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Some
22 million people were displaced by natural disasters in 2013 - three times
more than from conflicts and wars. Asia became the displacement ‘hotspot’,
accounting for over 80 percent of those affected, RT reports.
Currently,
twice as many people are displaced than there were in the 1970s, researchers
stated.
The
main cause behind the surge in numbers is the rapid urbanization, with the
growth and concentration of urban populations, especially in “vulnerable countries.”
“This
increasing trend will continue as more and more people live and work in
hazard-prone areas. <…> More people today are exposed and vulnerable,”
Jan Egeland said.
What’s
more, this kind of displacement is “expected
to be aggravated in the future by the impacts of climate change,”
Egeland added.
The
report emphasizes the fact that the disasters can happen in any area in the
world. However, the worst-affected for several years running has been Asia,
with a staggering 19 million – around 87 per cent of the total figure - forced
to flee their homes.
Developing
countries constitute over 85 percent of the displacement over the last five
years, the report also revealed.
The
‘hotspots’ for natural disasters are outlined in the study as well: in 2013,
those are the Philippines, where a single typhoon displaced over 4 million
people (the overall displacement figure for the Philippines in 5.8 million);
seasonal flooding forced people to escape sub-Saharan Africa: Niger, Chad,
Sudan and South Sudan.
Despite
Asia leading in terms of figures, Africa remains the riskiest region: its
population is set to double by 2050, and flooding combined with drought and
conflicts is expected to see displacement figures grow even faster.
The
specific vulnerability of locals in developing countries is that they sometimes
don’t have time to recover or flee before a new disaster hits.
“People
are crammed together and there is no escape. They live in river deltas, they
live on hurricane beaches, they live along river beds that are easily flooded,
they live where there are mud slides and so on,”
Egeland said.
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Developed
countries were also dealt a blow by the disasters. Typhoon Man-yi in Japan
displaced 260,000 people and tornadoes in the US state of Oklahoma saw 218,500
affected, the report said.
The
study also underlined the fact that the main cause of any natural disaster may
be attributed to humans, and outlined moves to curb the deadly disasters in the
urban environment.
“Most
disasters are as much man-made as they are natural,”
said director of IDMC (International Development Monitoring Center), Alfredo
Zamudio.
“Better
urban planning, flood defenses and building standards could mitigate much of
their impact,” he added.
On
average, 27 million people a year lost their homes to natural disasters over
the last decade. In 2010, that number rose to 42 million, the Guardian
reported. 2013 is memorable for the way many people were forced out of their
homes by war and violence: usually the ratio between war and natural disaster
displacement figures varies by 10 times, whereas last year’s was only 3 times.
The report comes ahead of
the UN climate summit set to take place next week.
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