| DFID's response to STWR'S article: ''The Tsunami and the Brandt Report |
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A response to Mohammed Mesbahi's article - the Tsunami, the Brandt Report and other matters - from Christine Edwards of the Department for International Development. 2nd Feb 2006
Dear Mr. Mesbahi,
It is clear that now the immediate relief phase has passed, there will be a massive need for assistance to get people's lives back to normal by rebuilding infrastructure - roads and telecommunications, schools and hospitals, water and sanitation systems - and helping to rebuild peoples' livelihoods. We are already in close touch with the World Bank and Asian Development Bank and other organisations which will be leading this longer-term work. As G8 President we will work to ensure that the governments concerned have the support and funding that they need. At the same time, please be assured that this effort will not divert assistance from DFID's other development programmes.
You mention that more needs to be done to reduce the impact of disasters such as the Tsunami. The World Conference on Disaster Reduction, held in Kobe in January, organised by the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, was an opportunity to draw together governments from different countries to try and get consensus and commitment on a Framework for Action. The Framework contains strong references to the importance of developing progress indicators and considering the effects of climate change, as well as promoting the mainstreaming of disaster risk reduction into Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers. DFID has recently employed a Scientific Adviser, Gordon Conway, who is looking more closely at the scientific aspect of earthquakes and how they might increase (as well as where they might occur specifically) in the future. Sir David King (from the Office of Science and Technology) is also leading a 'natural hazard working group', at the request of the Prime Minister, which DFID is engaged with. This is a group of scientific experts who will explore where future risks lie and what the UK might be able to do about them. However, we are keen within DFID to ensure that any scientific advice is not detached from what is needed on the ground. While important, this so-called 'hard' scientific knowledge is useless if it is not disseminated to those who need it. Post-tsunami there has been much discussion about what we can do to prevent such a disaster happening again. Many countries have put forward proposals to set up an early warning system (EWS) and details should be made clearer, such as who should lead, what type of system, where will it be placed etc, at the UNESCO/IOC (International Oceanographic Commission) meeting at the beginning of March. The UK's position on setting up an EWS, regarding what type of system it should be, is as follows: (i) It should not just focus on tsunamis, but should address all hazards, particularly those which happen frequently, such as floods, hurricanes, typhoons etc; (ii) It should be accessible to those who need it i.e. communities at the local level;
(iii) The most effective warning systems are those which are not necessarily high-tech and expensive, but those which are understood by people at the local level and used by them on a regular basis so that everyone is aware of how to respond and how to alert people. The 'communication cascade' is key to ensuring people are prepared quickly and are able to respond.
The UK is also one of the strongest supporters of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the UN agency which is responsible for coordinating response to such crises. In addition to contributing to its appeals, we have provided bilateral funding to boost the agency's capacity in its coordination role and improve the impact of its work in its core functions. From 1999 to the end of March 2005 DFID's core funding to OCHA will total £23.4 million. Christine Edwards
Public Enquiry Point Further Information: "The Tsunami and the Brandt Report" by Mohammed Mesbahi and Dr. Angela Paine DFID - UK Department for International Development The Disasters Emergency Committee
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