A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, July 19, 2017
Sri Lanka struggles to adapt as disasters become a new "normal"
COLOMBO (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - During Sri Lanka’s May floods,
rescue crews in Kiriella, a small town in Rathnapura District, spotted a
remarkable sight.
A middle-aged woman, trudging through waist-deep floodwater, clutched a
rooster carefully above the torrent, while a small girl struggled to
hold onto the woman’s waist, at times barely able to keep her head above
water.
“Not just the public, but even policy makers are the same: They look at
natural disasters as isolated events and the main aim is to save movable
and immovable property, not lives,” charged Ranjith Punyawardena, the
head of climatology in the agricultural department of Sri Lanka’s
University of Peradeniya.
Disasters – from deadly floods to worsening droughts – are happening more frequently in Sri Lanka.
But efforts to begin treating the crises as a new “normal” – which
requires fundamental changes to how the country’s systems work, rather
than one-time responses – is struggling, some officials say.
In May, floods and landslides killed 216 people, left 76 missing and
affected over 600,000 - just a year after similar floods killed more
than 100 people.
A 10- month drought, meanwhile, is lingering in the northern part of the
island – despite some recent rain – and is likely to result in the 2017
rice harvest being the lowest in a decade, according to the U.N. Food
and Agriculture Organization.
One of the main problems, Punyawardena said, is the difficulty of sustaining changes put in place in the wake of disasters.
Real Change?
In each of the last three years floods have killed at least a hundred
people in Sri Lanka, and in each case disaster officials have initiated
inquiries afterward to identify what went wrong, Punyawardena said.
After this year’s flooding, Sri Lanka’s Disaster Management Centre and
Department of Meteorology were widely criticized for failing to provide
sufficient early warnings of the approaching floods.
Officials at the Department of Meteorology said a lack of sophisticated
radar technology prevented it from issuing detailed-enough warnings.
The disaster center has since revamped its procedures for issuing early
warnings and the government has signed a $ 22 million agreement with
Japan to set up new weather radar stations.
The government also has said it will set up 100 disaster evacuation centers across the island nation.
But Punyawardena said it remained to be seen whether such action would cut the death toll from floods in coming years.
“Hopefully these new changes will not end like sudden bursts. We need
sustained emphasis. The policies have been there in the past as well. It
is the implementation that has been lacking,” he said.
The problem, said Punyawardena and Sarath Premalal, director general of
the Department of Meteorology, is that disasters usually lead to a
flurry of government activity that then peters out as the disaster
situation eases. The cycle then begins again with the next disaster,
they said.
“The policies are clearly there in documents and plans. I don’t think we
need newer ones. What we need is to properly implement these for the
long haul,” Punyawardena said.
Disaster officials say one big problem for them is lack of access to
top-level decision makers as they try to bring change. Normally such
access comes only during major disasters, Premalal said.
“We need support at the very top level to make sure we are prepared.
Sometimes it is very difficult to gain access to decision makers. That
slows down a lot of the work,” he said.
Working Together
Lack of coordination can also be a problem. During May’s floods, for
instance, both the country’s president and its prime minister chaired
separate committees aimed at addressing the disaster, leading to
confusion in the early stages of the crisis, according to Disaster
Management Centre officials and officials of United Nations relief
organizations.
Getting officials from across agencies – such as agriculture, water,
disaster and meteorology – together to coordinate plans also is a
challenge, Premalal said.
“We tend to still work in silos. There is a need for practical, real-time data and information sharing,” he said.
Since 2010, government agencies have come together to hold a pre-monsoon
meeting each March to share and discuss information on expected
rainfall. The problem is that very little activity then takes place to
head off problems that might be anticipated from the data, said the head
of the meteorological department.
For example, data provided by the Department of Meteorology before the
May floods suggested very heavy rainfall was possible, and should have
led to the country’s Department of Irrigation running computer models on
what flooding might be expected, Punyawardena said.
Currently the irrigation department relies primarily on water gauges in
rivers to assess water levels and determine when flood alerts should be
issued, he said.
M. Thuraisingham, director general of the irrigation department, said
that his team did not have the technical capacity or human resources to
accurately run computer models of possible flooding.
Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, Sri Lanka’s minister of disaster management,
said efforts to better spur and coordinate action are underway, however.
“At ministry level we are now having regular meetings with all connected
departments and if the need arises we will seek (a) meeting with the
President,” he said.
He noted that the government had also renewed its pioneering national
natural disaster insurance policy, which last year earned the country a
$2 million payout amid floods just six weeks after being purchased.
Reporting by Amantha Perera; editing by Laurie Goering :; Please credit
the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters,
that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women's
rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit news.trust.org/climate