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Tsunami highlights
need for regional disaster defense: UN |
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UNITED NATIONS, Tuesday (AFP)
- The world must beef up regional first lines of defense to
quickly react to disasters such as last year's Indian Ocean
tsunami, says UN emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland.
Reviewing the extraordinary world response to the killer
waves that devastated coastal communities in 12 countries,
the 48-year-old Norwegian said: "The tsunami started in the
most dramatic way possible, with nature at its worst and
humanity at its best."
"It was a year when the humanitarian community was uniquely
challenged and where we by and large rose to the challenge
like never before," he told AFP from his command center on
the 36th floor of the UN headquarters.
Many lessons were learnt, he noted, including "the need to
build much more of a first line of defense both in terms of
disaster preparedness and prevention", particularly in
developing countries.
"The lives that were saved were saved by the people who were
there when the tsunami broke," he said. "We need more
standby arrangements where we can use more Africans in
Africa, Asians in Asia and Latin Americans in Latin
America."
"We are often struggling in such areas as water and
sanitation, in management and coordination," the UN official
said. "How do you set up 10 cities or 50 cities in weeks
with security, administration, shelters, water, food? It's
an extremely complex operation."
Egeland, who is also UN under-secretary general for
humanitarian affairs, said the United Nations now has
standby arrangements on all continents but must do more to
recruit and train personnel.
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The world body
wants 10 percent of humanitarian aid to be invested in disaster
prevention measures, particularly in the developing world. Another
key lesson from the tsunami was the importance of effective
cooperation and coordination among UN agencies, the Red Cross and
the military.
"The speed with which people got food, water, medical relief and
emergency shelters was very impressive," Egeland said. "It was a
very good civilian and military cooperation, probably the best
ever."
"Where we seemed to have made less progress than we had hoped is in
permanent shelters and reconstruction and livelihood," Egeland said.
"There was so much money available for this effort that there were
expectations that people would not meet their first-year anniversary
in tents," he added.
But in the Indonesian province of Aceh, which was hit hardest by the
tsunami, "too many people will grieve (and) mourn their dead one
year after in the same tents they got in February."
The December 26 tsunami, and the earthquake off the coast of
Indonesia that triggered it, killed nearly 220,000 people, most of
them in Indonesia and Sri Lanka; left almost two million homeless;
and caused economic damage worth billions of dollars in a dozen
countries.
Egeland said that, realistically, the people of Aceh would probably
have to wait another year to have their homes rebuilt. He also
praised the world's generous response, noting that, "We had
resources like I have never seen before when we started the year
with the tsunami relief effort."
The UN has received 1.1 billion dollars (nearly one billion euros)
to date in response to its revised tsunami flash appeal for 1.3
billion dollars, and it has a further 72 million dollars in pledges.
And Egeland said the year was ending on a very positive note, with
the UN General Assembly's approval of a 500-million-dollar
(425-million-euro) humanitarian emergency fund.
"Donors and member states have realized that you have to go from
lottery to predictability," he said.
Egeland said that in addition to an existing loan facility of 50
million dollars, the new fund could already count on 173 million
dollars in pledges by mostly European donors, including Britain,
France, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and
Switzerland.
Another 40 million dollars were in the pipeline from donors,
including Canada, Denmark and Nigeria, he added.
The United States and Japan were considering contributing, Egeland
said, noting that he was also expecting funding from oil-rich
countries, particularly from the Gulf region.
The fund is expected to become fully operational in March.
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