Title: Disasters and Conflict
1Disasters and Conflict
- Zoë Chafe
- Worldwatch Institute
- USIP Global Peace and Security Seminar
- July 12, 2006
2Outline
- Disaster trends
- Natural vs. unnatural disasters
- Case studies of disaster and conflict
- -Aceh -Sri Lanka
- -Pakistan -Hurricane Katrina
- Recommendations and project goals
- Your thoughts and questions
3Why Disasters and Conflict?
- Immediate needs, survival mode
- Direct competition for aid
- Potential breakdown in social services
4Disasters of 2005
Source National Environmental Satellite, Mario
Tama Getty Images, AP, Karl Schular IUCN
Pakistan, Reuters, Wade Laube
5Disasters of 2005 Year of Records
- 650 loss events
- 100,000 deaths (only 3rd year recorded)
- 157 million people affected
- Unprecedented economic losses (210 bil)
- Wilma strongest hurricane in Atlantic
- Delta first tropical cyclone in Canaries
Source MunichRe, CRED
6Disasters of 2006
Source ESRI/USGS, China Daily, AP/Bureau of
Meteorology, Save the Children, Matt Rourke/AP,
International Security Assistance Force.
7This Year Disasters (so far) in 2006
- Afghanistan Landslides, affected 300,000
- Australia Cyclones, 200 million in damage
- Bolivia Floods, 35 million in damage
- China Floods, 957 million in damage, 100 killed
- DR Congo Floods, 75,000 people affected
- Indonesia Yogyakarta earthquake, 5,736 killed
- Iran Earthquake, affected 160,000 people
- US Floods, 200,000 evacuated on East Coast
8Number and Cost of Weather-Related Disasters
19802005
9Deaths from Weather-Related Disasters 19802005
10Average Number Affected by Weather-Related
Disasters 19812005
11Natural or Un-natural Disasters?
- Ecosystem destruction
- Climate change
- Population growth
- Human settlements in risky areas
12World Ecological Footprint, 19612002
13World Population, 19502005
14Annual Population Growth of Cities and Slums,
19902005
15Ecological Safety Net
- Coral reefs and mangroves dampen waves and surges
- Forests prevent localized flooding and landslides
- Case for precautionary principle
16Frequency of Disasters 1980-2004
17Who is at risk?
- Countries with low human development home to 11
of people exposed to risk - But account for 53 of deaths from disasters
- Disasters divert funds from social programs
- Erase land and property records
- Economic marginalization
- Women at increased risk
18Number Affected by Disasters 1980-2004
19Disasters and Conflict
- Selected cases of overlap
- Disaster type can dictate amount of press
- Potential to decrease human rights abuses
- Aid can exacerbate conflict
- Displacement can fuel future conflict
- Military role necessary but complicated
- Political leadership crucial
20Case Study Tsunami in Aceh
- Aceh site of 30 year conflict
- Rich in resources rampant poverty
- Illegal logging lucrative for police, military
- Tsunami brought international attention
- Common goals of relief, recovery, reconstruction
- Peace agreement secured in August 2005
21Impacts on Aceh
Acehs total population 4.2 million
22Case study Tsunami in Sri Lanka
- Civil war from 1983 to cease-fire in 2002
- Tsunami affected all parties
- Tamil Tigers accused government of discrimination
in aid distribution - Aid slow to reach all communities
- Peace talks resumed, but violence persists
23Impacts on Sri Lanka
Sri Lankas total population 19.6 million
24Case study Pakistan Earthquake
- 50 years of tension between India and Pakistan
- Earthquake killed more than 80,000
- Landslides contributed to suffering
- Border crossings opened for aid distribution
- Disputes over logistics marred goodwill
25Case study Hurricane Katrina
- More than 1,800 killed
- New Orleans heavily impoverished
- Intra-societal conflict under media scrutiny
- Breakdown in communications
- Conflict increasing?
26Foreign Aid to US
- 1 billion in total foreign aid offered
- From 115 countries and organizations
- UAE was largest donor at 100 million
- Kuwait donated 25 million to Red Cross
- UK meals were quarantined
- Offers from Iran, Cuba were rejected
27Recommendations
- Environmental protection for cooperation
- peace parks, regional agreements, monitoring
programs - Natural disaster prevention bridges political
boundaries - Address war- and disaster-affected populations in
comprehensive program - Strengthen civil society, encourage transparency
- Creative and imaginative collaboration
28Future goals of the project
- State of the World 2007 chapter
- Engage disaster and conflict agencies
- Roundtable discussion, Spring 2007
- Disaster book, expected Summer 2007
- Strengthen and update web portal
29Online Portal
www.worldwatch.org/features/disasters
30(No Transcript)