SRI LANKA: Children as early detectors, preventers of disaster
Source: IRIN
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COLOMBO, 8 July 2008 (IRIN) -
Residents of Ovilkanda, a remote village in Matale District, central Sri Lanka, often contend with a natural hazard, lightning, that strikes with great frequency and sometimes with deadly effect. So
when the local school, the Ovilkanda Maha Vidyalaya, hosted a disaster mitigation programme conducted jointly by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the Disaster Management
Centre (http://www.dmc.gov.lk/), the government agency handling disaster mitigation, the students were unanimous in their choice of which disaster prevention mechanism was most needed. "They
wanted a lightning conductor fixed to the school building," Indika Ranaweera, the DMC's disaster management coordinator for Matale District, told IRIN. "Lightning was the most persistent natural
danger for the kids. In the last two years lightning had struck twice in the school compound killing one person." Disaster mitigation specialists working with the UNDP/DMC project, as well as with
them on other similar projects throughout the country, told IRIN that Sri Lankan children were concerned that not as much attention was being paid to potential dangers always around them as to
periodic large-scale disasters. "Adults see the traditional dangers, like floods, cyclones, landslides or even tsunamis," UNDP field coordinator for the programme Zihan Zarouk said, "but children
can look outside the box, and identify things that adults probably see but tend to ignore." The one-year UNDP/DMC programme will cover 48 schools in 15 districts by the time it concludes this
November. (http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77789) Arjuna Eramudugolla, a project manager in the southern Matara District for the Child-Led Disaster Risk Reduction Programme - conducted
in schools by Save the Children UK (http://www.savethechildren.org.uk/) - also found children identifying dangers often overlooked by adults. "What we have seen is that they are keenly aware of
dangers that are present on a daily basis, like exposed wires, dangerous trees near school buildings or unsafe buildings and even road safety," he told IRIN. Rabid dogs In Weligama Division in
Matara District about 150km south of Colombo, children identified rabid dogs as the biggest threat to their community. Eramudugolla told IRIN that after discussions with village level community
groups, a rabies prevention programme was initiated in three villages in Weligama Division. "We were able to discuss with the students and adults and organise sterilisation and vaccination
programmes," the Save the Children official said. His counterpart in the eastern Batticaloa District, Mayroon Thevasingamany, a disaster risk reduction specialist with Save the Children UK, had a
similar experience with children at a centre for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Batticaloa town, 300km east of Colombo. "At the IDP centre, the children identified malaria and dengue as
dangers. They felt that pools of water stagnating everywhere in the camp was the cause," he told IRIN. The children also took the lead in organising the prevention programme as was the case with the
anti-rabies programme. "They organised a Shremadana (volunteer work campaign) among the IDPs to clean the site and also staged street dramas to educate others on the dangers posed by the mosquito
breeding grounds," Thevasingamany told IRIN. Success Officials involved in both programmes said such mitigation methods with children taking the lead were showing high levels of success. "They
learn fast, but will also do their own research," the UNDP field coordinator working with the DMC Zihan Zarouk, told IRIN. "Kids also have the time, energy and enthusiasm to get involved [in
prevention programmes] far more than adults who have other obligations." In one other school, Hadugamuva Maha Vidyalaya, also in Matale District, the UNDP/DMC joint programme found that children
wanted to prevent wild elephants encroaching on their villages but were not keen on setting up electric fences. "They went for the newer idea, that of setting up 'live' fences," Zarouk said.
"Instead of live electricity, the fences were made of plants with thick thorns that the animals find very hard to creep through." Saving money, victims The Save the Children UK disaster risk
education programme in Sri Lanka has already covered 150 schools throughout the country and involved 20,000 students. The agency said awareness programmes not only prevented children falling victim to
disasters but also saved colossal amounts of money spent on relief and recovery. In a recent report entitled In the Face of Disaster, Children and Climate Change,
(http://www.savethechildren.org.uk/en/docs/In_the_Face_of_Disaster.pdf), released on 30 June, the agency estimated that annually 175 million children fall victim to natural disasters. The report
said that every US$1 spent on preparing for a disaster can prevent US$7 in losses. "This demonstrates the case for disaster risk reduction to be mainstreamed into development planning and
programming," the report stated. ap/bj/cb© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org









