads/SaferCities24.pdf.
(19) Safer Cities 26: Using
Risk Assessments to Reduce Landslide Risk, 2009
This case study discusses risk
assessment and the subsequent methodologies and approaches for landslide risk
reduction. The Baguio City landslide risk mitigation project in the Philippines
focused on strengthening community capacity and enhancing local commitment. The
project for Kaluthara District in Sri Lanka developed a landslide early warning
system through a school-based network of rainfall monitoring stations. Finally,
the project for Patong City in Phuket, Thailand relied more on instrumentation
and technical risk assessment as the basis for structural mitigation measures.
To download, please go to:
http://www.adpc.net/v2007/Programs/UDRM/PROMISE/INFORMATION%20RESOURCES/Safer%20Cities/Downloads/SaferCities26.pdf.
(20) This month in Asia’s
disaster history
Haiphong, Vietnam, in the Gulf
of Tonkin was hit by a typhoon on 15 September 1881 that was so powerful,
300,000 people were killed. Not much is known about the circumstances.
However, the event is ranked as the 8th deadliest tropical cyclone based on
death toll. Read about this and other deadly cyclones at:
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