Australia: Disaster zone

February 9, 2011


Floods, fires and even earthquakes and volcanoes have become political events all over the world, polarising public opinion and sometimes contributing to the fall of governments. Now that the line between natural and man-made disasters has been blurred by a changed understanding of our impact on the planet, every disaster sets off a search for causes and culprits. This is made more contentious by arguments over the degree of human responsibility that have increased the tension between right and left in many countries. The inevitable result seems to be that political leaders are finding themselves more and more in the firing line when nature springs its nasty surprises.

The war over the causes of climate change, in particular, has been waged nowhere more fiercely than in Australia, a country whose knife-edge ecology makes it especially vulnerable. Floods in Queensland, Victoria and New South Wales, Cyclone Yasi, and now a dismal coda with bushfires around Perth in Western Australia, have made disaster control and prevention the issues of the day in what is normally Australia’s switched-off summer holiday period. Even so, it is surprising that support for the Australian government has tumbled so precipitately. If an election was held today, prime minister Julia Gillard and the Labor party would be swept from office, according to a poll published in the Australian.
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State Disaster Relief Centers Open Wednesday

December 18, 2008


The state is opening five disaster relief centers on Oahu on Wednesday for people affected by floods since last week.

About 190 homes on Oahu sustained some type of damage from the floods, Civil Defense officials said. The state said 47 of those homes had major damage.

The state is opening one-stop disaster assistance centers starting as early as Wednesday in Waipahu, Waianae, Haleiwa, Laie and Windward Oahu.

“If you had damages to your homes, with the floods over this past couple of days, you can get a wide range of assistance at the city and county level and even at the private sector level,” state Adjutant Gen. Robert Lee said.

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