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Reducing The Risk Of Disaster In Armenia

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  • Reducing The Risk Of Disaster In Armenia

    REDUCING THE RISK OF DISASTER IN ARMENIA

    PreventionWeb
    Oct 10 2012

    Date:9 Oct 2012
    Source(s):United Nations Development Programme - Armenia (UNDP Armenia)

    Hovhannes Arakelyan has witnessed hundreds of floods in his remote
    village of Sipanik, in Western Armenia. "I have seen smashed roads,
    houses, and crops, and disasters used to diminish our hope for a
    better life," says the 72-year-old.

    Sipanik's regular inundation when the Hrazdan River floods is just one
    of the catastrophes that many Armenians experience annually, which cost
    the country over US$ 33 million each year. The country's geographic
    location makes it one of the 60 most disaster-prone countries in the
    world, with a heightened risk of earthquakes, droughts and flooding. An
    earthquake that struck in 1988 killed 25,000 people, destroyed almost
    an entire town and left 517,000 homeless.

    Until UNDP started working in the country in 1997, there was no
    government-operated system to monitor disasters, or coordinate a
    response. Many communities, like Sipanik, lacked basic infrastructure
    to prevent catastrophes, such as drainage systems, mudflow channels
    and soil dams.

    But Armenia has shifted from reacting to disasters, to proactively
    reducing the risk. UNDP is helping the government to better prepare
    for catastrophe by providing money, advice and international experts
    to the country's first disaster coordination centre and observatory.

    Armen Yeritsyan, Minister of Emergency Situations in Armenia,
    recently highlighted the importance of UNDP's work in this area. "The
    establishment of an effective system of disaster risk reduction is of
    vital importance for our country, not only in terms of risk management,
    but also in terms of poverty reduction and addressing socio-economic
    and environmental vulnerabilities," he said.

    The centre has been collecting and analyzing data that is helping the
    government to pinpoint high risk areas in each region. For example,
    in 2008, it identified the village of Sipanik as a high risk area. As
    a result, the village, together with five other communities, received
    assistance from UNDP to build a one km long soil dam, which since then
    has protected 80 houses from flooding. Local residents contributed
    labour, machinery and 20 percent of the project costs.

    This has allowed the people of Sipanik to grow more food without the
    risk of losing crops due to floods. "I always thought that we must
    be prepared for the next time, rather than act after disaster knocks
    at our door," says Arakelyan.

    "With this dam, our settlement is no longer damaged by rises in water
    levels," said Anahit Hambardzumyan, another Sipanik resident. "We are
    even able to use the land in our backyards for agriculture. And most
    importantly, our children are safe."

    http://www.preventionweb.net/english/professional/news/v.php?id=29004




    From: A. Papazian
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