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- <text id=91TT1121>
- <title>
- May 27, 1991: Disasters:There Must Be A Better Way
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 27, 1991 Orlando
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 33
- DISASTERS
- There Must Be a Better Way
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With famine, floods and refugees demanding attention, providers
- of emergency aid think the time is ripe for change
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES WALSH--Reported by Anne Constable/London and Farah
- Nayeri/Paris, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> A few days after the latest cyclone ravaged Bangladesh,
- Mother Teresa arrived from Calcutta with 1,600 lbs. of relief
- supplies. It took a day for officials in Dhaka to decide how to
- deal with her. Since the Nobel Peace laureate had flown in on
- a commercial flight, some officials argued that the materials
- needed to go through customs. About a month earlier, when Iraqi
- Kurds began fleeing en masse from Saddam Hussein's soldiers, the
- Iranian army struggled to cope with thousands of dying children.
- They were treated with antibiotics instead of rehydration
- salts, a more effective means of staving off life-threatening
- diarrhea.
- </p>
- <p> Improvements in communications and transportation have
- made the world's disasters no easier to handle. Even with
- better warning systems, reactions can be snail-paced,
- ill-considered and futile. The first days following a
- catastrophe are the most critical for survivors. The demand for
- speed, however, is precisely what the world's complex
- disaster-relief network is not geared to meet. Says Nicholas
- Hinton, director general of Britain's Save the Children Fund:
- "Disaster relief is proving to be inadequate and ineffective.
- It should be reformed as a matter of urgency."
- </p>
- <p> But how? Major powers such as the U.S. are reluctant to
- take on the duty, let alone the cost, of intervening
- unilaterally. Should the United Nations assume the chore? In the
- wake of more than 30,000 Kurdish deaths and perhaps as many as
- 140,000 killed in Bangladesh's April 30 storm, many reformers
- pin their hopes on the organization. "Only the U.N. has the
- power and resources to mobilize the international community, but
- too often it has been hamstrung by a lack of clear leadership
- and coordination," argues Lynda Chalker, the British Minister
- for Overseas Development. Britain hopes to win agreement on the
- need for a U.N. agency with clout at the July Group of Seven
- economic summit in London.
- </p>
- <p> Even though the U.N. is theoretically above politics,
- reformers are far from unanimous about using it. The track
- record is not encouraging. Notes Francois Dumaine, a logistics
- expert for the French volunteer medical team Medecins sans
- Frontieres: "It takes the U.N. a month and sometimes longer to
- organize rescue operations." Adds Serge Telle, a technical
- adviser to France's Secretary of State for Humanitarian Affairs,
- Bernard Kouchner: "The U.N. relief agencies are plagued with
- chronic financial difficulties because of the West's
- indifference. On the one hand, we say everything has to go
- through the U.N.; on the other, we settle everything at the
- bilateral level."
- </p>
- <p> The U.N. already has agencies dedicated to handling
- emergencies: the High Commissioner for Refugees, for instance,
- and the Disaster Relief Coordinator's office. But the criteria
- of the former confine it to aiding persecution victims who cross
- borders, while the latter commands few resources and little
- authority. Officials in afflicted nations often bypass the U.N.
- and appeal directly to foreign governments and private charities
- such as Britain's Oxfam.
- </p>
- <p> Help at this level can be generous, and aid-giving
- countries have notably eased some disasters. Andrew Natsios,
- director of foreign disaster assistance for the U.S. Agency for
- International Development, says as many as 350,000 Bangladeshis
- were saved this time, thanks to a U.S.-built cyclone-warning
- system. Natsios also points to U.S.-supplied volcano and
- earthquake monitors and a Chilean tidal-wave-alert network. With
- satellite analysis of African vegetation, he adds, Washington
- pre-positioned 30,000 tons of supplies before the famine last
- year in the Sudan.
- </p>
- <p> But the U.S. budgeted just $10 million for disaster
- detection and preparation this year, while private charities are
- being whipsawed by conflicting demands. Says Marcus Thompson,
- Oxfam's emergencies director: "We are going flat out
- everywhere." What about a multinational force independent of the
- U.N.? The belated but effective intervention in Bangladesh by
- 12,000 U.S. soldiers suggests that a military-style operation
- might be the answer. In the Washington Post, columnist Jim
- Hoagland called on the U.S. to use its armed forces for other
- emergencies in the future. Yet developing countries often balk
- at U.S. intervention. On the other hand, a reserve multinational
- rapid-deployment force headed by Japan and with standby units
- in other nations might be more acceptable.
- </p>
- <p> Some Japanese officials are leaning toward using their
- military in disaster relief. Says Foreign Minister Taro
- Nakayama: "The Ground Self-Defense Force has many transport
- helicopters available, as well as technical units trained in
- disaster recovery operations. We should debate this." Yoshiaki
- Nemoto, a Japanese Red Cross official, agrees that the military,
- if forbidden to wage war abroad, could be used to better
- purpose. "The gulf war provided a rare chance for the Japanese
- to face the issue and make a step forward," says Nemoto. At
- present Tokyo tends to resist the idea as unrealistic. When the
- world is not overwhelmed by calamities, it seems, it is drowning
- in unrealistic ideas.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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