Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Draft national plan formulated to prevent deaths from drowning

- By Namini Wijedasa

A draft national plan for prevention of drowning that aims to cut deaths by five percent every year has been formulated by the Office of the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) with contributi­ons from other Government partners.

The proposals in the national plan include introducin­g - with the help of the Education Ministry - basic swimming and life saving skills as an extracurri­cular activity in the school curriculum, assigning to each national school a lifesaver trainer and eventually making it compulsory to have a lifeguard and lifesaving equipment at every swimming pool. A mobile phone applicatio­n that allows anyone to check the safety of beaches and other water bodies around the country is also being planned after a risk profile is done of all these areas.

The plan will be presented to President Maithripal­a Sirisena who recently tasked the CDS with leading and coordinati­ng Sri Lanka’s drowning prevention programme. The country is ranked 12th among 61 in most number of drowning deaths and occupies 10th position among middle-income nations.

According to police data, an average of six people died a day in 2016 (a total of 760) of drowning. In 2017, 678 people died and the number is already 413 up to June 30 this year. The majority of fatalities were men. The Western Province consistent­ly leads in the statistics followed by the Southern and North Western Provinces. Among the draft national plan’s objectives are to prevent drowning deaths, to educate the public about water safety, start lifesaver and swimmer training, identify danger areas, set up lifesaver teams, gather and analyse data for targeted action and to formulate a programme to promote the national economy through safe water activities.

Implementa­tion will be through at least 18 organisati­ons. They are the tri-forces and police; the Coast Conservati­on Department; Civil Defence Force; the Ministries of Education and Higher Education, Health, Tourism, Sports and Disaster Management; Sri Lanka Life Saving Associatio­n ( SLLSA); Department of Registrati­on of Persons; University of Peradeniya; Asia-Pacific Alliance for Disaster Management; and the Sri Lanka Aquatic Sports Union. The observers will be Victoria Lifesaving of Australia, the World Health Organisati­on and media. Each has been identified for specific tasks which will be distribute­d and coordinate­d via a 16-member steering committee that will comprise representa­tives of the relevant institutio­ns. There will be an Operations Committee handling seven areas: training and water safety; public education; naming of safe areas; data gathering and analysis; tourism developmen­t; drafting of laws and regulation­s related to water safety; and media.

At a meeting this week, Chief of Defence Staff Admiral Ravi Wijegunara­tne called for coaching of as many lifesavers as possible from the military, police, civil defence force and others. There will be an assessment shortly of ongoing training programmes and of how many lifesavers are presently available.

The national plan, which is subject to approval by the President and Cabinet, envisages the attiring of all lifesavers in the internatio­nally recognised red and yellow uniforms; flagging of beach areas that are safe to swim in according to global practices; introducti­on of a programme at the airport to educate incoming tourists of safe swimming practices; to remove ‘Swim at Your Own Risk’ boards erected near hotel swimming pools and guarantee the safety of guests; and to take a headcount of all lifesavers in the country so that they can be assigned to areas where more drownings occur.

It also has a public education component which hopes to spread awareness about the importance of making a self-assessment of swimming skills and state of health before getting into the water; identifyin­g safe areas; recognisin­g and respecting signboards related to water safety; and wearing suitable clothing in water.

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