Sunday, January 23, 2005

Tsunami attack and the importance of preparedness

The recent Tsunami attack in Pondicherry region (South India) resulted in the death of about 300 individuals and property damage running close to a hundred million dollars. The affected coastline was not more than 50 km in length.

Accounts from the M S Swaminathan Research Foundation based in Madras, India(www.mssrf.org), indicated that two rural onshore sites had significantly lower loss of lives. This was due to the stndard practice in those locations where a loud speaker was used in a public information center to make announcements about important events. This had been used since 1999 to make weather-related announcements and was linked to an internet-connected PC. A nummber of individuals were aware of the standard practice.

Thus, when the news of a possible sea rise was received in a village home, this arrangement was used to alert every household and a number of people made it to safe locations in time.

I used to be involved in setting this village project up and I note that the advantage derived was not just from the access to the Internet, but in having a local strategy and standardised practice for popular communication. This is a point that David Dickson, wellknown farm science communicator, also made in a piece on Scidev.net.

I believe this synergy between a top-down approach and a locally-founded and contextually-sensitive communication system lies at the heart of preparedness among the ordinary people. This is probably the best way to help rural families receive science-derived information quickly. Given that South Asia is the most disaster-prone region in the world, there is a need to build generic systems for popular preparedness to cope with a variety of events-floods, cyclones, wild fires, drought etc.

In this blog, I will present you with some ideas and a lot of information on what drought prepraredness.

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