Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Why is Nias Damage Less Exposed

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Why is Nias Damage Less Exposed"— Presentation transcript:

1 NIAS ISLANDS: HIDDEN DAMAGE OF A WORLD HERITAGE An Exposure to Call for Help

2 Why is Nias Damage Less Exposed

3 Main Reasons First Disaster (Tsunami) was relatively light
The killer quake was on the 28th of March, two days after Government call’s the Emergency Relief stage off The scale of the Island is too small for a National Disaster status, dwarfed by the Aceh scale Getting to Nias is very difficult

4 Lack of Funds Approved until October 2005 Approved for 2005, 2006 4% 12% The 4% international commitment is far from enough to support Nias recovery process

5 II. Nias Disasters and Damage

6 The Tsunami and Earthquake
122 dead 18 missing 2300 people were directly affected Earthquake (28 March 2005): 839 dead Over 6,279 injured Widespread fear among the people: 10,000-20,000 people have left the island 70,000 people are directly affected by the earthquake All the population are indirectly affected The livelihood of the 90% of the population were disrupted, mainly farmers and fishers (IOM, Draft 9 June 2005)

7 Devastating Effects of Earthquake

8 Overall Damages

9 Gunung Sitoli

10 Teluk Dalam

11 Nias Proposal

12 Budget Requirements and Resources
Your support and commitment are important to make this happen

13 Needs for the next 4 years
17%

14 Nias is COMPARATIVELY WORSE OFF than Aceh (in reconstruction terms)…..
Fair to expect 10 – 26% of Aceh-Nias Recovery Efforts

15 Future of Nias

16 Long-term Recovery Framework
Coordination and Integration Housing Water and Sanitation Basic Infrastructure Education Health Rural Economy Institutional Strengthening Socio-culture and Religion Fishing Economy Tourism state and societal institutions In partnership with Future Nias Society in Light of Lessons from the Tsunami and Earthquake Private Sector Area

17 Future of Nias Relying on Fisheries and Tourism

18 Remaining Gaps

19 Enormous Gaps Housing Health Schools

20 Enormous Gaps Roads Bridges and Ports Water & Sanitation

21 The Importance of Your Support

22 People of Sirombu thank Monaco (for the support on about 200 houses worth 1.4 million dollars)

23 Support of $2 million will be appreciated for
Building 10 new schools and make 4000 children return to permanent school Rehabilitation of Gunung Sitoli Hospital (Type C) 300 new houses for about 2000 people in Lolowau Subdistrict

24 $5 Million will be worth for
Rebuilding water and sanitation system of Teluk Dalam City benefitting its 50,000 population 20 km rural road reconstruction opening the isolation of 20,000 people in Lolomatua Subdistrict

25 Another benefit of $5 million
We can turn the slump area of Nou River into a livable river area

26 What $10 million can do Improvement of Gunung Sitoli Port
Revitalisation of Gunung Sitoli Central Business District

27 $10 million Can Help Build…
The ruined Gunung Sitoli City into a friendly waterfront city

28 Thanks for your support to Nias Recovery
Further Contact: William Sabandar Director, Nias Office Mobile: Ph/Fax:


Download ppt "Why is Nias Damage Less Exposed"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google