ECOWAS, NEMA collaborate on disaster risk management//Nice Decision
ECOWAS, NEMA collaborate
on disaster risk management
The Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) has called for the strengthening of the capacity of
disaster risk management agencies at local, states and national levels as well
as other stakeholders in disaster response. Dr Siga Jagne, ECOWAS Commissioner
for Social Affairs and Gender, made the call at a three-day capacity building
workshop organised for National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) staff and
other stakeholders.
The workshop, which began on Tuesday
in Abuja, was organised by NEMA in collaboration with ECOWAS commission and the
World Bank. The workshop is tagged: “Integrating Climate Change and COVID-19
Vulnerability Assessment and Adaptation Planning for Disaster Risk Management
in Nigeria.” Jagne said that the challenges posed by the climate change and
COVID-19 had significantly undermined development and sustainability in the
West African sub region. She said that the ECOWAS commission was committed to
developing and implementing programmes that would strengthen disaster risk
reduction coordination, planning and policy advisory. “It is, therefore,
necessary that for the implementation and adaptation of actions, the capacity
of disaster risk management agencies at the local, states and national levels
and other stakeholders be strengthened. “Hence, there is a need to build
capacity on the understanding of issues concerning COVID-19 and climate change
awareness or relevance. “Also on vulnerability assessment and adaptation
planning as well as COVID-19 recovery need assessment for disaster risk
reduction in Nigeria,” he said. According to him, Nigeria, in particular, is
one of the countries in the sub-region seriously affected by natural disasters,
epidemics and human-induced calamities. “Nigeria experiences
hydrometeorological events such as floods, windstorms, drought, coastal
erosions, gully erosions amongst others. “A combination of these events has led
to huge economic losses and unavoidably deaths,” she said. Speaking, Retired
Air Vice Marshal Muhammadu Muhammed, Director-General, NEMA, said that climate
change had added to the problems of environmental degradation and rapid
unplanned urban growth. He said that the situation had further reduced
communities’ abilities to cope with existing levels of weather-related hazards,
as increased drought in some regions would lead to land degradation, reduced
crop yield among others. The director-general said that it was important for
disaster managers to evolve from the traditional ways of handling disasters and
quickly adopt new ways to reduce hazards. “The impacts of climate change and
COVID-19 cut across all known boundaries, spatial or geographical, economic,
political technological or social and cultural.
“Developed and developing nations
are not immune to these adverse effects. “The risk and dynamics of COVID-19
pandemic and climate change vulnerability have given us the warning that we
have to quickly adapt to the new situation or we suffer the devastating
consequences,” he said. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the event
had representatives from the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster
Management and Social Development, NEMA, the European Union, World Bank, ECOWAS
and other stakeholders. (NAN)
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