Showing posts with label United Nations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Nations. Show all posts

Thursday, June 5, 2014

On the Tacloban Declaration: A simple message with hint / clue for ‪#‎ASEM‬ Manila


The ‪#‎Tacloban‬ experience of ‪#‎Haiyan‬ / ‪#‎Yolanda‬ is both challenging and fraught with danger. Within the context of a world community slowly becoming more aware of the diminishing validity of certain combines that still keep going through the very same motions of guiding and leading this planet's population into their perceived state of well being.

It cannot be overemphasized that the new normal will have to incorporate the very resources with which to nourish disaster preparedness, risk prevention and response. In the Tacloban experience, many governments opted to donate directly to a lot of towns outside of Tacloban and if possible, in an incognito manner whereas it is public knowledge in that area that more or less tens of thousands died in the Tacloban tragedy and only measly 20s or 50s or a few hundreds perished in the other places.

Months after #Yolanda, the stench of death still hang in the air, no one will be able to contest that. How many in Tacloban and in the provinces hit got their lives back really in terms of power supply, food, children being able to go back to their classrooms, people getting back to their livelihood... a terrible statistic to swallow but the reality is there, glaring and accusing.

For some, the acceptable assumption was to provide succor to those people that were supposedly left behind in the gargantuan efforts to resuscitate Tacloban. However the resulting product was the opposite of those altruistic intentions. When fires started happening in the United Nations donated tent homes, the predicament of a people who were said to be receiving the lion's share of disaster and humanitarian aid became exposed to one and all. Thousands still living in tents long after the calamity and to be honest, not only the fires but scores of other causes kept killing the survivors. It was not a blessing for some to have survived. In the throes of death post-disaster, they should have been thinking what a curse to have lived through all that bedlam and sham.

All the fanfare about construction projects getting bogged down by corruption, complaints at the highest levels by rehabilitation managers of the stiff resistance of key national leaders to pushing the disaster-hit locality towards fuller and better recovery was not just hype. These were real circumstance that were happening as if the nonchalance and cold treatment of the early days of post-#Yolanda were not enough.

That the Taclobanons have not really been truly helped, but have instead become the butt of too much aggrandizement and enrichment by some sectors, the shameless public infighting within the public sector, the frustration of many who have the real desire to be of help not out of great and grand ideas but out of new approaches and ways of dealing with old problems that have never been fully understood is the loss of the world community.

In the end, the cliches and all the damned rhetoric will apply, indeed it will not just be #Haiyan, or other much vaunted mega disasters like Japan's. But cliches and rhetoric do not help and lighten the day for the victims in Tacloban and elsewhere that there was real catastrophe and not sheer descriptions in paper and oratory.

What it cannot be helped to be preached is that with the people of the world shifting their own personal paradigms, isn't it clear enough that the leaders attending ASEM and future other events like this try at least to go with the flow?

For true leaders at heart, it is really sad to be clearly left behind, albeit still talking and writing voluminous diaries of things past and future, holding on to spoils and many other things unpleasant. That's the danger.

Shifting gears and getting hands really, really dirty might get the rehabilitation and resurging development in Tacloban clearly going in more truer terms. That is the real challenge and heaven not forbid, it might even cleanse some soul...

Clue #1:

A Philippine scientist and a Russian counterpart argued who among them had the lowest salary and worst treatment in the world.

Clue #2 - 400:

Please find out for yourself, it might just be right beside you.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon

Open Letter to the United Nations


November 21, 2013

HIS EXCELLENCY
BAN KI MOON
Secretary General
The United Nations
UN Headquarters
First Avenue at 46th Street
New York, NY 10017
USA


Dearest Secretary General Ban:

Our warmest greetings!

Kindly please understand, I had seriously debated on whether to send this communication to you or not. I decided on going through with it since I believe that the result would turn out for the better. Nothing that transpired in the past has diminished nor degraded my respect and love for the UN. I have no intention in demeaning anyone's position or creating anything negative between myself, my group and the UN even if that can't be helped, but this has to be done, and I shall humbly embrace the consequences of my act.

After tropical cyclone Haiyan aka Yolanda, not a surprising lot of relief organizations are now helping in Tacloban, in the towns of Leyte, Samar, Cebu, Bohol, Capiz, Aklan, even parts of Mindanao. Entire states committed volumes of resources to come to the aid of the Philippines. As published in the media, the Philippine Government stated that the affected areas include nine (9) Regions in the entire archipelago that consists of seventeen (17) Regions, with three (3) Regions being small and newly created divisions that were fairly recently separated by Special Law (CAR, ARMM and Caraga). It is presumed that all of these relief organizations and representatives of their own countries are operating out of the goodness of heart and the desire to be of sincere help to the people of Tacloban City, the municipalities of Leyte, Samar, Cebu, Bohol, Capiz, Aklan, portions of Mindanao. Although some are at a loss to convince others of their intentions: "just wait... in due time we are convince you of our legitimaty."

Some of these relief organizations are part and parcel of the United Nations organization. Be that as it may, most or all of these organizations anyway, under the principle that all states are municipalities embraced by the founding charter of League of Nations that is now the United Nations, are governed under the auspices of the august body that you head. The people of Tacloban City and the rest of the areas affected by the tropical cyclone Haiyan aka Yolanda, are grateful for all of the help of the UN, the honorable member states under it and the public sector as well as private relief groups that are now helping.

Now allow us to come to the point of this letter. Nearly five (5) years ago today, after tropical cyclone Ondoy struck, we increased the level and pace of our twenty one (21) year advocacy for disaster preparedness.  At the time, we painfully discovered what we, and many of us, have known all along, that the best kind of preparedness is foreknowledge and forewarning of events that will befall upon us. In the beginning, we began simply with the goading of Philippines Department of National Defense (DND) to adopt a modernized system incorporating the Geographic Information System (GIS) into the framework of its operations. That was in 1991-1992. On record, our paper was even used by the DND to brief Malacanang (at the time, headed by the late Madame Corazon Cojuangco Aquino).

Among the other relevant actions we undertook are the following:

1. We pushed for the creation of Philippines public sector satellite information management agency

Thursday, January 17, 2013

New Schedule for Hazards Mapping and Environment Summit

We have determined to set the new date for the Hazards Mapping and Environment Summit of 2010 to December 2013.

The extreme difficulty in dealing with a repository financial institution in Kuala Lumpur was the main obstacle in pushing through with the conference, despite appeals made to someone with whom we also reposed our trust in to resolve the problem.
Money cannot be the cause of not pursuing the cause of the conference, thus we have decided to go ahead, come hell or high water. After all, when those who gave us a hard time will be up to their necks deep in flood, they might want to ask the organizing committee for the conference what will they do next?

Join us in the quest to map forthcoming large disasters like the Japan earthquake - tsunami in advance and to figure out what areas will be the safest in time of great peril from causes like solar maximas, climate change and even man-made calamities.

Please Write your Letters to:

Corporate Social Responsibility
Cyberpark Group
Email: postmaster@cyberparkgroup.com
Website: www.cyberparkgroup.com

Dateline Davao

Corporate social responsibility team from Manila visits Davao for dialogues with various institutions and entities on prospects of rehabilitation in that area.

It is determined that not only private sector-led rehabilitation and recovery efforts will succeed. The cooperation of the public sector will have great bearing on the success of the undertaking to bring back Davao back on track.

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Denmark Conference on Climate Change

Countdown to Copenhagen: 41 days 17 hours 46 minutes 51 seconds in the website of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change wherein the 15th Climate Change Conference will be held on December 7-18, 2009.

In the Philippines, the government signed into law, Republic Act 9729 called Climate Change Act of 2009 that will create an autonomous policy making body under the Office of the President --- the Climate Change Commission. It shall coordinate programs of the government and represent the country in international climate change conferences according to the article also posted in this site in full.

According to article from GMANews.TV, the signing of said law comes before the Denmark conference in December "when global leaders are expected to approve a new climate change treaty that will chart the world's carbon emissions future after the first commitment period for the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012."

Before this, from the UNFCCC website, it reads:
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon convened a high-level Summit on Climate Change, ahead of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December. The summit brought together political leaders, including 100 Heads of State and Government. This was the biggest ever gathering of political leaders to discuss climate change.
Addressing the assembled leaders, Mr. Ban said:

"Failure to reach broad agreement in Copenhagen would be morally inexcusable, economically short-sighted and politically unwise."

Related links from UNFCCC are found below.

  Summary by the Secretary-General
Summit website
Webcast of the day's events
Pre-recorded video statements of Heads of State and Government


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Addressing the assembled leaders, Mr. Ban said:
"Failure to reach broad agreement in Copenhagen would be morally inexcusable, economically short-sighted and politically unwise."