From her half-built house, Ari Haryani takes a few
steps to reach a freshly cemented path that snakes through the narrow,
dusty walkways of this resettlement village. The path offers the
36-year-old a route to safety in case the nearby Mount Merapi,
Indonesia’s most active volcano, erupts. “It has given us some
security,” says the mother of three, referring to the path, one of the
many features taking shape to aid this community of 380 homes. “We know
what to do and where to run when there is another eruption.
Even my
children know.” Evacuation drills have also become part of Ari’s
regular rhythm as she and her family continue to rebuild their life on
this sloppy terrain after their former village, closer to the towering
Merapi, was buried under the searing heat of pyroclastic flows and ash
when the volcano last roared to life in October 2010. That
eruption killed close to 350 people and destroyed nearly 10,000 homes
over a 15-kilometer radius from the mountain’s crater. But these
efforts in Pager Jurang and other villages — including building
community health centers capable of treating patients for burns and
respiratory problems — mark a departure from the usual rehabilitation
drives that follow disasters.
The customary top-down role asserted by
officials in the capital, Jakarta, has given way to planning shaped by
local communities and local governments. “The local people had a
central role in determining what their village needs so they own this
disaster risk reduction program,” Rio Rahadi, a civil engineer with a
local reconstruction and rehabilitation agency, told IPS. “They
requested what they wanted to reduce casualties the next time the
volcano erupts.” Such a shift in this corner of Southeast Asia’s
largest archipelago — and one of its most disaster-prone regions —
affirms a pattern gaining momentum across Asia: local communities and
governments are discovering their voice and weight to build resilience.
“Decentralization
is the trend across Asia and that has led to greater efforts by local
communities to organise themselves and demand resources for disaster
reduction,” says Vinod Thomas, director general for independent
evaluation at the Manila-based Asian Development Bank. “How local
communities react makes a big difference in building resiliency.” Yet
government funding remains slow for these bottom-up initiatives for
communities exposed to disasters ranging from storms, floods and
earthquakes to tsunamis and volcanic eruptions.
“Funding
communities to reduce vulnerability is not as visible and political as
reacting and helping after a disaster,” Thomas told IPS. New studies are now questioning the top-down approach, since local communities are the most vulnerable to disasters in Asia. “The
impacts of disasters on communities need to be better understood for
practical action,” argues Debby Sapir, director of the Centre for
Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED), a Brussels-based think
tank. “[In 2012] some high risk countries in the region have
made significant progress in controlling disaster impacts. This means
that preparedness and prevention measures can be effective.”
“Actions
on the ground by local governments and local communities are huge in
reducing vulnerability,” adds Jerry Velasquez, head of the Asia-Pacific
division of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction
(UNISDR). “Governments are steadily becoming more aware of these
realities, but there are still gaps.” New reports exposing the
fact the Asia is the “world’s most disaster-prone region” — with floods
being the most frequent disaster, having the highest human and economic
impact in 2012 — have started to turn the heat up on regional
governments.
“[Floods] accounted for 54 percent of the death toll
in Asia, 78 percent of people affected and 56 percent of all economic
damages in the region,” according to data released this month by UNISDR
and CRED. In southern, southeastern and eastern Asia, 83
disasters caused 3,103 deaths affected a total of 64.5 million people
and triggered 15.1 billion dollars in damages in 2012. “Globally,
these three regions accounted for 57 percent of the total deaths, 74
percent of the affected people and 34 percent of the total economic
damages caused by disasters in the first 10 months of 2012,” according
to the data.
The Asia-Pacific region is the most disaster prone
area in the world and it is also the most seriously affected one, states
another report released recently by UNISDR and the Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), a Bangkok-based UN regional
body. “Almost two million people were killed in disasters between 1970
and 2011, representing 75 percent of all disaster fatalities globally.” The
most frequent hazards to torment Asians are “hydro-meteorological,”
with more than 1.2 billion people being exposed to such hazards since
2000, through 1,215 disasters, compared to the 355 million people
exposed to 394 “climatological, biological and geophysical disaster
events during the same period,” according to the 134-page report.
“People
and governments alike are still struggling to understand how the
various components of risk — hazards, vulnerability and exposure —
interact to create recurrent disasters.” With disasters on the rise, community-led responses — such as those in Pager Jurang — are invaluable. “Early warning and contingency works only if acted upon by local governments and local communities,” says Velasquez of UNISDR.
Inter-Press Service
Inter-Press Service
source : the jakarta globe
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