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Archive for July 25th, 2011

Women are often overlooked in preparedness efforts

Posted by African Press International on July 25, 2011

BANGLADESH: Bigger role for women in disaster preparedness

Women are often overlooked in preparedness efforts

DHAKA,  – In a nation considered the most vulnerable to natural disasters in the world, women must be enabled to take on a bigger role in disaster preparedness and response, experts say.

“To be frank, it’s a constant challenge to achieve genuine female participation in the various activities… While I’ve observed a real commitment to ensuring female representation in disaster preparedness, planning and response, actual participation is something else,” Steven Goldfinch, programme specialist in disaster management for the UN Development Programme (UNDP), told IRIN in Dhaka.

Women’s exclusion is not helped by a persistent myth that they are unable to manage in a disaster, added Puji Pujiono, the government’s project manager for the Comprehensive Disaster Management Programme (CDMP II).

“After a disaster, women undertake tasks directly related to survival. Once all family members are accounted for, women clean up the kitchen, and establish access to water, dry clothing and a place to sleep. Women will travel long distances and risk their own lives to get water for their families,” he said.

But reluctance at Bangladeshi women assuming a bigger role in this traditionally male-dominated country of 142 million has long been a problem.

According to a 2008 study by the Women’s Environment and Development Organization, an international organization working for gender equality, women in Bangladesh were not consulted in any community-level decision-making.

This is despite the fact that government and NGOs began placing stronger emphasis on gender studies in relation to natural disasters following the 1991 cyclone, which resulted in widespread flooding and some 140,000 dead, said Khurshid Alam, a climate change and natural disaster expert and one of the study’s authors.

Research indicates that women are the most vulnerable section of the population in Bangladesh, where 171 disasters between 1971 and 2005 resulted in the loss of more than half a million lives.


Photo: David Swanson/IRIN
Women line up for assistance following Cyclone Sidr

The UN Environment Programme reports that in 1991, among women aged 20-44, the death rate was 71 per 1,000 compared to 15 per thousand for men. It attributed the disparity to the social expectation that women wait for family members before escaping to a safer place.

Improvements have been made since then, but further change is necessary, Alam said.

“I do not believe the knowledge we have gained has been factored into disaster response adequately. There are good practices here and there, but it’s not mainstream. And as disaster response is still male-dominated, women are rarely mentioned in national documents,” he said.

One woman at a time

However, progress is being made.

As an urban community volunteer coordinator in Dhaka, Sultan Ara Begum, 44, has received training on collapsed structure search and rescue, fire-fighting and first aid from the Bangladesh Fire Service and Civil Defence Directorate. The volunteer scheme falls under CDMP- II, supported in part by UNDP Bangladesh.

Since January 2010, CDMP II has trained 5,466 urban volunteers, with a target of 62,000 by 2014. The goal is for 20 percent of the volunteers to be women. To date they are at 24 percent, Goldfinch said.

Begum said her family has reacted positively to her volunteer activities. “When I spent three days away from home for field training, my husband was supportive. He, along with my two daughters, sometimes attend training sessions with me,” she said, explaining her motivation: “I will die, but my memory will remain, so I want society to remember me as someone who did something worthwhile.”

jm/nb/cb source www.irinnews.org

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No rains: Dikicha village, in southern Ethiopia’s drought-hit Oromiya region

Posted by African Press International on July 25, 2011

ETHIOPIA: Golecha Deba, “If it rains, I will even crawl on my knees and plant”

Golecha Deba

DIKICHA (OROMIYA REGION),  - At 96, Golecha Deba, an agro-pastoralist from Dikicha village, in southern Ethiopia’s drought-hit Oromiya region, about 20km from Kenya’s northeastern border, has seen several cycles of drought, but never as severe as this one. He spoke to IRIN about living in an area classified by the UN as one step away from famine:

“I have lived long enough, I never thought I would see a day like this. Even my father never told me of such a day. When I was a boy we had seasons of bad rains but never like this.

“My [five] sons and I lost 28 livestock in May this year. Our livestock is our savings, our life, and our children.

“We have not had a drop of rain for over a year. If it rains, I will even crawl on my knees and plant my seeds.

“I cannot think of migrating, if I do, I will become fertiliser for the land [will die]. My sons cannot think of migrating, as they will not leave me. This is our land; we were born here. We cannot think of doing anything else – if we do we will be like fish outside the water – helpless.

“We don’t know what is happening, it is God’s will. He has decided to have this drought – we wait and see. I cannot think what will happen if it does not rain in October.

“In the past we have always managed. We grow sorghum, barley and teff. We even managed to sell some in the neighbouring town [Hidi].

“Now we are getting some cereals as food aid. We are surviving on that but for how long we don’t know.”

jk/mw source www.irinnews.org

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It is sad that drought and livestock rustling uprooted us from our home

Posted by African Press International on July 25, 2011

KENYA: Veronica Erupe, “We either burn charcoal or die of starvation”

Veronica Erupe holds her child

ISIOLO, 20 July 2011 (IRIN) – Veronica Erupe has lived in the village of Manyatta Chokaa, along the Isiolo-Samburu district border in northern Kenya, since 2008 when she fled drought and frequent livestock rustling at her Baragoi home, 600km away.

Erupe, a single mother of four, told IRIN how losing the family’s livestock had forced her to flee her home and pushed her into a life of poverty selling charcoal.

“I was not born here; my family came to this village from Baragoi to escape the terror of bandits. It’s a miracle that we survived [so] many raids. The final raid, during which our 50 remaining goats were stolen, left us poor.

“It is sad that drought and livestock rustling uprooted us from our home. Baragoi was a place I loved; I had many friends [there].

“I still remember the journey; it took us eight days to reach here [Manyatta Chokaa].

“Life since 2008 has been full of hardships for me and my children; my husband quit the marriage.

“I have been relying on selling charcoal since my arrival here. It provided the first meal for my family and helped construct this house. I could buy food, paraffin and clothes.

“But now, life is expensive and it’s difficult for charcoal traders to afford food and items like soap.

“[Recently], the population at our village and other settlements like it – Eremit, Attan, Manyatta Zebra and Ngaremara – has doubled with hundreds of desperate families, who have lost their animals to prolonged drought and cattle rustling.

“This village is now full of former wealthy livestock owners, who are now selling charcoal in Isiolo, so the price of a sack of charcoal has dropped to KSh600 (US$6.67) from KSh1,000 ($11.11) in January.

“But the cost of maize flour, cooking oil, vegetables, paraffin and transport to Isiolo, where we go for treatment, has increased.

“I have tried to adjust, but it’s still tough. My children no longer take a bath; I have not bought them clothes this year. I give them bone soup once a month as they were used to eating meat.

“We have to walk over 30km to get good trees to make charcoal but we risk meeting dangerous animals like elephants along the way. Some women and young girls have been attacked, injured and killed.

“It’s meaningless to work for KSh600 a week [but] we have no choice. We either burn charcoal or die of starvation.

“Manual work is no longer available as those who used to employ us to do house chores are also affected. Some girls are selling their bodies, and it’s risky with HIV/AIDS.

“We need assistance to settle, start small businesses. Our children need scholarships to pursue an education, and they need health facilities.

“We [charcoal sellers] are considered a nuisance, enemies to the environment and our charcoal is often confiscated. But we deserve to be assisted rather than condemned.”

na/aw/mw source www.irinnews.org

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