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| Regional
Disaster Response Teams (RDRT) or Regional Intervention Teams
(RIT)
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Regional Disaster Response Teams (RDDT) are a cost-effective
regional disaster response support system that is entirely
staffed by members of National Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies. The aim of RDRTs is to actively promote building
of regional capacities in disaster management.
An RDRT team is composed
of National Red Cross or Red Crescent Society volunteers or
staff, usually members of their own national response teams,
trained to work as a team and bring assistance to National
Societies in neighbouring countries. They are made up of a
core group of people with cross-sectoral expertise, such as
health, logistics, water and sanitation, as well as generalist
relief workers. Most are vastly experienced at providing disaster
response in their own countries as well as regionally.
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| How
does it works?
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Within defined geographical regions,
members of National Red Cross or Red Crescent Societies are
trained together as a team to be deployed within 24 or 48
hours to support neighbouring National Societies responding
to a disaster. These regions can be extremely large, such
as the Central American and Caribbean, or limited to a few
countries which often share the same language and culture.
The Regional Disaster Response Team initiative started in
1998 with the aim of effectively utilizing existing capacities
of National Societies within each region.
The training curriculum is
standardized and is designed so that regional teams are both
able to support national disaster response teams and work
alongside international teams where necessary. The training
is organized by the International Federation’s regional
delegations, which keeps a database of trained members, and
alerts and deploys them on request of a National Society.
Pre-prepared field equipment, including computers and telecommunications,
is kept at the delegations and deployed with the team.
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| Deployments
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In recent years, RDRTs have been
deployed in most regions on a wide variety of high profile
emergencies such as the South Asian Tsunami in 2004, the Sahel
operation and during the South Asia Earthquake in 2005. Equally
RDRTs have been deployed for less visible emergencies such
as widespread flooding in Romania (2005-06) and Cholera outbreaks
in Angola (June 2006.) The International Federation has deployed
RDRT teams alongside international Field Assessment and Coordination
Teams (FACT) in major disaster response operations, and to
carry out assessments in the case of slow onset disasters,
such as regional level drought.
In 2005 and 2006, 181 RDRT
members were deployed during 18 different missions.
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Find
out more |
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Documents available:
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