Clean up drive on the anniversary of Ondoy: “Community effort is key to
disaster risk reduction” - Australian Ambassador Bill Tweddell
On the third anniversary of Typhoon Ondoy, some 200 volunteers
converged last September 25 in Barangay Pinagbuhatan, Pasig City ,
to participate in Clean Up the World (CUW) 2012.
Volunteers from Australian organizations and the Australian Embassy,
led by Ambassador Bill Tweddell, partnered with the Metro Manila Development
Authority (MMDA), led by General Manager Corazon Jimenez, and the local
government and residents of Pasig, led by City Mayor Robert Eusebio and
Barangay Pinagbuhatan Chairman Monica Asilo.
They were supplemented by volunteers from the Armed Forces of the
Pinagbuhatan, one of the 17 priority communities under the MMDA’s
“Barangay Power 2012” clean-up initiative, is among the communities identified
as most vulnerable to flooding and other climate impacts that are exacerbated
by developmental challenges, such as environmental and waste management. It was severely affected by flooding brought
by Typhoon Ondoy in 2009 and recent torrential rains, such as in August and
September this year, continue to leave the community almost constantly
inundated.
In 2009, Australia
was among the first to respond to the Ondoy relief effort with PHP484Million in
assistance. Last month, as intense
monsoon rains compounded by habagat winds pounded Luzon , Australia
was once again among the first to offer assistance, with PHP88Million in food
and emergency supplies delivered through the Philippine Red Cross and the
United Nations World Food Programme.
“In the year since Ondoy struck, Australia has expanded its
assistance to the Philippines Government and other partners to ensure that the
country is better prepared to manage and respond to future disasters and
emergencies, and that disaster risk reduction initiatives will be effective in
saving lives and property. While we cannot stop typhoons or floods from hitting
Metro Manila, communities can be better prepared and build up their resilience.
The key to disaster risk reduction is, of course, community effort and
empowerment,” said Ambassador Tweddell.
“Our support to Clean Up the World complements what we aim to do
through AusAID’s BRACE program – to support Filipinos to take action in their
local communities to protect and preserve their environment to help reduce
vulnerabilities to natural disasters,” Ambassador Tweddell added.
MMDA will be key partner in lessening the vulnerability of Metro Manila
especially in promoting linkages between the BRACE pilot city, Taguig, and
other local government units, including Pasig City .
Australian Embassies around the world annually organize volunteer
activities in support of Clean Up the World, an environmental campaign that
inspires and empowers an estimated 35 million people from 130 countries to
clean up, fix and conserve their environment through community-based
activities. Initiated by prominent
Australian yachtsman and builder Ian Kiernan in 1993, CUW has since grown to
become a successful worldwide campaign supported by the United Nations
Environment Programme and by the Australian Government.
“The diversity of participation in this clean-up activity demonstrates
that success in disaster risk reduction and the full development of Metro
Manila can be achieved through concerted, organized positive efforts that are
grown into habits. Government, civil
society and industry can contribute a lot.
But also, the community itself has to be at the centre of the action and
take ownership,” said MMDA GM Jimenez.
“The support of Australia ,
in this case, shows that there are many levels of community: Pasig
is a community, Metro Manila is a community, Australia
and the Philippines
are close neighbours in the Asia Pacific community. We can succeed -- see our community grow and
prosper, and our world become more sustainable -- if only we work together,”
said Mayor Eusebio.
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Media Enquiries:
Australian Embassy Public Affairs | Fax (02) 757-8323 | Public-Affairs-MNLA@dfat.gov.au |
www.philippines.embassy.gov.au