300 likes | 434 Views
Disasters and Conflict. Zoë Chafe Worldwatch Institute USIP Global Peace and Security Seminar July 12, 2006. Outline. Disaster trends Natural vs. “unnatural” disasters Case studies of disaster and conflict -Aceh -Sri Lanka -Pakistan -Hurricane Katrina
E N D
Disasters and Conflict Zoë Chafe Worldwatch Institute USIP Global Peace and Security Seminar July 12, 2006
Outline • Disaster trends • Natural vs. “unnatural” disasters • Case studies of disaster and conflict -Aceh -Sri Lanka -Pakistan -Hurricane Katrina • Recommendations and project goals • Your thoughts and questions
Why Disasters and Conflict? • Immediate needs, survival mode • Direct competition for aid • Potential breakdown in social services
Disasters of 2005 Source: National Environmental Satellite, Mario Tama: Getty Images, AP, Karl Schular: IUCN Pakistan, Reuters, Wade Laube
Disasters of 2005: Year of Records • 650 “loss events” • 100,000 deaths (only 3rd year recorded) • 157 million people affected • Unprecedented economic losses ($210 bil) • Wilma: strongest hurricane in Atlantic • Delta: first tropical cyclone in Canaries Source: MunichRe, CRED
Disasters of 2006 Source: ESRI/USGS, China Daily, AP/Bureau of Meteorology, Save the Children, Matt Rourke/AP, International Security Assistance Force.
This Year: Disasters (so far) in 2006 • Afghanistan: Landslides, affected 300,000 • Australia: Cyclones, $200 million in damage • Bolivia: Floods, $35 million in damage • China: Floods, $957 million in damage, 100 killed • DR Congo: Floods, 75,000 people affected • Indonesia: Yogyakarta earthquake, 5,736 killed • Iran: Earthquake, affected 160,000 people • US: Floods, 200,000 evacuated on East Coast
Average Number Affected by Weather-Related Disasters 1981–2005
Natural or Un-natural Disasters? • Ecosystem destruction • Climate change • Population growth • Human settlements in risky areas
Ecological Safety Net • Coral reefs and mangroves dampen waves and surges • Forests prevent localized flooding and landslides • Case for precautionary principle
Who is at risk? • Countries with low human development: home to 11% of people exposed to risk • But account for 53% of deaths from disasters • Disasters divert funds from social programs • Erase land and property records • Economic marginalization • Women at increased risk
Disasters and Conflict • Selected cases of overlap • Disaster type can dictate amount of press • Potential to decrease human rights abuses • Aid can exacerbate conflict • Displacement can fuel future conflict • Military role necessary but complicated • Political leadership crucial
Case Study: Tsunami in Aceh • Aceh site of 30 year conflict • Rich in resources; rampant poverty • Illegal logging lucrative for police, military • Tsunami brought international attention • Common goals of relief, recovery, reconstruction • Peace agreement secured in August 2005
Impacts on Aceh Aceh’s total population: 4.2 million
Case study: Tsunami in Sri Lanka • Civil war from 1983 to cease-fire in 2002 • Tsunami affected all parties • Tamil Tigers accused government of discrimination in aid distribution • Aid slow to reach all communities • Peace talks resumed, but violence persists
Impacts on Sri Lanka Sri Lanka’s total population: 19.6 million
Case study: Pakistan Earthquake • 50 years of tension between India and Pakistan • Earthquake killed more than 80,000 • Landslides contributed to suffering • Border crossings opened for aid distribution • Disputes over logistics marred goodwill
Case study: Hurricane Katrina • More than 1,800 killed • New Orleans heavily impoverished • Intra-societal conflict under media scrutiny • Breakdown in communications • Conflict increasing?
Foreign Aid to US • $1 billion in total foreign aid offered • From 115 countries and organizations • UAE was largest donor at $100 million • Kuwait donated $25 million to Red Cross • UK meals were quarantined • Offers from Iran, Cuba were rejected
Recommendations • Environmental protection for cooperation: • peace parks, regional agreements, monitoring programs • Natural disaster prevention bridges political boundaries • Address war- and disaster-affected populations in comprehensive program • Strengthen civil society, encourage transparency • Creative and imaginative collaboration
Future goals of the project • State of the World 2007 chapter • Engage disaster and conflict agencies • Roundtable discussion, Spring 2007 • Disaster book, expected Summer 2007 • Strengthen and update web portal
Online Portal www.worldwatch.org/features/disasters