BSS-67 PM-GUARDIAN-MANAGEMENT-DISASTER-2-DHAKA

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BSS-67

PM-GUARDIAN-MANAGEMENT-DISASTER-2-DHAKA

The jointly authored article wrote that while any death was regrettable, Bangladesh’s disaster preparedness, including a network of 55,000 first responders, meant Amphan killed fewer people compared to its intensity.

It pointed out that Bangladesh’s early-warning systems and well-rehearsed evacuation drills “saved hundreds of thousands of lives over the years”.

The article, however, said Amphan-caused damages in India and Bangladesh was the “costliest on record in the north Indian Ocean, leaving destruction estimated at $13bn (£10.4m)”.

“In Bangladesh (alone), it washed out 415km of roads, 200 bridges, tens of thousands of homes and vast tracts of farmland and fisheries. More than 150km of embankments meant to contain storm surges were damaged,” it continued.

The article, however, observed that the mankind was currently faced with “interrelated nature of the climate and health risks as the Amphan came on top of the COVOD-19 amid global expert predictions of more such cyclones or hurricanes in the coming months.

Quoting weather agencies like US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration the article noted that unusually warm water temperatures might expose the Atlantic and Caribbean regions to such catastrophes which it described as a “consequence of the climate emergency”.

“As in Bangladesh, the task of keeping people safe across the southern US and the Caribbean will be immeasurably more complicated as a result of Covid-19,” the jointly authored article read.

It said “it is not enough to deal with the immediate effects of a natural disaster; communities need to be better prepared for the next storm” while rebuilding infrastructure and livelihoods, however, “is another matter”.

The article said Bangladesh rebuilt infrastructures many times before in the wake of cyclones as one of the most vulnerable countries in the world to tropical storms while two-thirds of its land lies less than 5m above sea level making the rebuilding is a “Sisyphean task”.

“The climate crisis makes it even harder. Cyclones are becoming fiercer and more frequent. Rising ocean levels are poisoning wells and farmland,” it read.

The article added: “The pandemic and resulting deep economic crisis mean that the government must now deal with overlapping health, climate and economic emergencies all at once.”

It said across the world, Covid-19 was adding a huge strain to government finances but long-term fiscal frameworks and climate adaptation plans could give nations better tools to respond as “health, economic and climate resilience are interrelated”.

“That’s why (Bangladesh’s) Delta Plan also includes land and water management projects, and measures to make communities healthier and more resilient: for example, solar home kits that can be used to filter contaminated water to stop disease following every destructive storm,” the article said.

The article’s co-author Verkooijen previously wrote jointly an op-ed with Ban Ki-Moon for The Boston Globe entitled Climate proofing our communities calling upon US to implement a climate-resilient infrastructure plan, a campaign Bangladesh spearheads under Sheikh Hasina’s stewardship being chair of the Climate Vulnerable Forum,

One of the globes most circulated and prestigious newspapers, The Guardian, carried the article days after Prince Charles appreciated Sheikh Hasina for her strides to contain novel coronavirus in Bangladesh.

“I was most impressed to hear how you have been able to contain the spread of this pernicious disease at the early stages of its outbreak and that the number of deaths is mercifully so low,” he wrote in a letter to the premier on April 6.

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