Latest update March 21st, 2025 7:03 AM
Feb 01, 2019 News
Disaster Risk Management and Response rests not only with central government, but rather, it requires a concerted effort from every member of society. This was the assertion of Minister of State, Joseph Harmon, who holds the responsibility for Civil Defence.
His remarks were vocalised yesterday as he delivered the feature address at the opening of the first Annual Regional Disaster Risk Management [RDRM] Conference for Regional Chairmen and Regional Executive Officers from the 10 Administrative Regions, which was held Cara Lodge, Quamina Street, Georgetown.
The Minister said Regional Democratic Councils [RDCs] are a very important layer in the governance system of the country and particularly in disaster risk management and response, since it is the first responder to the needs of the citizens in their respective regions.
“It is to you that the people of the region look for first response to tragedies and disasters and development, and it is to you that they will look for answers. I believe that Guyana has moved away from the system where everything resides within central Government. I believe that we have changed that paradigm, which says that unless the Minister or central government is there then nothing can happen,” he said.
He added, “We have restored the local Government system and the RDCs to manage their regions and neighbourhoods. We can’t take disaster risk preparedness as something that we don’t have to deal with. Disasters present a reality for us in all of the regions.”
The Minister noted that Guyana has been experiencing the effects of climate change since the massive floods of 2005, which left many communities across the country inundated.
Since then, Guyana has experienced several disastrous situations as a result of climate change and global warming. These disasters, he said, severely affected the livelihoods of many villages and the overall economic and infrastructural landscape of the respective regions.
Disaster risk management and response planning must therefore become a concern of every stakeholder.
“We have had and will continue to have these situations because of the low coastal plain on which we live. [The] majority of our population and what we produce is located here, and so the threats of rising sea levels will continue to be something to which we have to pay attention,” the Minister underscored.
As he pointed to the fact that the challenges are different in the various regions, Harmon went on to note that, “there are areas in which our biodiversity is threatened and so when we look at civil defence, we have to look at it in a holistic way. We also have the production of oil that will be taking place soon, and so the question of oil spill management becomes another issue we will have to deal with carefully. So, we have to broaden our lenses in the way we look at civil defence.”
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