Disaster Risk Reduction
Disaster Risk Reduction
According to Dr. Manmohan Singh Hon’ble Prime
Minister of India “Integration of Disaster Risk Reduction strategies into our
development initiatives must necessarily involve actively the local
communities. Make full use of our Panchayat Raj institutions to achieve this
objective. Pay special attention to this very important aspect. Another
area that perhaps needs greater attention relates to arrangements for providing
funds to people so that they are able to cope with the losses they suffer due
to natural disasters. The current systems, particularly at the National level,
lack institutional incentives and do not promote mechanisms such as risk
insurance and contingent credit facilities. The development of such ex-ante
arrangements is particularly important because they typically serve as a
primary source of immediate funding that would reduce human suffering, economic
losses and fiscal pressures in the aftermath of natural disasters. Managing
disasters is necessarily a collaborative and complex exercise, involving not
only several Departments of the Government at the Centre but also State and
local Governments, Civil Society Organizations, local communities and the
people at large. Disaster management is an area of vital national importance to
our country. As we all know, India is vulnerable to a large range of natural
and man-made disasters. Events like earthquakes, floods, droughts, cyclones,
landslides and industrial accidents have been a cause of great misery and
suffering in our country. In recent years, climate change has posed fresh new
challenges that our disaster management strategies should be able to cope with.
These are in the form of the increased intensity and frequency of disasters
like floods, cyclones and droughts. It is estimated that the chances of future
extreme events would be much higher than what they are today because of the
changes that continue to occur in our climate patterns”.
Way Forward
Nevertheless, the policy reforms undertaken by
India are comprehensive and envisage specific parameters for the different
phases of disaster management. The paradigm shift is a comprehensive overhaul
that represents ‘double-loop learning’ as far as federal policy making is
concerned. Its objective is to change the fundamental objective from
distribution of relief to addressing all-phases of generic disaster management.
The sum total of changes represents a complete policy overhaul in Indian
disaster management. However, there is also need for sensitizing and
galvakizing the people by launching outreach programmes at the grassroots level
to prepare them for facing the odds. Besides, better coordination, cooperation
and convergence is also called fro between the Centre and states with regard to
disaster management.
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