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6. ANNEXES


Annex 1: Workshop Agenda and List of Participants

AGENDA-DAY 1

LOCATION

Morning



9:00-10:00

Registration of participants, issuance of building passes


10:00-10:05

Welcome Remarks
by the Director of the Rural Development Division, Mr Cox

Gabon Room - A Ground Floor

10:05-10:20

Introduction of participants


10:20-11:00

Presentation of underlying key concepts, working hypothesis and definitions


11:00-11:10

Presentation of agenda and workshop procedures


11:10-11:20

Composition of working groups


11:20-12:30

Working Group Session 1: Local Institutions in DRM/ Consolidation of Data
Group 1: Storms and Floods/ case studies from Argentina, the Philippines, Vietnam, India
Group 2: Storms and Floods/ case studies from Honduras, Mozambique, South Africa
Group 3: Droughts/ case studies Burkina Faso, Iran, Niger

Group 1: Gabon - A Ground Floor
Group 2: B 503
Group 3: B 540

12:30-14.00

LUNCH


Afternoon



13:30-15:30

Working Group Session 1 (Group 1) continued


14:00-15:30

Working Group Session 1 (Group 2 and 3) continued


15:30-16:00

COFFEE BREAK


16:00-17:00

Plenary Session 1: Gallery Walk and short presentation of each working group on major issues discussed and findings

Gabon Room A Ground floor

Evening



19:30

Dinner


AGENDA-DAY 2


Morning



9:00-9:05

Review of Day 1

Canada Room A356

9:05-9:10

Introduction to Agenda of Day 2


9:10-9:30

Video Demonstration of DRM in Mozambique


9:30-10:30

Working Group Session 2: Comparative advantages and weaknesses of key actors in DRM resulting from case study and other experiences and verification of the working hypotheses

Group 1: Gabon Room A Ground Floor
Group 2: B 503
Group 3: Canada Room A 356

10:30-11:00

COFFEE BREAK


11:00-12:40

Working Group Session 2 continued

same rooms as above

12:40-13:40

LUNCH


Afternoon



13:40-15:30

Plenary Session 2: Common trends and differences of comparative advantages and weaknesses local institutions in DRM

Canada Room A 356

15:30-16:00

COFFEE BREAK


16:00-17:00

Open Space on proposed topics during the plenary

Canada Room A 356 and Atrium

17:00-17:30

Reporting back to note takers in Canada room


Evening



19:30

Self-organised dinner


AGENDA-DAY 3


Morning



9:00-9:05

Review of DAY 2

Canada Room A 356

9:05-9:10

Introduction to Agenda of Day 3


9:10-11:00

Working Group Session 3: Lessons Learned and Recommendations Group work on
1) Recommendations for policy and implementation to better address local governance in DRM, and DRM and Rural Development integration;
2) Capacity-building strategies to strengthen DRM and its implementation
3) Product/Material development (normative and operational) to support DRM and DRM-RD linkages
4) 10 key “essentials” which DRM systems must combine to function in synergy throughout the disaster cycle
5) possibly another topic of interest identified during workshop

Canada room A 356
B 503
B 540
C 603

11:00-11:20

COFFEE BREAK


11:20-13:00

Plenary Session 3: Presentation of the working groups Brainstorming on the “Way Forward”

Canada Room A356

13:00

CLOSING


List of Workshop Participants

Name

Title Organisation

Country

External Resource Persons

Mr Mohamadou Abdoulaye

LASDEL

Niger

Ms Lolita Bildan

Asian Disaster Preparedness Centre (ADPC)

Mozambique

Ms Helen MacGregor

Disaster Risk Research Coordinator, Disaster Mitigation for Sustainable Livelihoods Programme University of Cape Town (UTC)

South Africa

Mr Norman Messer

West and Central Africa Unit, IFAD

Rome-Italy

Ms Maryam Rahmanian

CENESTA

Iran

Mr Elías Suazo

National Project Director for the Trust Fund on the Consolidation of the Municipality Chain in Local Development

Honduras

Mr Subbiah

Asian Disaster Preparedness Centre (ADPC)

Thailand

Mr Matsimbe

German Technical Cooperation (GTZ)

Mozambique

Ms Jacqueline Flentge

World Food Programme (WFP)

Rome-Italy

FAO Resource Persons

Ms Cristina Amaral

Emergency Operations and Rehabilitation Division (TCE), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Stephan Baas

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Federica Battista

Rural Institutions and Participation Service, Consultant

Rome-Italy

Mr Emmanuel Chengu

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Maja Clausen

Agricultural Management, Marketing and Finance Service (AGSF), FAO


Mr Ian Cherrett

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO Regional Office

Santiago de Chile

Mr Richard China

Emergency Operations and Rehabilitation Division (TCE), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Eve Crowley

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Maximiliano Cox

Director of Rural Development Division (SDA), FAO


Ms Jennie Dey-De Pryck

Service Chief, Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Stephan Dohrn

Livelihood Support Programme (LSP), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Olivier Dubois

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Marco Knowles

Food Security and Agricultural Projects Analysis Service (ESAF), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Ana Guerrero

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Günther Hemrich

Food Security and Agricultural Projects Analysis, (ESAF) FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Tómas Lindemann

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Paul Mathieu

Land Tenure Service (SDAA), FAO

Rome-Italy

Mr Fabrizio Pittaluga

Office of Director, Fisheries Department (FIPD), FAO

Rome, Italy

Ms Pamela Pozarny

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO Regional Office

Accra

Mr Fritz Rembold

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO Regional Office

Budapest

Ms Francesca Romano

Forestry Policy and Institutions Service (FONP), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Laura Sciannamonaco

Emergency Operations and Rehabilitation Division (TCE), FAO

Rome Italy

Ms Paola Termine

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Ms Julia Wolf

Rural Institutions and Participation Service (SDAR), FAO

Rome-Italy

Annex 2: Key Concepts and Definitions

The Disaster Management Cycle and its key phases were used as a starting point in the analysis of the nine case studies. However participants shared analytical and operational concerns on the implications of its use, especially in terms of integration of DRM cycle into long-term rural development (details in the following sections).

The International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (ISDR) definitions have been used for key disaster related terms[10].

Hazard: A potentially damaging physical event, phenomenon or human activity, which may cause the loss of life or injury, property damage, social and economic disruption or environmental degradation.

Vulnerability: The conditions determined by physical, social, economic, and environmental factors or processes, which increase the susceptibility of a community to the impact of hazards.

Risk: The probability of harmful consequences, or expected losses (deaths, injuries, property, livelihoods, economic activity disrupted or environment damaged) resulting from interactions between natural or human-induced hazards and vulnerable conditions. Conventionally risk is expressed by the notation Risk = Hazards x Vulnerability. Some disciplines also include the concept of exposure to refer particularly to the physical aspects of vulnerability.

Resilience: The capacity of a system, community or society potentially exposed to hazards to adapt, by resisting or changing in order to reach and maintain an acceptable level of functioning and structure. This is determined by the degree to which the social system is capable of organizing itself to increase its capacity for learning from past disasters for better future protection and to improve risk reduction measures.

Disaster: A serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society causing widespread human, material, economic or environmental losses which exceed the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources.

Disaster Risk Management: The systematic process of using administrative decisions, organization, operational skills and capacities to implement policies, strategies and coping capacities of the society and communities to lessen the impacts of natural hazards and related environmental and technological disasters. This comprises all forms of activities, including structural and non-structural measures to avoid (prevention) or to limit (mitigation and preparedness) adverse effects of hazards.

The FAO/Rural Institutions and Participation Service’s working definitions of social capital and of processes linked to decentralization informed the institutional focus of the study and workshop debate.

Social Capital

Social capital can be defined as the set of norms, social relations, and organisations that enable people in a society to coordinate action to achieve their objectives. The concept of social capital has been the subject of theoretical discussion for a long time. Recent research focuses on three aspects:

Increasingly decentralisation policies are being considered as instruments for promoting more social capital formation in a society. Proponents of decentralisation and devolution have argued that the empowerment of local authorities and strengthening of capacities of local institutions through building of horizontal relations of partnerships and alliances between local government authorities and civil society organisations have constituted a viable strategy for the creation of social capital at the community level.

The process of decentralisation

In order to gain a clearer understanding of the link between decentralisation as a process of social capital formation and the participatory design of disaster preparedness strategies it is essential first to discuss and define the basic concepts of decentralisation.

Four broadly contrasting concepts of decentralisation, are defined below, namely: ‘deconcentration’, and ‘delegation’ of powers and responsibilities from central government to sub-national units, and semi-autonomous or parastatal organisations; and, ‘devolution’, and ‘partnership’ involving transfer of functions from central government to autonomous local government authorities, and civil society and non-governmental institutions.

‘Deconcentration’ involves the geographical redistribution or dispersal of central government administrative responsibilities, without providing many opportunities for local authorities “to exercise substantial local discretion in decision-making”. There are three levels of deconcentration. The first level involves mere ‘shifting of workload’ from central government ministries in the capital to those ministries’ field staff located in provincial or regional and district offices. Field staff in this case merely implements central government directives and have no initiating or decision-making powers. The second level of deconcentration is through ‘field administration’ which, in addition to shifting workloads, allows a limited transfer of some decision-making with respect to the day-to-day implementation of central government directives in order to adjust those directives to local conditions. The third level of deconcentration is through ‘local administration’. In this case, all sub-national levels of government (provincial and district) are agents of the central government’s executive branch. Thus, the sub-national or local units of government are headed by appointees of central government directly responsible to a central government agency such as the ministry of local government or of internal affairs. This ‘local administration’ type of deconcentration can itself be divided into two further categories, that is ‘integrated local administration’ and ‘unintegrated local administration’.

Delegation” to semi-autonomous or parastatal organisations involves delegation of planning and management functions in respect of specific tasks or projects to organisations which, although funded by central government, do not come under its operational control. Such parastatal bodies are semi-independent and are frequently located outside the normal structures of government. They are free to set up their own salary structures, which are often higher than those of the civil service in order to attract professional and technical personnel. Where international aid agencies have sponsored well-defined large-scale projects, they have sometimes insisted on the creation of such parastatal or public corporation bodies in order to by-pass government bureaucratic procedures and to avoid the spread into other sectors of funds earmarked for specific projects.

“Devolution”, which is often regarded as the purest form of decentralisation, is based on the creation of independent levels or units of local government which have a ‘co-ordinate systems’ relationship with each other and are free of extensive hierarchical control. The five fundamental characteristics of devolution identified by Cheema and Rondinelli are:

1. The “units of local government are autonomous, independent, and are clearly perceived as separate levels of government over which central authorities exercise little or no direct control”.

2. The “local governments have clear and legally recognised geographical boundaries within which they exercise authority and perform public functions”.

3. The “local governments have corporate status and the power to secure resources to perform their functions”.

4. “Local governments are developed as institutions in the sense that they are perceived by local citizens as organisations providing services that satisfy their needs and as governmental units over which they have some influence”.

5. Finally, “they involve arrangements in which there are reciprocal, mutually beneficial, and coordinated relationships between central and local governments; that is, the local government has the ability to interact reciprocally with other units in the system of government of which it is a part”.

Devolution is therefore a more advanced form of decentralisation. It involves the transfer of responsibilities, authority, assets, and financial resources to lower levels of government, such as provincial or district councils. Local governments to which authority and resources are devolved acquire the power and autonomy with respect to setting their own rules, goals and objectives, and implementing their own policies and strategies, and to allocating resources to different activities, within the domain assigned to them. In addition, they often are given authority to raise financial resources, through taxes, and in some cases, borrow on the capital markets.

Partnership’, the fourth conceptualisation of decentralisation involves, as implied by the terminology, the transfer from government of some or all planning and management powers with respect to public functions to civil society organisations that include voluntary and private non-governmental organisations. The devolution of planning, implementation, and resource management responsibilities to civil society organisations is the most effective means of facilitating people’s empowerment and participation.

Annex 3: Summary Matrix of selected “Good practices examples” (by Actor and emergency phase)

Phase

Pre-emergency phase

Emergency phase

Post-emergency phase

Actors

Prevention

Mitigation

Preparedness

Response

Recovery

Development

CBOs

Hazard risk diagnosis

Maintain public infrastructure

Construct infra-structure to protect property

Tap customary solidarity networks

Community mobilisation for joint action

Provide moral support and advice

“Local-level” NGOs

Provide skills training to local CBOs

Household vulnerability assessments

Carry out awareness raising campaigns

Deploy trainers on hygiene & health

Psychological counselling & support

Define local priorities to reduce vulnerability

MFIs

Hazard risk diagnosis

Promote mitigation practices

Spread risk across portfolio

Client damage assessments

Loan rescheduling and other special activities

Integrate DR M in development activity

Local emergency committees

Hazard risk diagnosis

Household vulnerability assessments

Prepare evacuation plans

Set up search & rescue committees

Set up food aid committees

Advise how to reduce local vulnerability

Locally respected persons

Awareness raising campaigns

Solicit external technical assistance on DRM

Carry out awareness raising campaigns

Act as advisory focal points

Promote improved technologies

Fight “fatalistic” attitudes

Local government

Draft a local disaster prevention plan

Watershed/ river basin planning

Prepare evacuation and contingency plans

Provide shelter to displaced households

Set up rehabilitation projects for public goods

Rec. info on households settled in high risk areas

“Meso-level” NGOs

Provide skills training to local NGOs

Watershed/ river basin planning

Skills training to local NGOs

Mediate between national and local level

Set up rehab. projects for private goods

Promote local institutional development

Provincial government

Set local administration rules, e.g. prohibit sand extraction, tree cutting, etc.

Promote multi-sectoral, integrated approaches in DRM

Provide agro-ecological and GIS data for national disaster relief plan

Coordinate nat. & international government & civil society actors

Implement Food For Work or other rehabilitation programmes

Protect roads against land-slides, reinforce slopes, improve gullies...

National government

Invest in early-warning systems and infrastructure Prepare and legal and institutional framework for DRM

Pass construction code & safety regulations

Prepare national disaster relief plan

Declare a disaster (& state of emergency)

Set up emergency & recovery fund

Prepare Codes of Conduct in relief & development.

International “community”

Raise aware-ness on sustainable NRM

Ensure quality in donor funded infrastructure projects

Stop treating DRM as an exceptional activity

Mobilise financial aid as grants & long-term loans

Fund FFW a.o. rehabilitation programmes

Mainstream DRM activities in development planning

(From Messer 2003)

Annex 4: Case Study Matrix Samples: Philippines and Mozambique

THE ROLE OF LOCAL INSTITUTIONS IN REDUCING VULNERABILITY TO RECURRENT NATURAL DISASTERS AND IN SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS DEVELOPMENT IN HIGH RISK AREAS CASE STUDY SUMMARY MATRIX

SECTION I: CONTEXT DESCRIPTION

Country: Philippines

Province: ILO-ILO Province /Panay Island
Municipality: Dumangas
3 baragays selected for the case study
Balud (lowland: typhoon damage every 2 years), Maquina (elevated area exposed to floods: typhoon damage every 3-5 years), Barasan (elevated relatively safe area: slight typhoon damage every 15-20 years)

Population of area covered by case study:

Land Area covered by case study: Profile of selected sites (1998)


Balud

Maquina

Barasan

Municipality

Land Area (hectares)

78

171

266

12,716

Population (2000)

474

819

963

56,291

No. of households

94

163

204

11,262

Farm area (hectares)

48

130

261

7,001

No. of farmers

14

77

200

3,606

Fish farm area (hectares)

-

-

29

4,536

Natural Phenomena: tropical cyclones (from November to January) and drought.
Climate: dry from November to April, wet rest of the year.
Annual Rainfall: 1,939 mm.
Hazard Profile: Severe flooding occurs yearly with damage to infrastructure, agriculture and farming (average number of farmers affected per event is 1500). Flooding occurs from the bursting of the Jalaur River banks. Households along rivers are at high risk, vulnerable households are forced to live there (Table 10 pg 14). Financial losses may range from 75-100% of the capital invested on farming on fishing activities.
Recent Disaster covered by Case Study: Several Typhoons between 1990 and 2003 (detail on 2000 and 2003 Typhoons)

Land tenure, land use patterns and livelihood strategies

Economy predominantly based on agriculture and aquaculture. 55% of land in municipality utilized for farming and 35% for fish farms. Rice is the major crop, brackish waters used for milkfish culture. Two crop seasons. Average rice production per hectare: 4 tons (irrigated areas); 2.5 tons (rain fed areas). Other crops include: Banana, watermelon, sugarcane, coconut. Small livestock: hogs, poultry, goats.

Most farmers do not own farming land, in 2 of the selected sites 50% of agricultural land owned by one person. The landowner provides inputs, and farmers get 10% of the produce. The produce farmers get during the harvest is kept for food. If the harvest is good, they get to sell some rice. At slack times of the farming cycle some work in sugarcane field some in construction jobs. Income is integrated with aquaculture and small livestock production.

The river basin is the major source of irrigation. Municipal industry is small scale (salt and grass roof making).
The livelihood pattern of most of the rural households is fragile; the periodic weather related shocks keep the livelihood systems from crisis to recovery on a continuous basis.
Population growth rate (1995): 44%. Average size of family (1995):5.

Main local actors in DRM; NON GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS

Dumangas Fisheries and Aquatic Resources Management Council (FARMC)

The FARMC, was organized in July 2002 through Administrative Order No. 196, series 2000; Tasks of FARMC: act as consultative body of the municipal government on fisheries-related issues and concerns, facilitate the Bantay Dagat (coastal resources watch) Programme in barangays, and monitor the fisheries operations in the municipality related to the environment, zoning ordinance and other local laws; play a key role in disaster management, before, during and after a disaster:

Pre-disaster:

Conducts coastal/river cleanup; Early warning transmission: Informs fishpond operators and fishermen of an impending disaster and advises fishpond operators to stop operations and fishermen to safely stow fishing gear and strengthen their residential and fishing structures.

Disaster response

Assists in the evacuation of flood victims from river banks and coastal areas using their bancas (small fishing boats)
Assists in rescue operations at barangay level in coordination with/ support to DREAM
Helps the barangay council in relief assistance distribution

Post-disaster:

Provides assistance (manpower, provision of food for labourers) to affected fishermen on the rehabilitation of their fishing gears
Shares food and medicine to worst affected fishermen and their families
Requests for assistance (provision of fishing gear to worst affected fishermen) from the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources

Tamboilan-Paloc Bigque-Bolilao Irrigators Association (TAPABIA)

TAPABIA, was organized in 1991, in coordination with the National Irrigation Administration to address disputes among farmers on water distribution issues. As agreed with NIA, TAPABIA undertakes Regular clearing of irrigation facilities (lateral canals), with funding support from NIA; Collection of Irrigators’ Service Fee (ISF) among NIA concessionaires; and arbitration among its members. Its key role in disaster management include:

Pre-disaster:

Dykes are reinforced and made higher to withstand higher flood levels.
Upon receipt of flood warning, TAPABIA opens the irrigation drop to drain water.
Disseminates flood warning to constituents to enable them to prepare for the flood (TAPABIA has made sure that rice/palay storehouses are elevated.) Each barangay under TAPABIA is divided into five Total Service Areas (TSA). Each TSA has a chairman who is responsible for disseminating warning in his area.
All members are advised to seal all field openings to prevent water logging in the rice paddies.
Farmers move their hand tractors to higher ground
Assists in evacuation

Response:

Helps monitor the flooding situation

Post-disaster

Cleaning and clearing of debris in the paddies and irrigation canals
Assists members in need of assistance (e.g. reconstruction of damaged dwellings)
Reports crop damage to the Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation for assessment and possible extension of assistance
Reports crop damage to the Municipal Agriculturist for certification of crop damage to enable them to defer payment to NIA
Lobbies for the extension of possible local government assistance to affected farmers

Dumangas Chapter of the National Association of radio communicators

The Kabalikat Civicom Association Incorporated, 215 Chapter, Dumangas was established in January 2000 as a local chapter of the nation-wide Kabalikat Civicom Association of radio communicators. The 215 Chapter serves as a support group of the Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation DYBQ - Radio Budyong Iloilo (an Iloilo City - based AM radio station). It is an accredited NGO in the municipality and a member of the municipality’s special bodies such as the Municipal Peace and Order Council and the Municipal Disaster Coordinating Council (MDCC). Its regular activities include the conduct of nightly net calls or programme assistance to the municipal government in information dissemination of important programmes, projects and activities; monitoring of and assistance to travelers within its area of operations, etc.; assistance to the municipal government in the implementation of projects in its capacity as a member of local special bodies; and other duties such as tree planting, and coastal and river clean-up. Its key role in disaster management include:

Pre-disaster

Participation in coastal/ river clean-up
Hazard monitoring and reporting to the Municipal Mayor for corresponding course of action. The group is divided into sub-groups, which are assigned areas of responsibility for monitoring.
Early warning of impending hazard through the municipal/ barangay officials
Information dissemination on warnings, reports, updates, advisories through DYBQ AM radio
Preparation of floats for use during evacuation

Response

Assistance to the DREAM, MDCC in rescue operations by volunteering as drivers, guiding evacuees during evacuation procedure, etc.
Situation monitoring and informing appropriate agencies concerned
Volunteering vehicles for transportation of relief goods, medicine, clean water, etc.
Assistance in relief distribution

Post-disaster

Assistance to the municipal government in consolidating damage report
Assistance in medical missions in the transport of medicines
Donation of food items and used clothing to disaster victims.

Dumangas Rescue and Emergency Assistance Movement (DREAM)

In response to the need for a more active and sustained support to the MDCC in the areas of emergency preparedness and response, vulnerability reduction and disaster risk control, the municipal government established the Dumangas Rescue and Emergency Assistance Movement (DREAM) in July 1999. Receives Beias member of the Local Special Bodies, financial support for its operation by the Municipality of Dumangas; Its functions include:

  • Quick response in times of disaster

  • Monitoring and reporting of the disaster situation and recommending appropriate measures to the MDCC

  • Participation in programmes, projects and activities of the municipal government

Registered as a NGO, the DREAM currently has 36 volunteer members (4 are women) trained in search and rescue, which includes six barangay tanods from the flood-prone barangays. Their expertise in search and rescue, and services/ assistance rendered in hazard monitoring, information dissemination, relief operation, medical missions and damage assessment have been put to test in flooding incidents associated with typhoons since 2000. In non-disaster times, DREAM is involved in activities aimed at reducing risks for floods, such as river and coastal clean-up, and reforestation.

Civic and Religious Organizations

The municipal government also entered into agreements with some civic and religious organizations to assist, in the spirit of volunteerism, in relief and rescue during emergencies, as well as to participate in the formulation of the Municipal Disaster Preparedness Plan. The Catholic Church also shares its financial resources to the BDCC through its parish pastoral council to augment resources for relief operations

The Municipal Economic Council (a private sector business consortium)

The Municipal Economic Council was created by the Municipal Executive Order No. 31, series 2000. It is chaired by the municipal mayor and co-chaired by representatives of business proprietors engaged in rice retailing, groceries, pharmacies, dry goods (clothing, utensils, etc.), fuel stations and construction supplies. All accredited business proprietors in the Dumangas Public Market are members of the council. The council advocates related programs, projects and activities to foster municipal economic growth and development, as well as recommends to the Municipal Mayor and the Sangguniang Bayan policies that would enhance the operations of the business sector as well as benefit its clientele. Its key role in times of disaster is to provide on loan basis goods and items required for disaster response. Being a member of the Local Special Bodies, financial support for its operation is provided by the Municipality of Dumangas.

Formal DRM set up

The NDCC is the highest policy making, coordinating & supervising body at the national level for disaster management. It performs the function of advising the President on the status of the national disaster preparedness programme, disaster operations and rehabilitation. The NDCC is chaired by the Secretary of National Defence and has for its members almost all the cabinet members and the Secretary-General of the Philippines National Red Cross. The Office of Civil Defence (OCD) provides the operations centre and secretariat functions as well executive-director functions through its Administrator. The NDCC has taken on an All-Hazards Approach in Disaster Risk Management which features the following strategies and approaches:

1. Mitigation: insurance coverage of public and private properties; safety regulations, land use, zoning, etc; building and fire codes; legislation and local ordinances on safety of communities; dams, levees, flood control and other structural measures

2. Preparedness: contingency plans, fire and earthquake plans, etc; public information, rapid dissemination of information through an emergency broadcast system, population awareness, etc; orientation of local officials, deputized coordinators, auxiliaries, volunteers, drills & rehearsals and other education and training activities; available response units, capabilities, equipment, manpower, location, contact nos. & persons, and other resources

3. Response: Alerts - receipt and rapid dissemination of warnings to threatened communities/populations; immediate Notification of response units, Golden Hour principle - the time within which lives could be saved and injuries minimized; Consequence Management

4. Rehabilitation: emergency funding from the Local and National Calamity Funds and other sources; loans and grants extended by NGOs and international NGOs; assistance extended by NGOs, international NGOs, foreign governments, etc.

5. The NDCC is replicated at the regional and local levels and they function substantially like the NDCC, except that they operate and utilize their own resources at their respective levels. The RDCCs and the local DCCs constitute the core of the disaster management system and it is at this level that emergency is most felt and protection, rescue, evacuation, relief and rehabilitation operations are launched and carried out. The DCCs are expected to embark on proactive activities such as dissemination of information on natural disasters and disaster preparedness, identification of evacuation centers, upgrading of facilities of identified evacuation centers and assignment of responsibilities per member agency during times of emergency.

DCC Organization Network

Organization Disaster Coordinating Councils (Regional, Provincial, City and Municipal Levels)

Municipal Disaster Coordinating Council (MDCC)

The establishment of the Municipal Disaster Coordinating Council is mandated by Presidential Decree (Local Government Code) of 1999. The Dumangas MDCC was re-organized in 16 October 2001 through Municipal Executive Order No. 16, series 2001. It is composed by the Municipal Mayor as Chairman, the Station Commander of the Philippine National Police as Vice-Chairman and Action Officer, with representatives from the private sector, municipal officials tasked with specific emergency functions, and National officials assigned in the municipality as members.

The MDCC has the following functions and responsibilities:

1. Coordinates disaster operations activities; 2. Implements within the municipality the guidelines set by the MDCC 3. Advises the barangay Disaster Coordinating Councils regarding disaster management, and 4. Submits reports and recommends for allocation of needed resources

The Disaster Operations Center is the facility where field activities are monitored and controlled. It is made up of the:

1. Intelligence and Disaster Analysis Unit – which evaluates information and advises member agencies of the MDCC of an impending disaster, makes recommendations on how to prevent disaster and/or suggest precautionary measures to minimize the impacts of disasters, submits recommendations for allocation of needed resources, and makes appropriate recommendations to relevant authorities regarding possible declaration of a state of calamity in affected areas.

2. Plans and Operations Unit – which recommends courses of action to be taken based on the recommendations of the Intelligence and Disaster Analysis Unit, determines the type of service units to be utilized in the disaster area, recommends implementation of existing plans, maintains and/or supervises progress of operations, determines the necessity of utilizing additional service units, and prepares appropriate reports upon termination of operations.

3. Resources Management Unit – which identifies and secures possible sources of funds for disaster victims, and gathers the necessary statistics on resources such as food, clothing, construction materials, medical supplies, transportation and other relief and rehabilitation items.

Task units formulate their own action/operations plan, which are consolidated to form the overall Municipal Disaster Preparedness Plan. Task units were streamlined from ten to five as follows:

1. Health Service Committee – chaired by the Municipal Health Office, with private clinics as members

2. Security and Fire Committee – chaired by the Philippine National Police, with the Fire Service Unit and barangay Tanods as members

3. Communication, Warning and Public Information Committee – chaired by the Office of the Mayor, with the Liga ng mga barangay President and all Punong barangays as members

4. Transportation, Rescue and Evacuation Committee – chaired by the Municipal Engineers Office, with the Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), Philippine National Police, Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), the Sangguniang Bayan and the Sangguniang Kabataan as members

5. Relief and Rehabilitation Committee – chaired by the Municipal Social Welfare and Development Office (MSWDO), with the Municipal Planning and Development Office, Municipal Engineers Office, Municipal Agriculture Office, Municipal Transportation Office, and representatives from the NGO and the bus transportation sectors as members

In addition to these task units, NGO and disaster welfare desks were set up to coordinate NGO assistance and to provide information on disaster victims, respectively.

CHART OF A TYPICAL BARANGAY DISASTER COORDINATING COUNCIL

Barangay Disaster Coordinating Council (BDCC)

As the MDCC established by the Local Government Code in 1999. Implements tasks at community level: preparedness and evacuation alerts, preliminary needs assessments, implementing evacuation plans, rescue, delivery of relief goods.

The Civil Defense Organization has 16 Civil Defense Regional Centers (field offices) nationwide for its regional-level operations and has designated Civil Defense Coordinators (Action Officers) at the provincial and municipal/city levels.

Resources for national and local comprehensive emergency management come from either emergency funding from the Local (LCF) and National Calamity Funds (NCF) or/and other sources, loans and grants (loans and grants extended by local and international NGOs) and/or assistance extended by NGOs, international NGOs, foreign governments, etc. Policies in the Use of the NCF:

1. The NCF can be used only for the following purposes:

a. Aid, relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction and other works or services in connection with calamities which may occur during the budget year or previous years’ past two plans

b. Pre-disaster activities such as training, and

c. Capital expenditures such as purchase of equipment for pre-disaster operations and rehabilitation

2. NCF shall be used in the following order of priority:

a. Priority I - For urgent and emergency relief operations and emergency repair and rehabilitation of vital public infrastructures and lifelines damaged by calamities occurring within the budget year e.g. hospitals, schools, major roads and bridges and farm-to-market roads

b. Priority II - For repair, rehabilitation and reconstruction of other damaged public infrastructures, which are not emergency in nature but are necessary for disaster mitigation

c. Priority III - For pre-disaster activities outside the regular budgets of line agencies and proposed capital expenditures for pre-disaster operation

3. NCF cannot be used for the following:

a. Repair/rehabilitation of government buildings damaged by fire e.g. hospitals, school buildings, city hall and public markets

b. Relief and rehabilitation requirements for specific calamities with specific appropriations under special laws, except when the appropriations have been fully expended or utilized

SECTION II: Policies, processes, structures and DRM related actions undertaken at local level (Situation described as it was during/after the disaster event analysed).

DRM Cycle Phase

A
Policy and Regulatory Framework (formal)
And/or
Customary Practices (informal)

B
Key Players/organizations (who?)
Key roles (what’)
Methods, Tools, Techniques (how?)

C
Capacity-Building elements,
Training (and Other Issues)

PREVENTION

1. Social capital formation

A1
- In response to the need for a more active and sustained support to the MDCC in the areas of emergency preparedness and response, vulnerability reduction and disaster risk control, the municipal government established the Dumangas Rescue and Emergency Assistance Movement (DREAM) in July 1999 (financial support provided by the municipality).
- Agreements with local civic and religious organizations for voluntary assistance in relief and rescue operations.
- The Municipal Economic Council was created by the Municipal Executive Order in 2000 to foster municipal economic growth and development.
- All members of community involved in line functions of the BDCC
- Administrative Order No. 196, series 2000; to institutionalize the role of fishermen and other resource users in the planning and formulation of policies and programs for the management, conservation, protection and sustainable development of fisheries and aquatic resources.
- Municipal Economic Council was created by the Municipal Executive Order No. 31, series 2000 (see under B6)

B1
Consultative body of municipal government on fisheries-related issues (FARMC), Irrigators Association (TAPABIA) and local radio communicators NGO allocated tasks in DRP/M within the Municipal Disaster Preparedness Plan.

Personal alliance systems (i.e. groupings composed of kin - real and ritual, grantors and recipients of favours, friends and partners in commercial exchanges; examples:
- concept of utang na loob (debt of goodwill
- Suki (market exchange) relationships
- Bayanihan, spirit of volunteerism in the community; people put together their strengths or resources to help out a person or family in need, including needs in crises/disaster times.

The entire disaster management system is built on local resources with trust and motivation of participating communities with a strong level of social capital. The establishment of specialized task forces to carry out warning, communication, transport, rescue, evacuation, supply, relief, medical, fire damage assistance, security and over all damage control at the barangays level revealed that almost each household participated in at least one of the specialized functions and thus the system could involve the entire community

C1
- Recognizing weakness in preparedness activities local governments initiates partnerships with civil society and private sector organizations.
- Training for volunteers and BDCC in rescue and search.

2. NRM and DRM Integration

A2
Institutionalization of fishermen and irrigators association role in NRM and DRM:
a) FARMC organized in July 2002 through Administrative Order in 2000 to institutionalize the role of fishermen and other resource users in the planning and formulation of policies and programs for the management, conservation, protection and sustainable development of fisheries and aquatic resources and disaster management.
b) TAPABIA organized in 1991 to address disputes among farmers.

B2
FARMC
Coastal/river clean-up

TAPABIA
Dykes reinforcement and clearing of paddy fields and irrigation canals;
Other devolved responsibilities with indirect implications for disaster prevention and mitigation include agricultural extension and on-site research and community-based forestry projects (of areas not exceeding 50 km2). LGUs are also responsible for enforcing environmental protection laws and for preparing extensive land-use plans

C2

3. Safety nets (informal)

A3
Informal traditional relationships between customers and suppliers (suki) and tenants-landlords may result in support, and protection. Bayanihan is the spirit of volunteerism in the community, where people put together their strengths or resources to help out a person or a family in need, whether in times of harvest in the fields, or when a house damaged by typhoon needs to be repaired, or in times of crisis. It strengthens cooperation and solidarity.

B3

C3

4. Financial Services and Insurance systems (formal)

A4
Local Government Code requires establishment of local calamity funds through local revenues.

A Memorandum Circular issued by the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the Department of Budget and management (DBM) on 20 March 2003, however, provides for the use of the LCF for preparedness activities for human-induced threats, including terrorism.

B4
Local Calamity Fund The LCF comes from the five percent (5%) of the estimated revenue that is set aside by the local government as annual lump sum appropriations for relief, rehabilitation, reconstruction and other works and services in connection with calamities which may occur during the budget year. If unused during the budget year, this fund could only be used for disaster preparedness activities, and is added to the municipality’s general fund for the subsequent year. A Memorandum Circular had been issued by the DILG and DBM in March 2003 clarifying that the LCF can be used for preparedness activities natural and human-induced threats, including terrorism (pending in PHI congress). Barangays have their own calamity fund (5% of the barangay income) for disaster relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction.

Municipal Development Fund: The municipal development fund comes from the 20 percent of the internal revenue allotment from the National government. The IRA is appropriated to local government units proportionate with the population and land area. This development fund supports the municipality’s programs in the agriculture, health, social welfare, infrastructure, environmental management, disaster preparedness, and tourism and youth sectors. Recognizing that disaster management is a key component of development, the municipal mayor utilizes the development funds to support disaster management in the relevant sectors (e.g. rehabilitation of roads and drainage systems from the infrastructure sector appropriation, medical missions from the health sector appropriation, etc.). (See Table 12, page 25).
In the aftermath of disasters poor households chose not to borrow to meet their basic needs. Even if credit facilities are available, the poor households could not avail it due to lack of collateral arrangements. These factors contribute delay in recovery of affected vulnerable households. The subsequent disasters compel them to borrow from informal credit markets with high interest rate of 20 to 30 % per month.
Other sources of funds include special budgetary allocations from the National Government, donations from businesses and the private sector, and assistance from other government and non-government agencies.

Municipal Economic Council: As agreed with members of the Economic Council, the municipality acquires goods and materials for disaster relief and rehabilitation on loan. Payment is made upon the release of the local calamity fund.

C4
Training for barangay tanods by integrating disaster management in the police training to counter terrorism.

5. Awareness raising

A5
Awareness in the two flood-prone barangays (Balud and Maquina) is high. Community members monitor river conditions although such is the task of the BDCC. Most would initiate preparatory actions based on the river conditions observed, even when an official warning has not been issued.

B5 the municipal government has planned to set up a community radio station that would broadcast time-relevant and accurate information and advisories during emergencies, as well as informative/educational programs for public education and awareness raising

C5
Baraguay meetings to empower people through enhanced understanding of their responsibilities and rights during emergencies.

6. Coordination mechanism (rehabilitation and prevention matters)

Including...

A6
Presidential Decree 1566 “Strengthening the Philippine Disaster Control and Capability & Establishing the National Program on Community Disaster Preparedness”, issued on 11 June 1978 is the country’s basic law on disaster management. It lays down the policy, institutional and operational framework for the disaster risk management system in the country. Its update now called “Philippine Disaster Management Act of 2003” includes the points:

- Responsibility for leadership rests on the Provincial Governor, City/Municipal Mayors, and Barangay Chairmen, each according to his area responsibility
- Self-reliance shall be developed by promoting and encouraging the spirit of self-help and mutual assistance among the local officials and their constituencies.
- Each political and administrative subdivision of the country shall utilize all available resources in the area before asking for assistance from neighbouring entities or higher authority.
- The primary responsibility rests on the government agencies in the affected areas in coordination with the people themselves.
- It is the responsibility of all government departments, bureaus, agencies and instrumentalities to have documented plans of their emergency functions and activities.
- The national government exists to support the local governments. In times of emergencies and according to their level of assignment, all national government offices in the field shall support the operations of the local government.

A Presidential Decree of 1999 mandates for the establishment of a Municipal and Barangay Disaster Coordination Council.

Municipal Economic Council was created by the Municipal Executive Order No. 31, series 2000. I

C6
Municipal Economic Council chaired by the municipal major, advocates related programs, projects and activities to foster municipal economic growth and development, as well as recommends to the Municipal Mayor and the Sangguniang Bayan policies that would enhance the operations of the business sector as well as benefit its clientele. Its key role in times of disaster is to provide on loan, goods and items required for disaster response Coordination tool see Municipal Disaster Preparedness Plan below

D6
MDCC, BDCC, and volunteers received training in search and rescue (1998) and disaster management (2000)

PREPAREDNESS

7. Contingency planning

A7 National Calamities and Preparedness Plan approved in 1983 was revised and issued in August 1988 together with the Implementing Rules and Regulations to P.D. 1566. An updated Calamities and Preparedness Plan is in process for approval of the National Disaster Coordinating Council

B7 Municipal Disaster Preparedness Plan is a consolidation of operational plans of the various task units of the Municipal Disaster Coordinating Council. It details activities to be undertaken, including funding requirements and sources, prior to, during and after an emergency. Total system approach, from preparedness, prevention and mitigation to emergency relief, rehabilitation, recovery and development.
Its objectives are to:

  • Reduce the undesirable impacts of disasters in the municipality
  • Effectively prevent or mitigate the occurrence of natural and man-made hazards
  • Implement disaster management, not as a periodic reaction to individual circumstances, but as a comprehensive and continuous activity

It details the functions and responsibilities of the MDCC, and the strategies for and extent of intervention

C7

8. Early Warning and Communication

A8
Establishment of a three source based early warning and communication system The early warning system is based on information from National forecast agency (PAGASA), on weather parameters, local irrigation authorities on hydrological parameters and communities on actual river level positions based on their experience. These three sourced information flow provides site specific disaster warning.

Efforts underway to establish a community based flood forecasting and warning system.

A regular consultative meeting, facilitated by the municipal mayor, brings together representatives of farmers’ groups, FARMC, the municipal agriculture office, municipal irrigation office, and, when necessary, the provincial agriculture office and the regional irrigation office, to discuss needs for information and technical assistance among other issues.

Early warning is communicated through a specialized NGO on communications to various users (TAPABIA,)

B8
MDCC/Intelligence and Disaster Analysis Unit: Evaluates information (from national forecast agency) and makes recommendations on disaster prevention and precautionary measures, eventually declaration of state of calamity. Submits recommendations for allocation of resources. Municipal Mayor issues official early warning.

FARMC: Advisory services for fisherman on disasters

TAPABIA, Local Radio and BDCC: Disseminate flood warnings (if possible via radio)

In Barangay Balud Hazard monitoring is done by everyone in the community. Water level at the Jalaur River is monitored using marked tree trunks at the riverbank as flood markers. Upstream river conditions are reported by other barangays by radio. Community members also observe cloud conditions upstream of the river.
(based on 2000 and 2003 events)

C8
Need and benefits for accurate information and early warning recognized and progressively incorporated into Disaster Preparedness Plan.

National Forecast did not provide enough detail; Local Agro-meteorological station installed.

9.Inftrastructural Safety Arrangements (boats, housing, refugee camps)

A9 National and sectoral agencies are responsible for maintenance and upkeep of physical infrastructure but do not undertake immediate repair and restoration due to procedural and resource constraints. Local institutions could be entrusted with restoration of this infrastructure with participation of communities. Our discussions with affected household revealed that they were willing to contribute labour and local materials and the local government could provide some resources and supervision and the National Government could have financial and technical resources.

C9 Fishermen boats used for rescue operations
- Dike and diversion canals constructions
- Most farmers have huts in higher areas where they can move to when residential area is flooded.
- Rafts made of bamboo and banana trunks built during evacuation.
- In barangay Balud, about 20% of dwellings are with a second floor. Huts in farms of higher elevation are also built to provide refuge in times of flood. Sheds for chicken and ducks are likewise raised.
- Municipality acquires goods and materials for disaster relief and rehabilitation on loan. This includes rice, canned food, medicine, clothing, cooking utensils, fuel and construction supplies. Payment is made upon the release of the local calamity fund.

D9

10. VulnerabilitAssessments (pre-disaster)

A10

B10

C10

RESPONSE and REHABILITATION

11. Response/Relief operations and coordination

A11
A Presidential Decree of 1999 mandates for the establishment of a Municipal and Barangay Disaster Coordination Council.

To re-orient the approach to disaster management in a systems mode the MDCC was re-organized in October 2001. Key agencies with resources and functions relevant to the MDCC functions were involved to lead the different MDCC units (e.g. PNP for Assistant Chairman, the Disaster Operations Center and the Intelligence and Disaster Analysis unit, Sangguniang Bayan for resources unit as their resolution is needed for mobilization of the local calamity fund, DECS for evacuation since school buildings are used as evacuation centers, etc.).

The number of task units was reduced from ten to five, merging units whose functions are inherent in the lead agencies (e.g. relief and rehabilitation for MSWDO) and to make coordination more effective (e.g. transportation, rescue and evacuation).

B11
BDCC (with DREAM Support)

- Preparatory actions (household items and animals transferred to higher grounds) and eventually evacuation following Mayors early warning communication. Prepares evacuation center and supports transfers to it.
- Damage and needs assessment
- Delivery of primary goods to community

MDCC

- On the basis of the preliminary needs assessment, declaration of state of calamity (necessary to mobilize calamity funds). Distributes primary goods to BDCCs.
- Eventually requests support from national bodies (Civil Defense, National Food Authority etc).
- On the basis of damage report requests for assistance from various offices (infrastructure, health etc)

Municipal Economic Council Provides for goods until LDC is mobilized (response mechanism based on 2000 + 2003 event)

C11
MDCC reorganized in 2001 with inclusion of key local agencies with resources and functions relevant to MDCC.

12. Damage and Needs Assessment (post disaster)

A12

C12
BDCC: Preliminary needs assessment
MDCC/ Intelligence and Disaster Analysis Unit (with support of local radio)

Consolidated damage report and allocation of resources
TAPABIA: Reports crop damage to Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation and Municipal Agriculturalist & lobbies for government assistance to affected farmers

D12

13. Transition relief/response to rehabilitation/prevention.

A13
Provinces, municipalities, cities and barangays are allowed to levy certain taxes, fees and other charges for their own use, including business and real property taxes. Such taxes should be equitable and based as far as possible on ability to pay. LGUs can also grant tax exemptions, relief and incentive privileges as they deem fit. In addition, both LGUs, acting on the recommendation of the local disaster coordinating council (DCC), and the President have the power to reduce or cancel property taxes following a general crop failure or natural disaster

C13
Municipal Agriculture Office:
Distributes seeds to affected farmers
MDCC/ Resource Management Unit
Identifies possible sources of funds for disaster victims and gathers necessary statistics on damage and needs.

D13

SECTION III: GAPS and LESSONS LEARNED

Key Lessons Learnt

- Evolution of Institutional Response: After independence (1950) and up to mid-60s, the communities recall that they faced severe hardships due to typhoons, flooding and other weather risks. They organized Disaster Brigades to save lives during floods. Later in mid-70s and 80s, the Disaster Brigades were transformed into Mountain Tigers. The Mountain Tigers received professional training in search and rescue operations through a provincial level NGO. While this development could instill confidence and minimize the loss of lives, due to inadequate early warning and communication systems, disaster-related losses continue to seriously impair the livelihood systems in terms of loss of houses, household assets, and livestock and crop losses (47).
- Decentralization: People could vividly call discernable improvements in the 90s after establishment of local governments with decentralized powers through local code of 1991. The organizational arrangements at the municipal and barangay levels were systematically reorganized by learning lessons by periodic natural hazard events. Every natural hazard event triggered institutional changes for managing subsequent disasters better. Prior to November 1998, the institutional arrangements were weak to monitor hazard and the emergency situation. The local government relied on PAGASA weather updates and typhoon advisories broadcasted from commercial radio stations, police reports on any flood-related incident, and motorists’ information on impassable roads (47). Today: man-made disasters (rice and agric policies, corruption; continuous expansion of private property into what should have been common or municipal property) are seen as more threatening by villagers than natural disaster risks;
- The adoption of local government code 1991 empowered the local institutions to take advantage of greater decision making powers at the local levels and provide opportunities to identify and apply localized solutions to problems posed by natural disasters. The local governments being closer to the communities were able to tailor national norms and plans to match the needs of the communities. The disaster management experiences of Dumangas municipality and its local support organizations like communication, NGO, search and rescue NGOs, the Economic Council, the private sector consortium and the BDCs of affected barangays could manage the 2000 typhoon-related floods and 2001 flooding without outside interventions to carry out the following: Search and rescue; Survey, assessment and reporting; First aid; Mobile medical assistance; Evacuation; Emergency welfare (e.g. mass feeding programmes); Emergency shelter (e.g. erection of tents, emergency building repairs); Emergency logistics Staffing of emergency operations centers (EOCs), including mobile ones; Information management The role of local Government in ensuring on-site disaster management capability freed national and sectoral agencies from undertaking these essential response functions.
- The role of national agencies was restricted to coordination and information-sharing activities
- Since the Philippines contains considerable economic, social and physical diversity, some types of services can be better provided by local authorities, which can adjust them to local needs and preferences, than by the National government
- Training and Partnerships. In 1998 a response system was organized. Arrangements were made with various agencies and training provided (system following 1999 is the one described in the case study) The improvements resulted in reduced lead-time of more than 48 hours of impending events and enhanced the community and household level preparedness to withstand the impact of natural hazards. The establishment of specialized task forces linked to municipal level local government and NGO and private sector systems with well orchestrated coordination arrangements resulted in efficient delivery of disaster management services. For example, the relief assistance reached the communities at the evacuation centres within 3 to 6 hours. The households were able to preserve not only the lives of their members but also their livestock assets and ensure safety and security of household assets. The interview with the community members revealed that preserving livestock assets could greatly help earlier recovery when compared to previous hazards (48).
- Learning and restructuring. The municipal officials mentioned that expenditure on relief has come down significantly on a household basis in recent years. To re-orient the approach to disaster management in a systems mode the MDCC was re-organized in October 2001. Key agencies with resources and functions relevant to the MDCC functions lead the different MDCC units. The number of task units was reduced from ten to five, merging units whose functions are inherent in the lead agencies and to make coordination more effective (48). Many respondents said that now they feel less threatened although they know that their lives and physical properties may be endangered. Their confidence comes from the knowledge that they will somehow recover from a natural disaster. The forecasts respondents get from the radio, television and the municipal government have also made them more confident that, in the wake of a natural hazard, they will have ample time to secure their animals, families, homes, movable properties, if not their crops. (15).
- The three source based early warning and communication system combining data from the National forecast agency, local irrigation authorities, and community observation of river level was capable of alerting communities with 24 to 48 hours lead-time (57).
- The evolution of institutional management systems in Dumangas illustrates that it could draw from the experiences of Disaster Brigades and Mountain Tigers to establish DREAM volunteers. The DREAM volunteers received specialized training search and rescue from 505th Search and Rescue Group of the 502nd Search and Rescue Squadron of the Philippine Air Force. As these community members are available within the community, their services are available continuously without any additional costs to the local government and are hence sustainable

Key Gaps And Recommendations

- Household vulnerability: Relief Assistance is distributed equally among all the households. While formal political institutions do not address differential vulnerability of communities, the informal social networks act as a conduit to redistribute relief assistance to the most vulnerable households. While community help could partially address most vulnerable households during crisis periods, it seldom addresses their recovery needs. Relief assistance for rehabilitation of agriculture is given in the form of seeds to the affected farmers who own the land. As most of the farmers are tenants, they do not have access to this kind of relief assistance which would enable them to recover fast from disaster impacts. The rehabilitation assistance is calculated and provided with reference to absolute and not relative loss due to disasters. The poor households incur disproportionately greater losses when compared to the total value of losses suffered by wealthier households. Hence, there is a need to develop a mechanism to provide rehabilitation assistance considering the capacity to recover rather than total loss incurred by households. The local institutions (in particular social networks) could articulate this requirement of the poor and vulnerable (51). The local institutions could also act as intermediary institutions between banks and the vulnerable households to evolve a credit delivery mechanism to suit the livelihood needs of vulnerable households.
- Delays in external (provincial and national assistance): The swift reconstruction of basic infrastructures such as bridges, roads, irrigation systems, schools, health clinic etc. following disasters have immediate social benefits. The reconstruction of these infrastructure facilities are not under the control of local institutions but sectoral institutions of the national government agencies. Immediate undertaking of reconstruction activities would provide immediate employment to the population as well as reestablish much needed communication facilities to speed up recovery process (50).
- National Resource allocation: National government funding mechanism does not include preparedness and mitigation measures. Allocation of resources to local government does not include criteria to benefit disaster prone areas (details pg 54). Resource constraints proved to be a major barrier for local government to integrate disaster prevention to development planning (54). National policy requires that calamity funds may only be used for relief and rehabilitation. A request has been made to the Department of the Interior to allow for savings to be allocated for preparedness. The LCF is now used also for preparedness.
- Emergency/Development Integration: Climate risk is to be treated as a continuous threat and a holistic approach is to be developed to treat disaster management as a continuum from preparedness to emergency response to recovery, reconstruction, mitigation and prevention. The local governments have already developed an integrated disaster management and development plan covering all cases of disasters. The National policies are yet to recognize and factoring this approach of integrity disaster management into development planning. The initiatives taken by the local governments could motivate the national policy makers to evolve and implement a holistic disaster management policy (61).
- Financial services: The seasonal gaps and income are often bridged by loans of varying interest rates from different sources. Most loans, from the organized institutions like banks go to the better off and middle-income groups in rural communities. This is due to collateral requirements and poor people are forced to borrow money, from relatives without interest or local money lenders with very high interest rates, especially during lean seasons. They may use this money mostly for unanticipated expenditures like medicines for sick family members. While everyday risk is a constant threat to livelihoods, the periodic weather-related shocks keep the livelihood systems from crisis to recovery on a continuous basis (19 and 60).
- Flood event in May 2003 showed that the system is not able to anticipate extreme events.

Other Aspects

- Municipal Disaster Coordinating Council recognized as the best in 2003 and received Presidential Award.
- Droughts are considered far worse than flooding and typhoons in terms of loss of crops
The local institutions could mediate with national agencies to bring in locally relevant scientific advancements for effective disaster management: for example, climate forecast/ early warning system

THE ROLE OF LOCAL INSTITUTIONS IN REDUCING VULNERABILITY TO RECURRENT NATURAL DISASTERS AND IN SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS DEVELOPMENT IN HIGH RISK AREAS CASE STUDY SUMMARY MATRIX

SECTION I: CONTEXT DESCRIPTION

Country: Mozambique
Province: Sofala, Búzi District
Municipality:
a) Munamicua Provoacao(study site) /Bandua Regulado (Local administration), lowland
b) Boca Provoacao (study site)/ Estaquinha Regulado (Local administration), high grounds.

Population covered by case study:
Munamicua: 3,634 inhabitants, 753 hh (1998 data)
Boca: 13,922, 287 hh (1999 data)
Land Area covered by case study: 7000 square kilometers

Natural Phenomena Cyclones and tropical storms resulting in heavy rains and floods
Hazard Profile: 5.2 million people affected (30% of population of Mozambique), 30.000 sqkm inundated with infrastructure destruction, national economic losses estimated of USD 6000 million. The small scale farming sector was the most affected. 139,000 hectares of planted crops was estimated to have been destroyed, 70-80%of livestock affected, 20.000 hectares of irrigation schemes destroyed. No data available on damage at district level. Riverine communities have been the most affected with both housing and crops lost. Increased health risk and waterborne disease (cholera and malaria).
Recent Disaster covered by Case Study:
1999/2000 floods (worst flooding ever recorded in southern and central Mozambique) From December 1999 to March 2000, Mozambique recorded the highest rainfall rates since 1951. They were associated with twelve meteorological systems, and triggered massive flooding in the southern and central regions of the country, with disastrous consequences, including human, physical and economic losses and affecting over 1 million people. The heavy rains in other southern African countries such as Botswana, Zimbabwe, South Africa and Swaziland, caused in part by the cyclones Connie and Eline, were precursors to the flooding in Mozambique. Neighbouring countries were forced to open their dams, resulting in excessive volumes of water entering the Mozambique catchments areas. The Búzi catchment in central Mozambique was one of those affected by waters released from the Chicamba Dam, causing rising levels in the Búzi River, with consequent flooding.

Land tenure, use patterns and livelihood strategies
Land tenure: Common property tenure regime with powers for allocation being vested in traditional authorities. Livelihood strategies: Búzi is a very poor district whose main means of livelihood is agriculture and livestock. The most important crops are maize, sorghum, rice, beans, sweet potatoes, groundnuts and vegetables. Livestock is the second main source of livelihood. Goats, chickens and ducks are the most common livestock produced in both areas. Livestock is partly used for consumption but mostly it is sold. Money from these transactions is used to access health assistance, to buy food in time of hunger and to pay children’s school fees

Main actors in DRM at community level

INGC (National institute for Disaster Management)

Permanent state institution acting as a coordinating body under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation recently being restructured under the 2001 Law of Disaster Management (see next section).

During the 2000 floods the INGC and the CVM were responsible for coordination and distribution of emergency assistance nationwide. However, in Sofala province, due to problems related to high corruption and lack of effective coordination the INGC failed to reach its beneficiaries. Due to the same reasons some donor organisations ignored the legitimacy and the role of the INGC, deciding to distribute emergency assistance directly to the affected people. In the visited areas the INGC is almost an unknown institution and when asked about the role played by any government institution most of our interviewers responded ‘none’. It is not completely true that the INGC was not there, but compared with the actions and impact of the presence of NGOs it was not visible. Since 2000 the tasks of the INGC go beyond the institutional capacity. Various NGOs have been working collaboratively or assisting the INGC to develop activities targeting the improvement of professional and administrative and technical skills.

CVM (Cruz Vermelha de Moçambique) - the Mozambican Red Cross

A district commission of the Mozambican Red Cross is situated at the Búzi district administrative headquarters, with small branches (“nuclei”) in most localities around the district. The Búzi district commission reports to the provincial commission and these reports in turn to the national headquarters. The Red Cross is developing projects in Búzi in areas such as early warning, health, water treatment and sanitation.

Through the use local volunteers, the Red Cross works in coordination with the local administration and health authorities to combat water-borne diseases such as malaria and cholera. The Red Cross convenes meetings with the local communities to discuss matters such as natural hazards and mechanisms of prevention of water-borne disease, and assists in mobilising communities to abandon high-risk zones.

GRC - Gestão de Risco de Calamidades (Disaster Risk Management), a GTZ Project attached to GTZ-Proder

The GTZ played an important role in Búzi during the 2000 floods, especially in terms of response and post-disaster assistance. After the floods, through its Proder project (Rural Development Project in Sofala), the GTZ participated in school and health centre rehabilitation, and assisted the government in implementing local disaster risk management. The GTZ was the first organisation to implement a disaster management strategy based at community level, by establishing local committees for risk management in Búzi. Other important activities of the GTZ include:

- Providing local communities with basic kits for improved early warning, rescue and response;
- Promotion of workshops and training for local activists for disaster prevention, preparedness and better response;
- Introduction of new agricultural techniques and new crops, or the re-establishment of local crops, to reduce people’s vulnerability to natural hazards.

The GRC has since expanded to include all localities of the district. In each community a nucleon or committee, consisting of seven volunteer members, represents the GRC. This committee works in coordination with local traditional authorities, mobilising people living in low-lying areas to move to safer places. Among other activities the GRC:

- promotes seminars with local authorities on risk management;
- monitors radio weather forecasts and gives this information to the local authorities who activate mechanisms to inform the community. GRC members themselves also disseminate early warnings to local communities;
- searches for the safest places for habitation;
- mobilises the owners of boats to participate in evacuation processes;
- evacuates the most vulnerable people to safe areas;
- mobilises people to abandon flood-prone regions in favour of higher-lying areas.

The Catholic Church and the CCM

These organisations use the Christian message to promote solidarity and a spirit of brotherhood for mutual assistance in cases of emergency. The Catholic Church commissions within the church have developed a range of different assistance procedures. The Charity Commission is the most important of these, and is responsible for collecting goods for distribution to affected people. The church also works as an important instrument for disaster early warning, and for encouraging people to adopt preventive measures. The local Catholic school in Estaquinha also works as an important institution for disaster management. When teachers receive an early warning via radio from the weather services, they transmit it to their students, who inform their parents back home. In Estaquinha, teachers also participate in the meeting held monthly at the administrative headquarters, where they discuss how to solve or minimise the problems of natural hazards.

ESMABAMA

ESMABAMA is a project created in 1995 by the Catholic Church to deal with post-conflict situations, but from 2000 it turned its focus to emergency food relief, and the distribution of seed and agricultural tools to flood victims along the Búzi River. This organisation has been working collaboratively with other organisations locally such as GTZ and the traditional authorities. During the fieldwork, ESMABAMA was focused on labor-for-food strategies to assist the local villagers against the drought that was affecting the study site. Other main activities of this organisation include:

- Training local communities in the care of livestock and the production of drought-resistant crops. Students also have a role in transmitting this knowledge to their parents and relatives back home and around the community.
- Promoting labor-for-food, in conjunction with the WFP: using work in road clearing and repair as a way to help people affected by drought.

Formal DRM set up

After the 2000 floods the Mozambican Government developed a new strategy for managing disaster events and for better coordination of operations with other organizations in 2001 a new law was ratified (Law of Disaster Management), the following describes the new set-up.

a) National Level

National Board for the Coordination of Disaster management (CCGC)

Operates at the national, provincial and district level, headed by the Prime Minister and integrates inputs from NGO’s and UN organizations.

Main role is to ensure coordination.

Technical Council for Disaster Management (CTGC)

Technical multi-sectoral organ, representing all ministries reporting to national government. UN and NGOs are on board. It is divided into seven working groups: (i) coordination, early warning, (ii) awareness raising, (iii) rescue and evacuation, (iv) logistic, (v) shelter, water and sanitation, and (vi) food security and agriculture. Each working group is responsible for designing operational plans, simplified instruction and procedures.

National Institute for Disaster Management (INGC).

National level body with branches in the ten provinces and some in some districts. Responsible for the development of contingency planning at national and provincial level. The Contingency Plan is the document containing strategic guidelines fro disaster prevention and mitigation.

b) Provincial Level

Provincial Disaster Management Committee

All national bodies have representation at the provincial level within the Provincial Disaster Management Committee. The provincial committee meets immediately before the rainy season and soon after the threat is over without being able to implement sound prevention programmes. Preventive measures are still limited, serious financial shortages, DRM is still perceived as a secondary priority. UN Agency and NGOs presence is limited at the provincial level.

c) District level

In Búzi local administration has created a district emergency committee, composed by local representatives of all the ministries. The role of the committee is: coordination and evacuation, supervision of affected area during the emergency and post disaster assessments and evaluations.

d) UN

DRM is one of the focuses of the UNDAF in Mozambique. The UN has supported the government in development of a disaster management policy, establish a disaster management information system, implement the disaster management plan.

SECTION II: Policies, processes, structures and DRM related actions undertaken at local level (Situation described as it was during/after the disaster event analyzed).

DRM/P Cycle phase

A
Policy and Regulatory Framework (formal)
And/or
Customary Practices (informal)

B
Key Players/Organizations (Who?)
Key Roles (What?)
Methods, Tools, Techniques (How?)

D
Local Learning and Capacity-building Elements
And Other Issues

PREVENTION

1. Social capital formation

A1
Traditional leadership and informal social networks compensated the lack of formal support in the first stages of the 2000 emergency. Although there are positive aspects as regards the role of the traditional authorities, they have been accused of nepotism when food assistance arrives.
Local communities perceive increased frequency and intensity of disastrous events as a result of local spirits, ancestors, and/or gods will (see box 3 page 33)
A conflict exists between administrative and traditional authorities (régulos) regarding the division of power. At local level there is no clear definition of hierarchy between these authorities; they use the same state symbols and report to the same level of administration - the chief of the administration post.

B1
Informal social networks played an important role in 2000 in Búzi. In most cases the emergency response was initially taken by people organising their own informal social networks (neighbourhood, friendship, kinship, church, etc.). Small private boats belonging to the fishermen along the river were used for evacuation of vulnerable people (elders, women and children), from the flooded areas to safer places, where they later received assistance.

D1
At the Estaquinha administrative post, traditional authorities are now invited to attend monthly meetings where they are encouraged to report to the head of administration on problems and progress in their area of jurisdiction. The problem they report most frequently is hunger.

2. NRM and DRN Integration

A2
Laws on Land, Environment, Forestry, Fishery and Water ratified between 1990 and 1999 but not linked to DRM.

B2

D2

3. Safety nets (informal)

A3
Village communities have strong networks to reduce the impact of extreme weather events as well as for subsequent recovery.

B3
To minimise the problem of lack of seeds after floods, people activate social networks based on kinship, friendship or neighbourhood ties - exchanging vegetable or cereal seed free of charge, or with merely symbolic payment. People with no seed at all acquire it by working for those who do have seed, and also give part of their harvest to these donors. The same applies to mutual food assistance in field cultivation, or “kulimila” and “likuku”.

C3
GTZ After 2000, introduction of new agricultural techniques and new crops, or re-establishment of local crops, to reduce people’s vulnerability to natural hazards.

4. Financial Services and Insurance systems (formal)

A4
Mozambique’s government sought assistance from the international community and received about USD 162 millions (GOM, 2000).

B4

C4

5. Awareness raising

A5

B5

D5
CVM: After 2000, the Red Cross convenes meetings with the local communities to discuss matters such as natural hazards and mechanisms of prevention of water-borne disease, and assists in mobilising communities to abandon high-risk zones.

6. Coordination mechanism (rehabilitation and prevention matters)

A6

B6
No mechanism in place previous/during 2000 floods, new strategy since 2002 (see Section I).

D6
By 2001 the Law of Disaster Management was finally approved. This law aimed at establishing strategies, plans, legal norms and operational programmes for disaster prevention, aid and rehabilitation. It was also intended to reduce communities’ vulnerability through a continuous, integrated, multidisciplinary and multi-sectoral process, based on an adequate information and communication system (Bill of the Law of Disaster Management, 2001).
After 2000 GTZ initiated a disaster management strategy based at community level, by establishing local committees (GRC) for risk management in Búzi (details in section 1) activities include promotion of workshops and training for local activists for disaster prevention, preparedness and better response and seminars with local authorities on risk management.

PREPAREDNESS

7. Early Warning & Communication

A7

B7
During 2000 floods the Búzi administrative authorities were warned about 48 hour before by the upper stream authorities. The Búzi authorities alerted the communities surrounding their headquarters, but owing to weakness in institutional coordination and communication the early warning did not reach the remote areas in time...however even the alerted communities did not take the warning seriously; the villagers were aware of their vulnerability to floods but nobody imagined the scale of those particular events.

Community based early-warning systems: communities use their traditional knowledge to predict hazards, they know the period of the year when floods, cyclones and droughts occur and which places are most at risk. They could predict natural hazards by interpretating natural signs such as the movement of birds, the appearance of insects or the position of the new moon. However, the uncharacteristic nature of the 2000 event marked a change in the perception of natural hazards by Búzi communities. It also marked changes in terms of community organisation and mechanisms for local institutional coordination.

D7
Since 2000 community-based early warning systems have become more sophisticated. GTZ and CVM have provided technical support, equipment and training. System of coloured flags established as a warning mechanism. The Catholic Church works as an important instrument for disaster early warning, and for encouraging people to adopt preventive measures. The local Catholic school in Estaquinha is an important institution for disaster management. When teachers receive an early warning via radio from the weather services, they transmit it to their students, who inform their parents back home.

8. Contingency planning

A8

B8
No mechanism in place previous/during 2000 floods, new strategy since 2002 (see Section I).

C8
Within the 2001 Law the INGC is responsible for the development of a contingency plan at national and provincial level. It was argued that given the Mozambican reality, characterized by poor mechanisms of communication and dissemination of information, the provincial level seems to be too high to design effective contingency plans because there is no means for collecting accurate and up to date data that reflects the situation on the ground. Experience showed that even the district authorities in Búzi were not aware of the content of the provincial plan, making it difficult to work collaboratively with the provincial authorities.

9. Infrastructural Safety Arrangements (boats, housing, refugee camps)

A9

B9

C9
After 2000 floods GTZ has been mobilizing people to:

  • Use stronger building materials (e.g. steel wire instead of ropes extracted from trees);
  • Build houses in higher-lying areas or to build houses with upper floors
  • Plant bamboos around their houses to protect them from winds;
  • Build small huts to protect livestock;
  • Avoid using canoes to cross the river by small boats and avoid walking under big trees.

10. Vulnerability assessments (pre disaster)

A10
There was no pre disaster vulnerability assessment due to absence of appropriate institutional mechanisms for the coordination of planning and response to disasters

B10

C10

RESPONSE AND REHABILITATION

11. Response/Relief operations and coordination

A11
The limited capacity of the national government in terms of resources (human, material and financial) to respond to the emergency was clear from the outset.
The lack of coordination between national and international agencies, and of governmental organizations and NGOs, constituted a major limitation in addressing the needs of the rural population. This problem was especially bad at provincial level in Sofala.
Some organizations and donors decided to distribute relief independently, in some cases without knowledge and respect of local norms which led to more problems than solutions.
The government collaborated with UN agencies (UNDP, FAO, WHO, UNESCO, UNICEF, WFP, UNFPA, UNEP/HABITAT), as well as with major NGOs and the private sector. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) developed a UN Disaster Assessment and Co-ordination team to assist the INGC and the UN Disaster Management Team. In facilitating the INGC’s disaster response, the UNDAC team helped in the establishment and functioning of Coordination Centres in all the regions affected by the flooding.

B11
At the beginning of the 2000 floods no formal rescue was provided because of unavailability of resources. By the time the means of rescue were provided by official authorities or external agencies households had already evacuated themselves to safer locations. The local radios suggested safe places for people to evacuate to.
Formal evacuation started late, it was undertaken by the Mozambican Army, South African Air Force, Beira MIL, AIRSERVE and a number of countries sent rescue helicopters.
Informal social networks played an important role, emergency response was initially taken by people organizing their own informal social networks, small private boats belonging to fishermen were used for evacuation.
With limited resources to respond to the disaster the Mozambique government sought assistance from the international community and received about USD 162 millions (GOM, 2000).
Assistance made it possible for people to buy essential goods, and funded services for the emergency operations being undertaken by state institutions, NGOs, UN agencies and religious organisations. The involvement of several organisations in the reception and distribution of aid made the operation more flexible and efficient. It was also possible to rescue 53,000 people, to provide emergency assistance to about 676,700 people in the established accommodation centres, and to start the process of population resettlement. Assistance was distributed using criteria based on the declaration of items lost.
The Mozambican government established a national emergency coordination mechanism chaired by the INGC. Flood committees were established at provincial and district levels.
The INGC roles were:

- to assess the needs of affected people;
- to coordinate the distribution of food and clothing by the organisations that had responded to the government appeals;
- to provide temporary accommodation in accommodation centres, and
- to provide medical assistance to the victims, especially in accommodation centres.

The main assistance provided by the UN to the affected people consisted of rescue, clothing, temporary shelter (tents), high-energy food, medical assistance, sanitation, water and vaccination against the water-borne diseases. Table1/page 29 shows the roles played by some of the UN agencies.

C11

12. Damage and Needs Assessment (post disaster)

A12
The Mozambican Government assessed the dramatic consequences of this disaster over three dimensions:
Human dimension: a total of 5.2 million people were affected (30% of the Mozambican population): 699 people died, 491,000 were displaced and 95 disappeared.
Physical dimension: roads, railways and other infrastructures were destroyed; an area of 30,000 square kilometres was inundated from the Umbelúzi, Incomáti, Limpopo and Save River basins in southern Mozambique to the Búzi River basin in the central region of the country;
Economic losses were estimated to have totaled USD 600 million, with a reduction in the country’s economic growth from 10 per cent to 3.8 per cent (GOM, 2000).

B12
NGOS and religious organizations evaluated the needs of the affected people. Hazard victims were viewed as homogeneous in terms of their vulnerability.

The assistance was provided after a rapid needs assessment conducted by the donors or administrative authorities. In other areas local traditional authorities were involved in listing affected households. The listing process sometimes was falsified because traditional leaders registered more than the actual number of households, in order to get more assistance. According to some interviewers, the numbers of affected people were inflated for this reason, even by the national government and some NGOs

D12

13. Transition relief/response to rehabilitation/prevention.

A13
Emergency response and relief was largely designed to be a temporary solution to the crisis, and this actually impeded the sustainable recovery of at-risk communities.

B13
Reconstruction programmes for aiding affected households after the flood were implemented by a number of internal agencies and non-governmental and church organisations, but considering the level of destruction suffered, they were far too small to address the needs of the population. The government was mainly occupied with the reconstruction of public infrastructure such as hospitals and health centres, schools, roads and small bridges, but the level of these services is still far from adequate.
CVN (Mozambican Red Cross)
Works in coordination with the local administration and health authorities to combat water-borne diseases such as malaria and cholera.

GTZ Participated in school and health centre rehabilitation, and assisted the government in implementing local disaster risk management.

NGOs and donor organisations that provided relief assistance left after six months before the requirements of affected families were met.

C13
ESMABAMA
From 2000 it turned its focus to emergency food relief, and the distribution of seed and agricultural tools to flood victims along the Búzi River. Focus is on: training local communities in the care of livestock and the production of drought-resistant crops and promoting Food for Work, in conjunction with the WFP.

SECTION III: GAPS and LESSONS LEARNED

Key Lessons Learnt

· The 2000 floods and cyclones exposed the Mozambican government’s institutional weaknesses and limited capacity to respond efficiently to emergencies. At the onset of the event there were no clear programmes or plans for responding to the emergency - including preparedness, evacuation and response. Existing plans did not consider an event of such magnitude nor the type of impacts that resulted. Communities also did not anticipate an event of such magnitude, inhibiting appropriate responses, particularly to early warning.
· The 2000 event did however represent an opportunity for the government to understand its institutional vulnerability expressed in:

- lack of institutional coordination to respond situations of extreme need;
- weak mechanisms of communication between different levels of the administration;
- lack of efficient channels and mechanisms to disseminate information on natural hazard management to communities that really need that information;
- centralisation of decision-making at national level and non-flexible mechanisms for information flow from bottom-up. As result, most of the decisions taken do not reflect the needs and expectations of the people on the ground;
- fragile and incompatible links between the different powers created in a context of new democratisation. At the local level there is no clear definition of roles between the traditional and administrative authorities; this sometimes results in conflict, which can have a negative effect on institutional coordination in disaster management.

· In some cases the government finds itself incapable of challenging donors’ imposition of conditions for the application of the funds provided. Donors in many cases decide what to give or to build, in which community or area, when and how, without coordinating with government authorities or even the local authorities of the beneficiary communities. As a result, in some cases their initiatives or projects fail to reach their goal. In terms of disaster prevention and mitigation, the Mozambique government recognised that strategies and programmes for addressing these issues are still far from reaching the necessary efficiency, and policies and programmes for addressing extreme poverty are still inadequate. The extent of the impact was due not only to the intensity and magnitude of the event, but also to the high levels of vulnerability within rural communities, compounded by HIV/Aids and chronic food insecurity. Factors influencing early warning: The case of Búzi provides a key lesson on how to design effective early-warning mechanisms within communities vulnerable to weather events. A better understanding of how people interpret and respond to warnings is needed. In this case it can be noted that people are less likely to respond to a warning if the previous warning did not result in a serious disaster or if they have never experienced an event of considerable magnitude and intensity. In Búzi people did not take the warning seriously because the previous two warnings had resulted in floods of low intensity without any large impact on people’s livelihoods. They assumed that this case would be the same.

Key Gaps and Recommendations (details on page 45 to 52)

a) Early warning and emergency planning

- Development of local management plans involving the local authorities and the most influential people within the community.
- Promotion of the local community radio station in Búzi to disseminate early warnings and Distribution of solar or wind-up radios, as the villagers often cannot afford to purchase batteries.
- Active involvement of GRC members to complement the information broadcast by the local radio to local communities, especially in remote locations along the Búzi catchment.
- Working with communities to inform them of the recurrence of extreme weather events,
- Promotion of national and provincial teams for monitoring, recording and evaluating indicators of the natural hazards and subsequent dissemination of information to potentially affected communities.
- Facilitation of environmental education programmes with the local community to increase their knowledge of natural hazards.
- Design of evacuation plans with at-risk communities,
- Integration of the scientific understanding of natural hazards with local ‘conventional wisdom’ or traditional beliefs.

b) Evacuation, search and rescue

- Ongoing training programmes for the youth resident in each vulnerable zone should be developed, providing them with the knowledge needed to conduct first aid in an emergency situation

c) Assessing the impact and distributing relief

- Need for standardised assessment procedure.
- Conduct pre-assessment and monitoring of food relief distribution by the local authorities to avoid community conflicts
- Supporting local support networks.
- Encourage partnerships between the Mozambican government and external agencies for better coordination in case of an emergency situation.
- Design of emergency food aid interventions to support mitigation activities as well as simply providing immediate relief, 4.3.1.4 Recovery and rehabilitation

d) Recovery and rehabilitation

- Establishment of long-term rehabilitation processes involving all community members.
- Design of planning and recovery programmes that take into consideration local cognitive factors that will influence their effectiveness.

e) Reducing the vulnerability of at-risk communities/ Strengthening and diversifying community livelihoods

- The livelihoods of more than 80% of the Mozambican population are based on agriculture. This sector is frequently seriously affected by natural hazards, especially droughts, cyclones and floods, which destroy the means of livelihood of local communities and impact severely on their food security. The situation is exacerbated by the limited capacity of local communities to diversify their livelihoods using the available natural resources. In order to strengthen and diversify community means of livelihood, the following are recommended.
- Focus on extensive and diverse sustainable utilisation of the natural resource base (agriculture, livestock, wildlife, fishery and forest resources)
- Focus on female-headed households whose livelihoods are agriculturally dependent.
- Encourage local seed exchanges between farmers from different communities
- Promoting local agrarian extension officers to help local communities improve agricultural production.
- Encouragement of NGOs in implementing small projects for livestock production as a second means of livelihood.

f) Strengthening the coordination role of local institutions in reducing the vulnerability of at-risk communities

- Increased coordination between government institutions at national, provincial, district and local levels should be strengthened.
- Permanent operation of disaster committees at each level of government.
- Strengthen coordination between Mozambique and other southern African countries.
- Expansion of the database identifying all institutions and organisations working on disaster management at the local level.
- Establishment of communication mechanisms and information exchange among local institutions to ensure greater coordination.
- Strengthening of initiatives such as the GRC, by the CVM and GTZ.
- Strengthen disaster committees to support communities in managing their own risk.
- Strengthening the organisational capacity of local organisations.
- The government should take advantage of collaboration with NGOs and other agencies that already understand the importance of local organisation.

g) Integrating disaster management in sectoral policies

- Increased sectoral engagement between government departments on disaster risk management.
- Integration of disaster risk reduction principles into government programmes.

h) Promoting multidisciplinary research into vulnerability reduction

- Adoption of a multi-disciplinary approach to assess at-risk communities.
- Encouragement of government and local institutions to develop an interdisciplinary “vulnerability index’.
- Local authorities should work on a long-term basis to persuade local communities that extreme events like the 2000 can occur again.

GAPS

- While the Bill of the Law of Disaster Management, 2001 recognises the role of local governance in reducing the vulnerability of communities at risk, its focus is still predominately on the protection of state resources and national strategies are still based on strengthening the state’s capacity to respond to disasters, with a limited focus on increasing the community’s capacity to prepare for and respond to disasters or to reduce risk conditions. The challenge for local government is therefore to strengthen local communities’ capacity to cope, whilst linking them to external support at both local and national levels.
- Traditional authorities played an important role during the 2000 event, but they were sometimes limited by not knowing precisely what was going to happen. In some cases it was reported that they appeared primarily interested in securing their own household assets as opposed to assisting the community.
- No standardised assessment as a result of uncoordinated assessment procedure, relief was distributed haphazardly, and not all affected communities were assisted.
- During the relief distribution, several constraints emerged in the field. There was a severe scarcity of fiscal resources on account of the lack of institutional capacity to act quickly to solve emerging problems. Second was the problem of inefficient flow of information about what was happening at different administrative levels.
- Although contingency plans are important tools for disasters management, the nature of the contingency plans has been criticised because they had been prepared based on generalized information from national or provincial levels, which did not reflect the reality at the local level. It was argued that given the Mozambican reality, which is characterized by poor mechanisms for communication and dissemination of information, the provincial level would seem inadequate to design effective contingency plans because there is no means for collecting accurate and up-to-date data that reflects the situation on the ground. Experience showed that district authorities in Búzi were not aware of the content of the provincial plan, making it difficult to work collaboratively with the provincial authorities.

Other Technical Aspects

The protracted civil war resulted in a severe disruption of social networks. With the uncontrolled dispersion of communities, families were split up, and could no longer draw on mutual support, an important base for rural livelihoods. Mechanisms such as local norms and values, traditional rules, taboos and ceremonies that had influenced the sustainable use of natural resources and environmental protection were all abandoned, and traditional authorities that had been responsible for the dissemination of values and knowledge, especially to the younger generation, collapsed and lost their legitimacy. Indigenous knowledge of farming techniques, livestock production, and disaster prevention and preparedness were lost completely. This placed communities at greater risk to natural hazards.

Annex 5: FAO’s Disaster Management Cycle

The Disaster Management Cycle is illustrated in the below diagram. It consists of a number of phases, each requiring a different range of response activities. The different phases, however, are often grouped together under three main categories: the pre-emergency phase, the emergency phase and the post-emergency phase. In the course of this paper, the activities of UN entities in the disaster management cycle will be examined under these three broad categories.

A. PRE-EMERGENCY PHASE

The emphasis in the pre-emergency phase is on reducing the vulnerability of communities to suffer from the impact of natural phenomena. Measures to achieve this objective include risk-mapping, application of building codes, land zoning as well as structural measures such as the construction of dams against flooding. They are grouped under the heading risk reduction, comprising prevention, mitigation and preparedness.

i. Prevention

Includes all measures aimed at avoiding that natural phenomena turn into disasters for settlements, economies and the infrastructures of communities.

ii. Mitigation

Involves measures taken to limit the adverse impact of natural hazards and related environmental and technological disasters. Examples of mitigation are the retrofitting of buildings or the installation of flood-control dams, and specific legislation.

iii. Preparedness

Involves measures taken to ensure effective response to the impact of disasters. Preparedness measures include, for example, evacuation plans, early warning systems, pre-stocking of relief items - all being part of a national disaster relief plan.

B. EMERGENCY PHASE

In the emergency phase of a natural disaster, response mechanisms are automated. This phase is normally short-lived and may be over within days or weeks.

i. Response

Involves measures taken immediately prior to and following the disaster impact. Response measures are directed towards saving life and protecting property. They deal with the immediate disruption caused by the disaster. They include search and rescue, and the provision of emergency food, shelter, medical assistance. The effectiveness of responding to disasters largely depends on the level of preparedness.

C. POST-EMERGENCY PHASE

The transition from relief to rehabilitation is rarely clear-cut. On the one hand, the foundations of recovery and reconstruction are usually laid in the immediate aftermath of a major disaster, while emergency response activities are still ongoing. On the other hand, there is often, in the aftermath of a natural disaster, a phase when basic needs must still be met as the long-term benefits of rehabilitation and reconstruction projects have not yet been fully realised. As a result, the phasing-out of relief assistance must be managed carefully.

i. Recovery

Is the process by which communities are assisted in returning to their proper level of functioning. The recovery process can be very protracted, in some cases up to a decade or more. Typical activities undertaken under this phase include: restoration of essential services and installations, and long-term measures of reconstruction, including the replacement of buildings and infrastructure that have been destroyed by the disaster.

ii. Development

Its inclusion in the disaster cycle is intended to ensure that following the natural disaster, countries factor hazard and vulnerability considerations into their development policies and plans, in the interest of national progress.

The rationale behind the use of the expression ‘disaster management cycle’ is that disaster and its management is a continuum of inter-linked activities. Yet, the expression is slightly deceiving in that it suggests that the periodic occurrence of natural disasters is something inevitable, always requiring the same response. On the contrary, if effective prevention and preparedness measures are implemented, natural disasters may be avoided by limiting the adverse impact of inevitable natural phenomena.

To illustrate progress in reducing a country’s vulnerability to the impact of natural phenomena through the implementation of risk-reduction measures, the series of events applying to disaster management should be represented as a spiral. In a spiral, disaster-related activities are linked as a continuum, but not in a cyclical manner. At the beginning of the spiral, the country’s vulnerability to natural disasters is high since inadequate focus is placed on risk-reduction and more efforts are correspondingly required during the emergency phase of a disaster. An upward movement along the spiral indicates that prevention and preparedness measures are gradually put into place, thereby reducing the country’s vulnerability to natural disasters and the need for emergency assistance in the event of a disaster.

Annex 6: Examples to increase Local DRM capacity

Annex 7: WebSites

Asian Disaster Preparedness Centre

http://www.adpc.ait.ac.th

Asian Disaster Reduction Centre

http://www.adrc.or.jp

Caribean Disaster Mitigation Project

http://www.oas.org/EN/CDMP

CEPREDENAC (Centro de Coordinación para la Prevención de los Desastres Naturales en América Central)

http://www.cepredenac.org

Centro Régional de Información sobre Desastres (América Latina y el Caribe)

http://www.disaster.info.desastres.net/crid

Directory of Disaster Reduction Institutions

http://www.unige.ch/idndr

Disaster Information Network

http://www.disaster.net

Disaster Preparedness ECHO (DIPECHO)

http://www.disaster.info.desastres.net/dipecho

Disaster Relief - Worldwide Disaster Aid and Information via the Internet

http://www.disasterrelief.org

Earthquake Research Institute

http://www.eri.u-tokyo.ac.jp

European Union Humanitarian Office

http://www.europa.eu.int/comm/echo

FAO Global Information and Early Warning System (GIEWS)

http://www.fao.org/giews/default.html

FAO Geoweb

http://geoweb.fao.org

FAO Food Insecurity and Vulnerability Information Mapping System (FIVIMS)

http://www.fao.org/fivims/default.html

US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)

http://www.fema.gov

Fortalecer Estructuras Locales para la Mitigación de Desastres (FEMID)

http://www.cepredenac.org/10_femid/10_index.html

HazardNet

http://hoshi.cic.sfu.ca/hazard/index.html

HazNet

http://www.haznet.org

Humanitarian Policy Group /ODI

www.odihpn.org

International Committee of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies

http://www.ifrc.org

International Institute for Disaster Risk Management

http://www.idrmhome.org

International Strategy for Disaster Reduction

http://www.unisdr.org

La Red de Estudios Sociales en Prevención de Desastres en América Latina

http://www.osso.univalle.edu.co/tmp/lared/lared/html

La Red de Estudios Sociales en Prevención de Desastres en América Latina - Publications:

http://www.desenredando.org

Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

http://www.reliefweb.int/

Promujer

http://www.promujer.org

ProVention Consortium

http://www.proventionconsortium.org

SEWA

http://www.sewa.org

UNDP Disaster Management

http://www.undp.org/erd/disaster.html

UNDP Disaster Management Programme

http://www.undp.org/erd/dmp.html

UNESCO Unit for Natural Disaster Reduction

http://www.unesco.org/environment

World Bank Disaster Management Facility

http://www.worldbank.org/dmf

World Food Programme

http://www.wfp.org

World Health Organization Division of Emergency and Humanitarian Action

http://www.who.int/eha

World Meteorological Organization

http://www.wmo.ch


[10] Inter-Agency Secretariat of the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UN/ISDR), Living with Risk: A global review of disaster reduction initiatives, United Nations, Geneva, 2004.

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