Many actions were taken for minimizing the impact of 2001 floods:
Regarding Preparedness
-
To prepare national and provincial contingency plans.
-
To train national resources, including military and police, for rapid response.
-
To work regionally to ensure cross-border coordination.
-
To improve vulnerability assessment and mapping.
-
To ensure weather and water level forecasting.
-
To pre-position emergency assets.
-
To remain on stand-by to response with needed transport, equipment and goods.
-
To inform communities of emergency processes and procedures.
Regarding capacities at national, provincial and local levels
-
To increase emergency communication networks.
-
To better coordinate efforts between Government and other working technical groups.
-
To second line ministry staff to serve during emergencies and assist INGC.
-
To improve accountability and mapping of emergency assets.
-
To clearly define roles for Government public servants.
-
To improve linkages between Government, NGOs and local communities.
-
To reduce bureaucratic obstacles and procedures during emergency relief operations.
The 2000-2001 operation improved in some areas due to the following reasons:
An accurate weather forecast. The weather forecasting, allowed formulating a contingency
plan based on potential 2001 flooding between January and April.
The preparedness capacity. The National Contingency Plan along with the UN Contingency Plan,
allowed pre-positioning or warehousing part of the needed materials, goods, and equipment
prior to the floods.
Coordination strategy in place. The coordination capacity had improved: meetings on a
weekly basis, latest information available, up-to-date mapping, website, forecasts, river
level measurement, and reports regarding logistics, health, water, shelter, communications,
food security, and overall coordination in the Beira operational hub, drove to reactivate
and to create management mechanisms.
A common appealing position. It was possible again this year to successfully launch a common
UN appeal which mobilised more than the total amount of $30 million requested by Government.
There is a need of further improvement to have a much better response in the future. During
an emergency, the main priority is to reduce mortality among the affected population, first
of all through rescue of the people in danger and secondly ensuring survival with relief
assistance. To attain the objectives, it is essential to respond to the following main
challenges:
Preparedness: the weather forecast mechanisms alerted about 2001 floods and provided
accurate information to prepare an adequate response.
The contingency plan must be reviewed, updated and modified every year to ensure that we
are responding in the most effective possible way. In order to dispose of an adequate
coordination, both contingency plans, Government and UN should be prepared simultaneously
in a complementary and integrated way. A detailed procedures manual is a crucial tool
that has yet to be prepared.
Improvement in all partners working together has to be done, to ensure the coordination
process makes the best use of combined resources, talents and assets and the embracement of
a new culture of on-going planning and preparation.
Disaster management capacity. The Mozambican Government and the International
Community improved substantially their management capacity during the last year. Meanwhile,
one of the main constraints was the lack of human resources both in quality and quantity.
Assessments of disasters need to be much more immediate and must be conducted jointly with
the Government and partners. They must begin sooner, use common assessment instruments, and
feed into a common database which all partners contribute to and utilize. Otherwise, we
again end up with differing statistics, conflicting assessments, and competitive responses.
Unlike in 2000, the assessment and implementation in such a widespread affected area was
more difficult, costly and time-consuming. The need was even greater for full cooperation
and collaboration to serve populations and save lives.
An adequate response will not be possible without sufficient funds. It is highly possible
that, in a near future, floods will affect again Mozambique, one of the poorest countries
in the world.
Training and specialization of national and international officers, institutional
capacitating with adequate resources and technology, rehabilitation and construction of
roads and bridges, construction of water defence mechanisms (dikes and platforms) and
access in due time to transportation assets for rescue and relief (boats, hovercrafts,
helicopters and plains), are not feasible without the will and participation of the
international solidarity of the powerful countries. The paradox is that solidarity, is not
always related to the needs of the affected population, but for strategic, media related,
economic, political and mediocrity related reasons.
Enrique MuСЃoz Leira
UN OCHA Emergency Coordination Advisor
Maputo, Mozambique
14 September 2001
|