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No. 21 March 2012 2011 3 11 500 2 NGO NGO 3 500 4 7 1 3

3 11 9.1 4

1 6 1. 2. 3. 5

4. 5. 6. 1 5 1 2011 4 A4 1 2 6

1 IASC 13 15 1. 2. 3. Anderson, 1999 2.1 / 7

1. 4. 1 5. PTSD 8

/ 6. 1 1. i. 5.1 ii. 2 1 / iii. 3 9

PHC PFA iv. / a b / 2 I Preparing for Natural Disasters 10 Surviving Earthquakes and Tsunami The single most important thing that you can do to survive a natural disaster is to be prepared for it. Important things you can do to prepare for an earthquake/tsunami are : 1 All buildings must be able to withstand earthquakes. Laws must require people to make buildings safe. Unsafe buildings kill people. In a tsunami - prone area, if there is no high land, public buildings must be built high enough and strong enough to withstand huge tsunami. Manmade barriers such as seawalls or building roads on high earthen embankments can help, but they are not failsafe. 2 Regular disaster drills save lives. They will stop people panicking, and help people react rationally and constructively. People will know who needs help in evacuating. 3 Governments must plan escape routes and safe refuges. Poorly made roads will not be usable after an earthquake. Narrow roads will become blocked and unpassable. Traffic lights will fail. Escape routes must be planned to be passable after a destructive earthquake, not under ordinary conditions. 4 Learn from the past. Look for traces of past tsunami in the landscape around you. Listen to the legends and stories of local people about past tsunami and earthquakes. 5 Relief centres must have emergency supplies of food, water, blankets, communication equipment, and emergency electrical generators, adequate for the area they serve. Babies, small children, and elderly people have special needs.

6 Having a personal stock of emergency supplies and an emergency escape kit can help you and others survive. Keep copies of important personal records ID, bank accounts, etc. in your escape kit. II Escaping and Evacuating 1 Early warning systems save lives, but only if people listen to them. After a major earthquake, prepare to evacuate from a tsunami ; watch the sea and river levels. If you see anything unusual, such as a sudden drop in water levels, or water coming up through the soil, evacuate immediately. 2 Think calmly and judge for yourself. In a real disaster, nothing goes according to plan. Even if other people are not evacuating, it does not mean that it is safe. 3 Do not forget your escape kit. 4 It might be faster to evacuate by bicycle than by car. III Surviving After the Disaster 1 Strong communities survive disasters better. Do not depend on outside help ; do what you can by yourself, with other survivors. Survivors need their self - respect. 2 Survivors are not all the same. Elderly people need peace. Little children need a space where they can play quietly. Involve older children in the support effort 3 The most important thing that people need after a disaster is to be able to feel safe. This will help to prevent people from becoming traumatised. Shelter, food, and water are important psychologically as well. 4 Social network media are more dependable than regular telephones. Students of the Department of Intercultural Studies, Miyagi Gakuin Women s University, Japan I 1 2 11

3 4 5 6 ID II 1 2 3 4 III 1 2 3 PTSD 4 12

1 IASC http://www.mofa.go.jp/mofaj/gaiko/jindo/jindoushien2 2y.html 1. FAO OCHA UNDP UNFPA UN - HABITAT UNHCR UNICEF WFP WHO ICRC ICVA International Council of Voluntary Agencies IFRC Inter Action IOM OHCHR World Bank 2. IASC IASC URL http://www.humanitari aninfo.org/iasc/ 13