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Taking the time to be quick
3 February 2004
by Marie-Françoise Borel
What is the first thing logisticians do when they arrive on site in the hours following a disaster? Run to the airport to unload planes? No. They quickly set up their base camp, laptop computers, satellite phones, check out the state of existing transportation services (airport, roads), the availability of material (trucks, forklifts) and warehousing capacity, in cooperation with local authorities and teams, and with the essential help of local translators.

In the midst of an emergency, logisticians must take the time to be methodical and organized to make sure systems run smoothly. This ensures the swift and efficient delivery of essential relief goods to their colleagues in charge of distributing them as well as the rapid deployment of emergency response units (ERU) such as water and sanitation teams and field hospitals.

In Bam, the challenges were enormous, concedes Richard North, one of the five members of a joint British-Danish Red Cross logistics ERU, which arrived just two days after the violent 26 December earthquake devastated the Iranian city, leaving more than 41,000 people dead, some 30,000 injured and 75,000 homeless.

Thankfully, the airport was functioning since the authorities had brought in a mobile air control tower to replace the one destroyed by the quake, as well as teams of air controllers. Fortunately, the runway at Bam airport was also undamaged. Had it been, the relief operation would have been severely hampered.

Bam airport normally handled about two planes a day, but national and international response was so quick that up to 20 aircraft at a time were on the tarmac, waiting to be unloaded. Adding to the stress were aircraft turning up with no advance notification.

“It was unbelievable,” says North. “Planes were zigzagging between other planes and sometimes the crews got so frustrated at having to wait hours before they could leave that they would rev up their engines, blowing away crates of goods and equipment which were on the tarmac, to clear a path.”

In the two weeks following the tremor, two thousand aircraft landed at Bam airport. “Sometimes, we were trying to clear five aircraft at the same time,” adds North.

Local teams were overwhelmed and needed support. Volunteers were many and willing, but most were not trained to unload and handle goods. “The Iranian Red Crescent were doing everything they could to help us. They were able to mobilize 10,000 volunteers,” explains North, “but as the teams rotated, we had to train the new ones all over again.”
In some cases, the cargo had been loaded in great haste, in what North qualifies as a “non-friendly” manner, and this delayed the unloading.

Only two forklifts were available, too few to efficiently service dozens of waiting cargo planes, so additional forklifts had to be brought in from the capital, Tehran. In the meantime, manual labour was used.

The trucks available on site were “tipper” trucks, usually used to unload piles of earth or gravel at construction sites and not suitable for palettes of humanitarian goods. What the logistics team needed were flatbed trucks, whose long, flat platform is ideal to pile up containers of equipment and relief items.

“We saw the Turkish Red Crescent had come to Ban with the right kind of trucks, so we ‘borrowed’ them for the first few days. You have to be creative in these circumstances,” notes North. The authorities provided free fuel in the days following the earthquake.

The airport at Kerman, the provincial capital, about three hours’ drive away, was functioning normally, but the roads between Kerman and Bam were completely blocked with cars and emergency vehicles as people either fled the area, arrived to volunteer their help or came to locate their family. So trucking goods from Kerman to Bam was not an efficient option in those initial days.

In the meantime, “Rubb Halls”, huge 2,000 square metre tent warehouses, had to be set up where tents, blankets and kitchen sets could be stored. The team was able to erect eight Rubb Halls with the help of 50 Iranian Red Crescent volunteers.

“We could not have done anything without my counterpart in the Iranian Red Crescent. If we needed trucks or volunteers or anything else, he got it. His mobile phone was ringing all the time,” notes North.

Working hours were long and tasks were varied. “We were under pressure to get things moving quickly. We were working till two in the morning and getting up at seven. And at the same time, we were giving interviews on the satellite phone!” says North.

“You just keep focused and you have no time to think. One night, working in the office tent, all of a sudden someone said ‘Hey, it’s New Year’s Eve’. So we looked up and we said, ‘That’s great’, and we continued working. That’s the most morose New Year’s Eve I ever spent,” remembers North. “You can only take pressure like that for so long, but it’s for a good cause.”
Richard North (left) and John Kalhoeg of the Danish Red Cross (right) coordinate with colleagues from the Iranian Red Crescent (p11165)

RELATED LINKS
Iran earthquake
Emergency Response Units
Logistics
More news stories
It is New Year's Day, but works goes on to erect the Rubb Halls, the large tented warehouses in which to store relief goods (p11151)

Work went on round the clock to ensure that humanitarian aid reached those in Bam who needed it (p11154)

Thanks to the coordination of the logistics ERU, Bam quickly benefited from Rubb Halls and a field hospital (p11156)

The fact that Bam airport was still able to accept aircraft, despite the destruction of its control tower, greatly helped the relief operation. In the two weeks that followed the disaster, 2,000 planes landed there (p11161)