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Subject: EAST TIMOR: UN Helps to Mitigate Disaster Risk
EAST TIMOR: UN Helps to Mitigate Disaster Risk By Matt Crook
DILI, Jun 24 (IPS) - Disasters happen regularly in East Timor, but
until now, the institutions called on to deal with them have struggled to
effectively react to seasonal events that impact thousands of Timorese
lives every year.
"We are yet to be truly prepared to act together as one to plan
for the consequences of disasters, as well as to develop strategies for
reducing the risks faced by our brothers and sisters who live in
vulnerable locations," said Francisco do Rosario, director of the
National Disaster Management Directorate (NDMD) - part of the Ministry of
Social Solidarity (MSS).
With more than 40 percent of the population of 1.1 million below the
poverty line and the majority of the nation’s poor living in rural
areas, when disasters hit, they can be devastating, especially as about 80
percent of households rely on subsistence agriculture to survive.
"The general definition of disasters we promote is that a disaster
is something that takes a community beyond its coping capacities. So you
might have a village of 20 households, and if there’s a localised
windstorm that flattens half of their crops and it’s beyond their
capacity to recover, then that’s a disaster," said James Hardman, a
project manager for the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP)
Crisis Prevention and Recovery Unit.
East Timor is prone to an impressive ensemble of disasters: drought,
erratic rains, flooding, landslides, windstorm erosion, monsoons,
deforestation and crop infestation.
Responding to the need to have an effective system in place to deal
with disasters, UNDP is collaborating with the NDMD on an one-year project
called Disaster Risk Management Institutional and Operational Systems
Development in East Timor.
The 468,000-dollar project, launched in April and funded by the
European Commission and UNDP, focuses on supporting the NDMD so that it
can prepare for and respond to disasters in all 13 districts.
"The role of the NDMD in emergency response is basically to
coordinate, not so much to do. It’s the job of the NDMD to provide
coordination and support to the other ministries, whether it’s the
police or part of the MSS providing social assistance," said Hardman.
"That’s difficult in this sort of environment. Ministries have
been struggling to get their own houses in order, as you’d expect in
such a new country, so there hasn’t been much space for developing whole
government approaches," he explained.
By the end of the project, the aim is for there to be structural
operational procedures in place to support the country’s national
disaster operation centre, housed in the MSS.
Currently district-level centres are being established in Bobonaro and
Lautem districts - with plans to eventually open stations in all 13
districts.
"The district disaster operations centre is supposed to be an
operational body that deals with things as they develop. Say there’s
flooding in one [village] - they coordinate the information and pass it on
to the district administrator and it flows to the national or regional
level where decisions on appropriate response are made," said
Hardman.
Although statistical data is limited, each year in East Timor, heavy
rain causes flooding - mostly in the south - and landslides. Drought
conditions affect many parts of the country, especially during the El
Niño cycle of weather fluctuations, the most recent of which finished in
2007.
According to the Australian Government’s Bureau of Meteorology, there
is a possibility of another El Niño this year.
Manatuto in central East Timor is of particular risk to disasters. The
hillsides are regularly hit with drought - due to unreliable rains during
the wet season from November to May - plus deforestation and fires.
In Covalima in the southwest, communities are prone to regular
flooding; while in Lautem in the east, there are high seasonal risks of
flooding, landslides, drought and forest fires.
Although work on community-based disaster-risk-management practices is
still in its early stages, Concern, Oxfam and Care are among the most
active non-governmental organisations working in the field.
Maris Palencia is Concern’s DRR programme coordinator.
"We work in Lautem and Manufahi [districts]," Palencia said.
"We support the efforts of the NDMD in the formation of the disaster
management committees from the [village] level. We have public awareness
activities in the communities and we facilitate community-based disaster
risk management," she added.
"We also have several activities to teach people how to prepare
for disasters and what they can do before, during and after. We work with
local government and local NGOs because we will be handing it over to
them," Palencia explained.
Lautem is considered a model for disaster management structures in East
Timor. As one of the first structures to be established, the communities
in the district have undergone many challenges, Palencia said.
"To get organised, to respond in an appropriate and timely manner
- it saves lives and livelihoods," she said.
About one-third of East Timor’s population regularly experiences food
shortages and nearly half of children under the age of five are
chronically malnourished, according to the World Food Programme (WFP).
In the western part of the country, agricultural pest infestation poses
a significant threat.
In February 2007 there was a major infestation of locusts that started
in the western districts of Bobonaro and Ermera. By April, about 4,500
hectares of crops had been affected while about 80 percent of the maize
planting areas and 70 percent of the rice seedlings for the next crops had
been destroyed.
The infestation spread south to Covalima, which, along with Bobonaro,
produces about a quarter of the nation’s rice.
The locust outbreak and drought that year caused a 30 percent decline
in crop production nationwide.
"The outbreak in 2007 was most likely linked to the delayed onset
of the rainy season followed by a period of irregular rains combined with
dry spells. This was the moment FAO was requested by the government to
help," said Fabrizio Cesaretti, emergency coordinator for the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
After FAO assisted the government to get the infestation under control
using aerial and ground spraying of pesticides. Now, a programme has been
launched so that future infestations could be caught and controlled
earlier.
"We launched a capacity-building project working with the Ministry
of Agriculture and the communities prone to the risk of locust outbreaks
to set up a monitoring and reporting system of potential infestation. This
way you can control it from the beginning," Cesaretti said.
The ministry got a chance to test out its newly learned capabilities
earlier this year when a potential outbreak of locusts was detected in the
western districts of Bobonaro and Oecussi.
"The assessment carried out on both sides of the border [with
Indonesian West Timor] didn’t identify major threats. There was an
increase in population in one species, but it’s not so harmful,"
Cesaretti added. "A good sign from our side was to see that the field
offices of the Ministry of Agriculture were able to identify the form of
locust population they had and the phase they were at. If you can identify
the phase you can do the control better," he said.
FAO also supports trans-boundary cooperation between Indonesia and East
Timor. The first Technical Workshop on Migratory Locust Issues, organised
by FAO, was held in Bali Mar. 31 to Apr. 1.
Meanwhile, Hardman is confident that the work he does with the
government over the next 12 months will continue past the initial project’s
allotted time to help build an institution that will save lives.
"UNDP’s view is that it’s not just a 12-month project, but
part of a four- to five-year plan, so we want to come up with a strategy
that identifies what to do for future disaster risk management projects,
leading into phase two," Hardman said, "If there isn’t
continuity from the government and donors then the work we do in these 12
months would be at risk."
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