The Secretary-General's Message on the International Day for Disaster Reduction
8 October
2008. New-York – Kyiv -The observance of the International
Day for Disaster Reduction for 2008 takes place in a year that has seen more
than its fair share of natural calamities, and falls on the third anniversary
of the earthquake in South Asia. With the casualties of that disaster and of
this year’s Wenchuan Earthquake and Cyclone Nargis still fresh in our minds, it
is all the more appropriate to recall the lessons we have learned.
Nearly
four years ago, Governments adopted the Hyogo Framework for Action, which aims to
reduce our collective vulnerability to natural hazards. But we must do more to turn commitments on
paper into deeds that can keep the next major disaster from taking so many
lives and destroying so many livelihoods. Now more than ever, when we are trying to
accelerate national and international efforts to achieve the Millennium Development
Goals, disaster risk reduction needs to be acknowledged and incorporated as a
key plank of that work.The threats
posed by climate change – including increasing droughts, floods and storms –
increases the urgency further still, particularly in the world’s poorest, most
vulnerable communities.
The
World Disaster Reduction Campaign for 2008-2009 focuses on making “Hospitals
Safe from Disasters”. When health
facilities are damaged, so, too, is our ability to improve maternal and child
health and to provide other essential health services. But in resilient
communities, health systems are better able to withstand natural hazards. We need to mobilize society at every level to reduce
risk and protect health facilities so that they can save lives.
I
urge all partners – Governments, civil society, international financial
institutions and the private sector -- to step up implementation of the Hyogo
Framework. Disaster risk reduction is
everybody’s business.Only by investing
in tangible risk reduction measures can we reduce vulnerability and protect
development. On this International Day,
let us renew our dedication to this vital task.