GREATER HORN OF AFRICA: Preparing to mitigate negative impact of El Niño

As countries across East Africa and the Horn of Africa begin to receive
El Niño-related enhanced rainfall, disaster risk reduction experts from
10 countries in the region are meeting in Nairobi to develop strategies
for reducing the negative impact of the evolving El Niño phenomenon.
"Africa, and in particular the Horn of Africa, suffers more and more
the impact of climate-induced hazards," Pedro Basabe, the Africa
programme representative of the UN International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction (UNISDR), said on 19 October at the beginning of the
three-day conference, organized by the InterGovernmental Authority on
Development (IGAD) and World Bank. "Drought and floods affect directly
or indirectly millions of people each year, in particular the poor who
are the most vulnerable."
According to the IGAD Climate Prediction and Applications Centre
(ICPAC), which produces monthly and seasonal climate outlooks, the
Greater Horn of Africa is prone to extreme climate events such as
drought and floods, which often have severe negative effects on the
region’s key socio-economic sectors.
Experts from Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Rwanda,
Tanzania, Uganda, Sudan and Somalia are attending the conference, of
which the second and third day will be held in the western town of
Kisumu, with participants making field trips to nearby flood-prone
areas.
In a keynote speech, Moses Gitari, a senior deputy secretary in the
Kenyan Ministry of State for Special Programmes, said memories of the
negative impacts of the 1997-1998 El Niño and awareness efforts by
climate experts had helped the country develop several disaster
preparedness strategies.
"These include education, awareness and information sharing, risks and
vulnerability analysis, people-centred early warning, adaptation to
climate change, environmental protection, vulnerability reduction
through development and social programmes and community coping
mechanisms," Gitari said.
He added that community level intervention was pivotal to any disaster risk reduction strategy.
Gitari said the meeting was timely since some of the intervention
efforts could require support beyond individual countries' borders.
Abbas Gullet, secretary-general of the Kenya Red Cross Society, said
the government, UN agencies and NGOs had, in September, developed a
National Contingency Plan for El Niño, "which is being [put into
operation] currently".
"We have pre-positioned relief items, human and material resources
countrywide in all the eight regions we work in and have conducted
drills in some of the regions with a view to putting preparedness
capacity on alert status," Gullet said. "It is our hope that this
workshop will provide opportunities to explore the various ways and
means of entrenching disaster risk reduction in communities we work
with and provide a way forward for building safer and resilient
communities countrywide." (IRIN)