Southern Africa (September 1995)
- Issue 4 Accountability and Regulation
- 1 Échange Humanitaire No. 4 : Bulletin d’information
- 2 Feedback (September 1995)
- 3 Southern Africa: Drought Relief, Drought Rehabilitation… What about Drought Mitigation?
- 4 The Impact of Refugees on the Environment and Appropriate Responses
- 5 Women Killers in Rwanda
- 6 Women, War and Humanitarian Intervention: Resources for NGOs
- 7 European Union 1996 EU Draft Budget
- 8 Cannes Summit, June 1995
- 9 EuronAid General Assembly Adopts Code of Conduct on Food Aid and Food Security
- 10 One Year On Update on the Code of Conduct for the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and VFOs in Disaster Relief
- 11 Commonwealth Foundation Endorses New Guidelines for Good Policy and Practice for NGOs
- 12 Burundi/Zaire/Tanzania/Rwanda (September 1995)
- 13 Southern Africa (September 1995)
- 14 Mozambique (September 1995)
- 15 Somalia (September 1995)
- 16 Angola (September 1995)
- 17 Sudan (September 1995)
- 18 Liberia/Sierra Leone Region (September 1995)
- 19 Former Yugoslavia (September 1995)
- 20 Croatia (September 1995)
- 21 Bosnia (September 1995)
- 22 Serbia (September 1995)
- 23 Chechnya (September 1995)
- 24 Georgia/Abkhazia (September 1995)
- 25 Sri Lanka (September 1995)
- 26 Bangladesh (September 1995)
While the dramatic events in Yugoslavia and Rwanda have inevitably made headline news during 1994 and 1995, southern Africa has had its share of huge population movements and disaster-related suffering. It is well-known that the appalling drought of 1991/92 left more than 20 million people at severe risk. It is less well-known that in March 1994, Cyclone Nadya left one million people homeless following winds of up to 150km/h which battered Mozambiques northern coast. Only three months later, violent storms and flooding caused a further 20,000 people to lose their homes in South Africas Eastern and Western Capes. This year, flash floods have occurred in Namibia, Botswana, South Africa and Tanzania. In 1995, an estimated total of 13 million people are again at risk from recurrent drought-related problems, following hard upon years of political turmoil and armed conflict which itself caused millions of displaced and vulnerable.
This legacy of natural and complex disasters gave rise to the recent decision by the South African Research and Documentation Centre (SARDC) to set up a regional Disaster Management Information Project (DMIP). The project aims to document, categorise and consolidate disaster related materials, drawing on experience and technical advice gained from other developing regions.
More details can be obtained from:
SARDC
PO Box 5690
Harare
Zimbabwe
Tel: +263 4 737 301
Fax: +263 4 738 693
Email: SARDC@Mango.zw
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