Lessons shared on disaster recovery
Three years after the Boxing Day tsunami, experts from Indonesia,
India and Sri Lanka met on Monday to share lessons learned from recovery
efforts in post-disaster areas.
Ananda Mallawatantri, the assistant resident representative for UNDP
in Sri Lanka, said too much consultation with international donors and
other parties was leading to an unhealthy dependence on foreign aid.
He was speaking on the first day of a two-day workshop, which has
been organised by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the
Indonesian Coordinating Ministry for People's Welfare.
"After the tsunami, we prepared the Disaster Management Act in 2005,
followed by the establishment of the Disaster Management Centre and the
Ministry," Ananda said. He said procedural issues, including customs and
duty, were causing delays in the recovery process. "We conducted rapid
assessments, but decided to take our time in the recovery process,"
Ananda said.
"Putting everything into practice was the most difficult aspect."
He said the country's preparedness for natural disasters had improved
significantly after the 2004 tsunami.
C.V. Sankar, the officer on special duty from the government of Tamil
Nadu in India, said the country should learn more from Indonesia's State
Ministry for Women's Empowerment in addressing the "women-centric"
issues of disaster recovery.
"For example, we distributed saris to women in Tamil Nadu, but they
stepped forward and asked for curides, a more modern outfit that they
preferred to wear," Sankar said.
Sankar said the government incorporated recommendations from the
community and non-governmental organizations in reconstructing damaged
and poorly constructed houses using disaster resistant features.
Budhy Andono, assistant deputy for natural disasters at the
Coordinating Ministry for People's Welfare, said there was a complicated
line of bureaucracy involved in Indonesia's responses to natural
disasters.
"Indonesia is a country prone to many natural disasters, like forest
fires, droughts, landslides, earthquakes, floods and tsunamis," Budhy
said. "So we know that the recovery process is not easy."
UNDP identified eight main problems in its preliminary findings on
the recovery process in Indonesia, which included weak coordination
between the central government and regional administrations, unclear
financial mechanisms and weaknesses in collecting and verifying
information on victims.
Jakarta Post |