Red
Cross in Americas prepares for hurricane season
17
May 2006
The
Atlantic hurricane season will officially start on 1 June, and meteorological
experts are predicting that the Caribbean and Central America could
witness above average levels of activity. Experts forecast that the
season, which lasts until the end of November, will produce up to
14 tropical storms, with six to eight of these becoming hurricanes,
of which two to four may be classified as major hurricanes.
Red Cross preparations for the hurricane season are well under way.
Today, in St. Lucia representatives of 23 Central American and Caribbean
national Red Cross Societies, Overseas branches and other actors such
as ECHO (European Commission Humanitarian Aid Department), Spanish
Agency for International Cooperation (AECI), United Nation's office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the Carribean
disaster and emergency response agency (CDERA) will gather for a three
day meeting on disaster preparedness.
Participants will revise and update contingency and co-ordination
plans. The meeting will specifically focus on strengthening disaster
management networks in the region.
“Time and again it has been shown that disaster preparedness
pays off”, says Santiago Gil, Head of the Americas department
at the International Federation. “The Red Cross has witnessed
how preparedness can save lives on several occasions in the Americas.”
The Red Cross plays a critical role in disseminating early warning
messages and safety information at the local level by mobilizing its
unique network of volunteers and community members.
“Every hurricane season in the Americas, when terrible storms
strike, those countries that gets the information and manage to spread
the word, suffer much less,” Gil says.
“For example, in Jamaica, once meteorological information is
received electronically and analysed, Red Cross volunteers go from
street to street, using megaphones to alert people to the danger,
“ he explains. “They encourage marginalised groups or
people with special needs such as elderly and disabled to hang a white
flag to signal that they need help to evacuate”, he adds.
The International Federation has also prepared the material resources
to respond to big storms. Support from ECHO, among others, has enabled
the International Federation to run the preparedness meeting and to
purchase relief stocks ready to be deployed from Panama.
“By June, we will have the capacity to meet the needs of some
25,000 families,” says Steve McAndrew, International Federation
Pan- American Disaster Response Unit coordinator based in Panama.
“We have in stock materials such as plastic sheeting, hygiene
kits, kitchen sets, jerry cans and provision of clean water ready
to be distributed whenever it is required”, he said.
The 2005 hurricane season broke all records in the number of named
storms, their intensity and behaviour. It was considered to be the
most active ever recorded in the Atlantic, and in hurricane history.
There were a total of 27 named storms, 14 hurricanes and seven major
hurricanes last year. As a result, last year the International Federation
appealed for more than ten million CHF to meet the needs of 171,000
people in 12 of the worst affected countries including Haiti, Jamaica,
Bahamas, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, El Salvador
and Cuba.
For further information, or to set up interviews,
please contact:
In St. Lucia:
Manuel Rodriguez, Press Officer Tel: (507) 6679-4334
Allison Ali, Information Officer Tel: 1 758 721 5430
In Geneva:
Eva M. Calvo, Press Officer Tel: + 41 22 730 43 57
Duty phone Tel: + 41 79 416 38 81
The Geneva-based International Federation
promotes the humanitarian activities of 183 National Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies among vulnerable people. By coordinating international
disaster relief and encouraging development support, it seeks to prevent
and alleviate human suffering. The Federation, National Societies
and the International Committee of the Red Cross together, constitute
the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
© International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
|