Author/Authors :
Lori Dengler، نويسنده , , Jane Preuss ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The July 17, 1998 tsunami killed over 2,100 people, injured at least 800 severely enough to
require hospitalization, permanently displaced over 10,000 and disrupted the social and economic
framework of the coastal communities of eastern Saundaun Province, Papua New Guinea. Initial response
to the disaster was delayed 16 hours because of the failure to communicate the magnitude of the impact
outside the affected area. Once the scope of the disaster was known, international assistance was rapid and
substantial. Medical teams, supplies, air transport and mobile field hospitals were provided to assist
national medical personnel and facilities. Seven care centers were established for the displaced survivors.
Nineteen countries and 17 NGOs (Non-Governmental Organizations) donated money, relief and
rebuilding supplies valued at over 6 million US$ in addition to substantial contributions from national
recovery funds and the Catholic Diocese. The three Malol villages, two Arop, four Sissano and the
Warupu village were permanently abandoned and new villages established inland. Closure of the lagoon
and restriction of coastal fishing impacted adjacent villages as well as tsunami survivors. By the second
anniversary of the tsunami construction of schools, water and sanitation systems and some roads had been
completed. Survivors were provided tools and building supplies to construct new homes, canoes and fishing
equipment. Relief and recovery efforts were complicated by coordination difficulties among the many
responding agencies and organizations, the disruption of daily routines for both survivors and villages
hosting the care centers, and the intrusion of outside aid workers in a region that had been isolated before
the disaster. Adaptation to the new village sites has been difficult due to their inland locations that are
hotter, more insect-infested and have water and sanitation difficulties. The high number of casualties from
the tsunami was the result of several factors:
Population concentrated in the area of maximum tsunami impact.
Date and time of occurrence.
Siting of villages on vulnerable sand spits.
Failure of residents to self-evacuate after feeling the earthquake.
Substantial delay in mobilizing response.
However, further losses were likely reduced because of the rapid deployment of air transport and medical
teams, and massive international relief support. The tsunami has affected long-term tsunami mitigation in
the Sissano region through the relocation of villages, heightened awareness and education programs. It has
also had a significant effect on mitigation in other countries by illuminating the potential dangers of
landslide-generated tsunamis and in media coverage of tsunami hazards.
Keywords :
Impacts , response , relief , recovery , mitigation.