Civil-Military Cooperation- experiences from India COMMUNITY MANAGED DISASTER RISK REDUCTION (CMDRR)...

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Civil-Military Cooperation- experiences from India

COMMUNITY MANAGED DISASTER RISK REDUCTION (CMDRR)

CARE. ACT. SHARE. LIKE CORDAID.

CORDAIDS DRR INTERVENTIONS

MARCH 2015 SENDAI

CARE. ACT. SHARE. LIKE CORDAID.

DISASTER RISK REDUCTION

Strength of Armed Forces

Strength of Armed Forces

MARCH 2015 – SENDAI

Only country which has dedicated armed force for “Disaster response” called NDRF (National Disaster Response Force)

12 raised battalions: 1249 soldiers strength in each battalion

Spread all over the country covering almost all hazard locations

Sufficient Resources- not dependent on external world, sufficient logistics of all types (including Aerial)

Pre-positioned/located in remote areas

Trained force- search and Kill (Search and Rescue) + medical

Effective institutional arrangement is at place(National- State- District)

Concept of “Civil Military Liason Conferences”- but personality driven at times

Constitutional obligation- to save people of country

CARE. ACT. SHARE. LIKE CORDAID.

Challenges

Challenges

MARCH 2015 – SENDAI

Limited engagement with Civilians, sometimes purposeful distance from public

Only “event based” dialogues with civil administration- more need based

Low engagement with Civil society/NGOs, even if there is, via administration

For armed forces, NGOs bring lot on table

Local knowledge

Connect with community

Understanding of Language

Mapping of area/Minute detailing

Trained people- teachers/volunteers/retired staff

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What is required now

Efforts need to be there for:

Continuous dialogues- Civil-Military-Private sector

Trust building- acknowledge and work on each others strengths

Institutionalization of “mechanisms” especially at “bottom” level- engagement/working mechanisms/role clarity/accountability

More “working together” during peace time

CARE. ACT. SHARE. LIKE CORDAID.

Thank you

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