EU, ASEAN joining forces against climate disasters
Both Indonesia and Europe know tragically well the impact of natural disasters. Both of our regions are prone to earthquakes, floods, and the consequences of climate change. And increasingly so.
Early in September, I was shocked by reports of devastation caused by Typhoon Yagi across Southeast Asia. One of the strongest cyclones in the region in decades, Yagi left a deadly trail of destruction across Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Cambodia. The European Union (EU), as a leading global humanitarian donor, stepped in to help. We released over 2 million euros ($2.18 million) in emergency funding to support the victims.
While people in Southeast Asia were coping with the impact of Yagi, more than 8,000 kilometers away, Storm Boris was lashing central and eastern Europe. Nearly a dozen European countries were affected by floods.
Such extreme weather events that used to appear once in a lifetime are now happening almost annually. The global reality of climate breakdown spares no one. And make no mistake: these tragedies are not anomalies. They are fast becoming the norm for our shared future on this planet.
This is why disaster preparedness is a constant strand of the EU’s humanitarian funding across the world. In the Association of Southeast Asian countries, the EU has been supporting disaster preparedness efforts for nearly 20 years. Since 2020, we have invested nearly 87 million euros of EU funds for this purpose in Asia.
The EU also responds regularly to emergencies in the region, immediately once they occur, both through humanitarian aid and civil protection tools. Such was the case 20 years ago, when a tsunami of unprecedented scale wreaked havoc across Southeast Asia, with northern Aceh bearing the brunt of the disaster. European solidarity quickly stepped in to help.
The EU, together with several of its members, was the largest contributor to the fund set up in the aftermath of the tragedy to support the rehabilitation and reconstruction of affected communities.
Thanks to this initiative, more than 20,000 homes were rebuilt, together with 670 schools, and hundreds of kilometers of roads and irrigation channels, among other key infrastructure. It represented a landmark in the partnership between the EU and Indonesia.
With the memory of that tragic moment still present in our minds, the EU remains committed to supporting Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ (ASEAN) countries to face the existing humanitarian crisis nowadays. For this purpose, I am happy to announce a new 21.5 million euros aid package to be used in Bangladesh, Myanmar, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
I am proud to be in Jakarta to endorse the new agreement with ASEAN’s Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on Disaster Management (AHA).
This new agreement reached between the EU and the AHA center will allow us to strengthen our respective capacities to respond to disasters and to exchange expertise and good practices.
As ASEAN countries have long years of experience to share in disaster response, I am convinced this will provide a great opportunity to learn from each other. —Janez Lenarčič, The Jakarta Post/Asia News Network
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The writer is EU commissioner for crisis management. He is visiting Indonesia on Oct. 15-17.
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The Philippine Daily Inquirer is a member of the Asia News Network, an alliance of 22 media titles in the region
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