Jamaica to host 2020 DRR meeeting

2018-07-11 14:23 Source:UNISDR AM

 

Over three days, the conference in this historic port city debated the four priorities of the Sendai accord – understanding disaster risk, strengthening governance, investing in disaster risk reduction and enhancing disaster preparedness.

The past year has provided many sombre reminders – including the deadly 2017 hurricanes in the Caribbean – of why the work of disaster risk reduction, action on climate change and eradicating poverty need to be closely aligned across the region.

The Regional Action Plan includes commitments to assigning responsibilities and to accelerate country-level implementation of the disaster risk reduction agenda over the next two years.

The Cartagena event was the first time the region has met since the launch in March of the Sendai Framework Monitor, which will track countries’ progress. There were also technical discussions on efforts to collate data on other Sendai targets, including on disaster mortality, numbers of persons affected, economic losses and damage to critical infrastructure.

A special session was dedicated to early warning systems and recovery based on a review presented by the World Meteorological Organization of last year’s Atlantic hurricane season.  The key findings and reflections will feed directly into the policy discussions of the up-coming Caribbean Disaster and Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) meeting at Ministerial-level.

Gender issues, and the need for greater involvement of women in disaster risk reduction work, along with the special needs of disabled people, were other key topics in Cartagena.

Alongside representatives of national and local governments, the regional platform drew hundreds of participants from the private sector, the scientific and academic community, indigenous people, women, youth, older persons and people living with disabilities.

“They came together to commit to Sendai. That is what is most gratifying,” said Mami Mizutori, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction and head of the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction.

“Inclusivity has been a very strong theme – women, the disabled – that is something that we aspire to and which we have achieved here,” she said in remarks to the final session.

Date:

25 Jun 2018

Sources:

United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction – Regional Office for the Americas (UNISDR AM)

Countries:

Colombia

Regions:

Americas

Editor:Amy