
PACIFIC DISASTER MANAGEMENT INFORMATION NETWORK
(PDMIN)
1 Jarrett White Road MCPA-DM, Tripler AMC, HI 96859-5000
Telephone: 808.433.7035 · PDMIN@coe-dmha.org
· http://www.coe-dmha.org
June 15, 2005
Note: New content has
been inserted in red, italicized, bold font.

Table of Contents:
Overview......................................page
2-4
Indonesia.....................................page
5-10
Sri Lanka.....................................page
11-16
Thailand.......................................page
17-21
Overview
· The overall focus of attention is on long-term
recovery and rehabilitation for the December 26 earthquake and tsunami
disaster. The death toll from
tsunamis triggered by an undersea earthquake measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale
off the west coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra Island has recently been revised to some
228,000 people along the coastal areas of 11 countries in the Indian Ocean,
largely due to the Indonesian government revising its estimate for the number
of people missing from 93,458 to 37,063, an approximate 60 percent cut. The
change in the number missing reflects the identification of people who were
listed as missing but were actually among those displaced after the disaster
destroyed their homes. Over 1.7
million are reported to be homeless.
· Tsunami-related deaths were recorded in
Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Myanmar, Maldives, Bangladesh,
Somalia, Tanzania and Kenya. The
loss of life is particularly severe in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand. Some 166,000 dead and missing are from
Indonesia. The dead and missing
toll in Sri Lanka climbed to nearly 39,000. In India, at least 10,672 died in Tamil Nadu State and the
Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The
death toll on Thailand’s west coast climbed to around 5,400, including some 1,953
foreigners from at least 36 countries.
More than 400 combined deaths have been reported in the other countries.
· The world’s largest reinsurer, Munich Re, initially estimated
the total cost of the disaster will exceed US$13.6 billion. In February, UN Assistant Secretary
General Hafiz Pasha said rebuilding the affected areas would cost some US$10-12
billion dollars over the next three to five years. (Feb-16, AFP) Former US Presidents Bill Clinton and
George Bush senior visited some tsunami-affected countries in February and said
at the end of their tour, that some US$11.5 billion was needed for
reconstruction. In the four
worst-affected countries, namely Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand, the
economic impact is expected to be manageable. The GDP growth for India is expected to be unaffected. The 2005 projected GDP growth rate now
stands at 5.4% for Indonesia; 4.2% for Sri Lanka; and 4.3% for Thailand.
· Researchers in a conference sponsored by US-based
academic institutions (including the East-West Center) on June 3-4 in Bangkok,
Thailand, have found that significant human rights problems still persist in
tsunami-affected areas. Researchers found that vulnerable groups, including
women, children and migrants are suffering from violence in conflict-affected
areas, exploitation and corruption that has blocked aid in Indonesia, Thailand,
Sri Lanka and India. (June-6, East West Center)
· A UN-sponsored tsunami warning
system for the Indian Ocean region is scheduled to be launched during a meeting
of the Assembly of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) on June
21-30 in the French capital Paris.
A permanent warning system currently under development is expected to be
fully operational by July 2006.
(Jun-14, PTI)
·
Coordination:
The UN announced an agreement with Price Waterhouse Coopers for 8,000
hours of pro bono work to monitor disbursement of the US$977 million tsunami
relief fund. (Mar-14, UN)
· Logistics: UNJLC has a detailed
list of civilian/commercial transportation assets available on its website www.unjlc.org (Feb-3, UNJLC)
· Food: FAO says overall food availability in
the region is adequate to cover needs.
WFP says it is providing food to more than 1.9 million people. (Apr-26, Indonesia Relief) FAO reports that as of February 9, funds approved for FAO
total US$31.1 million. Germany, Norway and the UK have made commitments to
FAO’s newly established Special Fund for Emergency and Rehabilitation
Activities (SFERA). FAO will be focused on the agriculture and fisheries
sectors in tsunami-affected areas of the region. (June-6, FAO)
· Health/Medical:
WHO estimates 500,000 people were injured. There were scattered reports of diarrhea, malaria, dengue,
measles, pneumonia, tetanus and skin infections, but no outbreaks.
o The WHO said it and other humanitarian
organizations must change the way they respond to natural disasters. A
future agenda would focus more on health and psychological trauma, cut down on
duplication of tasks and promote greater civilian-military coordination.
Reuters reports that a controversial recommendation by the WHO was that the UN
would create a rapid assessment of what was required and then requisition
military support agreed upon in advance. Officials said that they set a
six-month deadline for reform.
· Security:
Reports of
continued violence in Sri Lanka’s east; Sporadic clashes between TNI and GAM in
Aceh also reported.
·
Shelter: On March 8 Aceh Governor Azwar Abubakar
said that the GoI will stop building shelters in Aceh and instead focus on
making sure existing ones have proper sanitation and clean water.
·
Political-Military: No new inforamtion
· International Assistance:
At least US$9 billion has been raised for affected countries thus
far. (May-20, Reuters).
· New World Bank President Paul
Wolfowitz on Friday (June 3) urged international community to redouble its
efforts to deliver reconstruction aid to hundreds of thousands of tsunami victims in need. (JUN-3, Reuters)
· UN agencies, at a meeting organized by the
UN Development Program (UNDP), said Monday (May 25) that countries hit by the
disaster will take at least 5 to 10 years to recover with the help of
international aid. Experts said
that efforts are needed to tackle problems with conflict, poverty, and land
disputes that existed before the disaster. (May-23, AFP)
· The US Business Roundtable, an association
of some 160 CEOs, says that it has contributed some US$200 million in funding,
services and materials to tsunami relief, part of over US$450 million donated
for reconstruction. (May 14,
Indonesia-Relief.org)
· Former US President Bill Clinton, the UN
special envoy to head UN operations for recovery and reconstruction, will make
his second visit to Asia to ensure that the world’s attention is focused on
tsunami recovery efforts. Clinton
will visit India, Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Indonesia. (May-24, AP)
· Jan Egeland, the UN Under-Secretary
General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, said on
April 6 that the UN was raising its initial appeal of US$970 million to US$1.08
billion. (Apr-6, Reuters)
· The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
said that estimates from India, Indonesia, Maldives, Myanmar, Somalia, Sri Lanka,
and Thailand put the combined costs of the fisheries sector alone at some
US$520 million. FAO reports that
it continues to provide direct assistance to farmers and fishermen. (May-19, FAO)
· The head of UNESCO’s Intergovernmental
Oceanographic Commission says that an interim tsunami warning system for the
Indian Ocean should be in place by October, mainly through the upgrading of the
existing network of tide gauges.
(May-19, Reuters)
· A study by Reuters AlertNet says that aid
allocation figures show just 58 percent of the US$5.3 billion promised by the
top 10 donor governments and multilateral organizations has been disbursed,
committed or budgeted. That figure
leaves some US$2.2 billion in pledges not earmarked and which donors will
struggle to include in planning as reconstruction begins, the study says. (May-18, Reuters)
· According to Visa International, travel
and tourism spending is experiencing a new slump despite an initial recovery in
March. The study shows that
spending by cardholders fell in April and May in Phuket, Thailand, Sri Lanka
and the Maldives compared to last year.
Travel experts at a recent World Tourism Organization (WTO) conference
in Bali also concluded that the recent spending slump corresponded with a drop
in media coverage and interest in tsunami-affected areas. “We found that US$3 billion is likely
to be lost from the tourism industry in the region—but that is turning
out to be a conservative estimate,” James Murray, Visa’s executive
vice-president for Southeast Asia told the conference. (May-25, CNN)
·
Interpol head Ronald Noble
said that waning government support and resources could delay the
identification of thousands of victims indefinitely. Diminishing funds and a shortage of Disaster Victim
Identification experts were contributing to the delay. (May-21, Reuters)
·
International
Development & Relief Organizations:
§
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies (IFRC) on May 9 launched a US$1.2 billion million 5-year plan to help
10 countries to rebuild. (May-24, Reuters)
Indonesia

Organization
Overview
…………………………………………………………page 6
Sectors……………………………………………………………page
8
Overview: According to the National Disaster Relief
Coordinating Board, the confirmed death toll rose by 213 to 128,790. (May-3,
AP) The number of missing remains
at 37,063. (Apr-18, AFP)
The Indonesian government (GoI) earlier in
April revised its estimate for the number of people missing from 93,458 to
37,063, an approximate 60 percent cut, because of better data collection. The
change in the missing reflects the identification of people who were listed as
missing but were actually among those displaced after the disaster destroyed
their homes. According to the ADB, 44% of people in Aceh lost their
livelihoods, while number of homeless is estimated at 800,000. The Indonesian
government estimates reconstruction will cost US$4.5 billion over the next 3
years. Donors are reported to have pledged US$1.7 billion for this year.
(June-7, Muslim Aid)
Prior to
the scheduled fifth round of peace talks between the Indonesian government and
the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM) in July, the EU will send an assessment
team to evaluate any future role it will have in monitoring a peace deal
between the parties. This move comes after several representatives from the
European Commission and the EU Council of Ministers attended the last round of
talks held in May in Helsinki. During those talks, the representatives were
presented with plans from both sides to improve security in Aceh and to
enforce a security agreement with the assistance of EU peacekeepers. The
assessment team from the EU is scheduled to depart on a week-long visit on June
24 and will be led by Pieter Fieth, a senior advisor to EU foreign policy chief
Javier Solana, who has a background in truce enforcement in the Balkans. During
the visit, the team will assess the situation in Aceh and meet with Indonesian
authorities in Jakarta. (Jun-14,
Reuters)
The Indonesian government on May 11 said that foreign aid
workers can extend their visas for another month. Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, head of the government’s rebuilding
agency for Aceh says that the extension would allow his agency to assess the
work of the aid organizations.
(May-11, AP) The government has required foreign aid groups to give
detailed reports of their activities so the government could decide whether the
visas will be extended. Some
observers say some nationalist politicians and the military are suspicious of
foreign groups and may fear the presence of aid groups might increase
international sympathy for the GAM rebels in Aceh. The Indonesian
government also said on May 2 that foreign aid groups that want to continue
working in Aceh province will have to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
that they will not “interfere in the country’s domestic affairs” or support the
separatist movement.
Indonesian President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono has appointed members to an agency which will oversee the
reconstruction of Aceh province, called the Rehabilitation and Reconstruction
Agency (BRR-Badan Rehabilitasi dan Rekonstruksi) for Aceh and Nias. The
agency will be headed by former mines and energy minister Kuntoro
Mangkusubroto, who will manage the some US$4.84 billion fund for reconstructing
Aceh and Nias. (May-9, Reuters, BBC)
BRR head Kuntoro says that
after meeting with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, around US$1.2 billion in
foreign aid is ready to be spent on reconstruction projects in Aceh. Indonesian
House of Representatives on June 4 approved 8.2 trillion rupiah (US$863
million) for fiscal year 2005 for rehabilitation and reconstruction of Aceh and
Nias (Jun-12, GOI). Reuters reported that the GoI has set aside some US$635
million for rebuilding. Kuntoro
says that he does not expect those funds to be made available until
September. (May-19, Reuters). On
June 9, BRR approved 172 of the 187 projects it reviewed valued at US$586
million. (Jun-12, GOI)
Indonesian Supreme Court
allocates US$6.6 million (IDR 63 billion) to renovate and rebuild courts in
Aceh and Nias. (Jun-15, JP)
GOI put the December tsunami/earthquake losses at US$4.5
billion. The Consultative Group on
Indonesia, made up of 30 international lenders, pledged US$1.7 billion in
tsunami aid for 2005, consisting of US$1.2 billion in grants and US$500 million
in soft loans. The aid is in
addition to US$3.4 billion donors pledged that will mostly go towards reducing
the national deficit. State Minister for Development
Planning, Sri Mulyani Indrawati, said March 14 that the GoI will accept the
offer of a debt moratorium from the Paris Club. The total debt on which repayment will be delayed is US$2.6
billion. (Mar-14, Tempo
Interactive) Indonesia has some US$48 billion in foreign debt to donor
countries under the Paris Club. (Mar-14, Xinhua)
Indonesia to
receive US$400 million of a total of US$857 million aid package pledged by the
United States for tsunami-affected countries. (May-26, Reuters)
The Asian
Development Bank (ADB) on April 20 said that it plans to lend some US$519
million to Indonesia in 2005.
(Apr-20, ADB)
The World Bank
reported May 10 that at the inaugural meeting of the Steering Committee of the
Multi-Donor Trust Fund for Aceh and North Sumatra, some US$250 million in grant
financing was approved for Aceh and Nias.
(May-10, World Bank)
IOM says
an estimated 4,500 people are now directly involved in the manufacturing,
transport and construction of IOM’s transitional housing units in Aceh. (Jun-14, IOM)
Indonesia to
unveil a national tsunami warning system in August as part of a regional
network aimed at preventing a repeat of the destruction caused by the tsunami
on December 26, 2004. (Jun-1, JP)
Banda Aceh vicinity: City
returning to some semblance of normalcy.
UNJLC reports that there are somewhere between 150-200 NGOs in Banda
Aceh. (Feb-23, UNJLC)
West Coast of Aceh
Province/Western Islands: The Indonesian government reported
April 8 that the country would need some US$326.4 million (Rp 3.1 trillion) to
rebuild areas damaged by the March 28 8.7-magnitude earthquake. The money
is needed to rebuild damaged roads, bridges, and buildings that are mainly
on the island of Nias. (Mar-10, Jakarta Post) The
west coast of Aceh had a population of about one million in its six regencies,
with about 500,000 in the heavily damaged northern three and 500,000 in the
southern three.
|
Sector Status |
|
Affected Population
|
Aceh province had an estimated population of 4.1 million before
the disaster; 575,000 people were in the provincial capital, Banda Aceh and
surrounding Aceh Besar Regency. AFP
reports more than 595,000 displaced (May-13, AFP). |
|
Coordination |
UN OCHA reiterated the need for all UN agencies, IGOs,
NGOs to coordinate their respective reconstruction plans closely with the
Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Agency (BRR) representative in Nias, as
well as local and regional authorities.
(JUN-7, UNJLC) Welfare Minister Alwi Shihab coordinating GOI response. The GoI has collaborated with NGOs and donors to initiate the
construction of e-Aceh, “a unitary information sharing portal on the
rehabilitation and reconstruction of Aceh and Nias,” in response to the need
for transparency and coordination of reconstruction. |
|
Logistics |
Latest UNJLC land route maps
of the West Coast are available on the UNJLC website (www.unjlc.org) UNJLC-Medan is currently
gathering data for production of a Bulog (National Logistics Company)
warehouse map for the island of Sumatra. Bulog chief says, the first of its kind, map would
be very invaluable. (JUN-7,
UNJLC)p |
|
Food |
To date, some 13,750
beneficiaries on Nias island have received relief materials from the Red
Cross, including food, water and NFIs. (June-3, IFRC) World Vision has begun food
distributions in Aceh Barat province for two months, after completing
distributions in Banda Aceh and Aceh Besar. On Nias island, food has been
distributed to 17,390 people. (June-3, World Vision) FAO says rice production for
Aceh for the 2005/2006 marketing year shows a surplus of some 200,000 metric
tons. However, many farmers are
estimated to have lost two 2005 consecutive seasons of paddy production. In the fisheries sector, 2005 fish
output is estimated to decline 50 percent for marine fishing and 41 percent
for brackish water culture.
(May-5, FAO) |