Quantcast
Last updated on February 12, 2012 at 11:46 EST

Tsunami areas must ‘build back better’ -Clinton

July 14, 2005

By Irwin Arieff

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – The unprecedented outpouring of
aid for the Indian Ocean tsunami must be used to “build back
better” and not simply restore what was there before, former
U.S. President Bill Clinton said on Thursday.

Nearly seven months after the disaster, the international
community was entering the most challenging phase of the relief
effort, with many survivors still living in difficult
circumstances and increasingly frustrated with the slow pace of
help, said Clinton, a U.N. special envoy for tsunami recovery,

“We have at least 230,000 reminders from December 26th as
to why we need to make sure this recovery process accomplishes
more than just restoring what was there before,” Clinton told a
U.N. conference seeking to draw lessons from the relief effort
to date.

“Can we honestly say that we are on track to building back
better?” he asked.

More than 240,000 people were killed in last December’s
earthquake and tsunami, with another 50,000 still missing and
presumed dead, according to the latest U.N. figures.

The damage has been estimated at $94 billion, and a
stunning 158 million people were driven from their homes or
otherwise affected by the disaster, Belgian Ambassador Johan
Verbeke said as he opened the session.

To keep the recovery on track, affected governments,
international agencies and private relief groups had to quickly
resolve any remaining policy disagreements, agree on programs
and closely coordinate their efforts, Clinton said.

FRUSTRATING TIMES AHEAD

“It will be a complex and frustrating time. There is
impatience already, and there is exhaustion. Recovery in each
country will need a customized response and will move at
different speeds,” he said.

Clinton also urged governments to assess risks from natural
disasters before they occur and take preventive measures.

In the tsunami-hit areas, it was “clear the human toll
would have been lower if there had been adequate early warning
and (if) other prevention strategies had been in place,” he
said.

Ann Veneman, head of the U.N. Children’s Fund UNICEF, said
the rapid initial global response had helped avert widespread
death in the period following the tsunami, when health and
sanitary systems broke down.

“The bottom line is that children did not die from
preventable diseases linked to the crisis, and nearly all
children were back in school within two months of the tsunami,”
she said.

To “build back better,” her agency was now helping improve
health care and water facilities and build 325 new schools that
would be better equipped than the ones destroyed by the
tsunami, she said.


Source: