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Baltz Tribunalo of Plan International reports on the magnitude 6.9 earthquake which hit Negros at 11.49am on 6 February.   He reports that the earthquake caused a landslide in Guihulngan, a city of about 100,000 people ...Read More
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This weekend the GNDR Steering Group met together in  Delhi, India to share ideas on future direction and organisation of the network (picture attached).  Members* sharing in the The Forward Together discussion fed ...Read More
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Cordaid staged a workshop in Washington in September 2011 and the report has just been published.It reveals valuable lessons about how to shift the emphasis towards local knowledge and management, and also poses questions ...Read More
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AIDMI's contribution to the 2011 International Day for Disaster Reduction PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 13 October 2011 00:00

AIDMI's contribution to the 2011 International Day for Disaster Reduction


Accept our greetings on IDDR from AIDMI, India! You may have interest to read following points come up again and again during a dialogue with youth on October 11, 2011, Ahmedabad, India. They are recorded as AIDMI's contribution to the 2011 International Day for Disaster Reduction. The youth were shown photo essay of work with victims of 2010 cloudburst in Ladakh. The photos were taken by Yash Kadam and Sanchit Oza and shown on October 11, 2011. After the photo show discussion was held.

1. Many youth have no idea of what disasters are like. Where are museums of humanitarian action and disaster risk reduction for them to visit? Youth want to go beyond the theory of DRR, and see DRR as a separate subject and far from poverty reduction.
2. Youth are curious on how to rapidly build culture of trust and  collaboration in humanitarian action. Who trusts whom and why? And what factors add to this process?
3. Youth also want to know not only what India is doing at home in reducing disaster risk but also India's global engagements in humanitarian action. Global trends are becoming important to youth.
4. Youth are keen to know what are economic consequences of disasters on India's economy that is growing at 8% GDP as well as on individual common man's life.
5. Again and again youth are amazed at the dignity of victims of disasters when relief is delays and recovery hardly ever takes place faster than the onset of poverty. According to the youth, major and most important learning are coming from the field,  with the community.
6. Rain water harvesting as a measure against floods and droughts is firmly engraved in the minds of youth. Such measures are ecosystem based and with low carbon footprint.
7. Youth are keen for youth-to-youth exchange between disaster victim youth and other youths in India. Such exchanges build youth together and have shared reality of a disaster.
8. Youth are curious about  humanitarian action beyond aid and charity. Is it possible? What role markets can play? Big national cooperators? Global business networks?

It is our younger generation who will find solutions to the risks that have been created over the past two centuries. But for this to happen we must invest our trust, ideas and resources in our youth.

The above eight points came up in discussion with youth on disaster risk reduction as a part of 2011 IDDR.

Vishal Pathak

 

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