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Tearfund Reducing Risk of Disaster One Year on From Kashmir Earthquake

Tearfund has been hard at work in the region of Kashmir since the massive earthquake destroyed entire villages last year and one of its focus areas remains Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR).

by Maria Mackay
Posted: Monday, October 2, 2006, 14:50 (BST)
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One year after the devastating earthquake struck Kashmir, ongoing Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) work by Christian development agency Tearfund is continuing to dramatically reduce the vulnerability of villages in this remote region.

Many lessons were learned when the massive quake struck on 8 October 2005, flattening homes and buildings in seconds and leaving 80,000 dead. Not only were all efforts by aid agencies to bring food, water and shelter to people severely hampered by the remote mountainous terrain; the need for disaster prevention measures also became immediately apparent.

Some of the major problems identified in the aftermath of the disaster were also the inadequacy of the buildings, which were designed with no resistance to earth movement, and the communications between remote villages.

Tearfund, a leading advocate for DDR measures, was in the region in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake and was soon facilitating a village level communication system with communities near the remote town of Bagh.

The development agency has also worked closely with the local community elders over the year to develop a comprehensive Disaster Risk Reduction programme which includes first aid training, the formation of disaster committees to co-ordinate relief and training on building designs that are more resistant to quakes.

Schools and hospitals collapsing, due to poor structural design caused a high number of fatalities in the quake. Jon Kennedy, Operations Manager for Tearfund's Kashmir response, says that telling children not to run into buildings when the ground starts to quake is one simple education example that saves lives.

He explains that it is also about working together. "Local risk reduction isn't driven externally" says Jon. "It's about engaging with the culture and the remote village way of life to understand what works for the people as a community in the wake of a disaster. Through that dialogue and combined initiative we can help them build their own disaster management plan, to ensure that basic life saving measures - actions to reduce vulnerability, become part of community thinking to pass on for future generations."



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