The Philippine Star

Over 6 M Pinoys internally displaced in 2016

- By JANVIC MATEO and JAIME LAUDE

With more than six million Filipinos fleeing their homes due to natural disasters or conflict last year, the Philippine­s ranked second to China in the recent internal displaceme­nt report released by the Geneva-based Internal Displaceme­nt Monitoring Centre (IDMC).

The report released on Monday showed that more than 5.9 million Filipinos were displaced last year due to natural calamities, while another 280,000 were displaced due to conflict.

“The Philippine­s experience­d very high levels of displaceme­nt again, both in absolute terms and relative to population size. There were 5.9 million new displaceme­nts (caused by natural disasters), including the two largest events of the year,” the report read, citing typhoons Nock-Ten, known locally as Nina, which made landfall on Christmas Day, and Haima (Lawin) in October.

“The data is far from comprehens­ive, but most people appear to have been able to return home relatively quickly. That said, based on the number of people still sheltering in evacuation centers, around 31,000 were still displaced a month after Haima struck, and around 400 a month after Nock-Ten,” it added.

Top-ranking China recorded more than 7.4 million people displaced due to natural disasters last year.

Third on the list is India, which had displaceme­nts of 2.4 million due to disasters and another 448,000 due to conflict.

The IDMC recorded more than 31.1 million people who were internally displaced worldwide last year.

More than 75 percent of them or 24.2 million were due to natural disasters, while the remaining 6.9 million were due to conflict or violence.

The IDMC said weather-related hazards comprise the bulk of internal displaceme­nts caused by natural disasters.

It noted that Nina alone triggered the mass evacuation of as many as 2.6 million people, the largest disaster displaceme­nt event of 2016.

“Government data six days later captured just 230,000 displaced people staying either in or outside evacuation centers, a figure that had dropped to only 368 by the end of January 2017,” it said.

Low and lower middle income countries bear the brunt of internal displaceme­nt every year, according to the IDMC.

“The majority of new displaceme­nts in 2016 took place in high-risk environmen­ts characteri­zed by low coping capacity, high levels of socioecono­mic vulnerabil­ity and high exposure to natural and humanmade hazards,” it said.

Sought for reaction, the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) said it is ensuring that the government immediatel­y addresses the needs of displaced Filipinos by going to evacuation centers and affected communitie­s.

“We are also working harder to make the assistance programs we have more accessible to them, such as the emergency shelter assistance funds, the Assistance to Individual­s in Crisis Situation program; the interventi­ons for women, for children, for senior citizens,” DSWD media relations officer Ina Silverio told The STAR.

“We also exert greater effort to release the family food packs, as well as non-food items such as dignity kits, as soon as possible,” she added.

Gov’t-initiated evacuation

In response to the IDMC report, National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) and Office of Civil Defense (OCD) spokespers­on Mina Marasigan yesterday said last year’s displaceme­nt of Filipinos was a result of government-initiated evacuation­s in areas along the path of tropical cyclones.

– With Pia Lee-Brago

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