The Government will spend $3.5 million on improving tsunami
preparedness and warning systems across the Pacific in a
programme which Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully
describes as a major upgrade.
Mr McCully is in Samoa at the end of a week-long trip to the
Solomon Islands, Kiribati and Samoa.
Labour MP Phil Twyford yesterday criticised the Government
for cancelling a three year contract with Suva-based
Foundation for the Peoples of the South Pacific.
The contract, worth $500,000 a year for three years, was
focused on reducing the impact of disasters such as tsunami
and cyclones, Mr Twyford said.
"Mr McCully is taking an axe to non-governmental organisation
(NGO) based programmes that he doesn't like the look of," he
said.
But Mr McCully today told NZPA the programme was cut because
it was "piecemeal and ad hoc" and was not part of a
comprehensive framework.
He said the Government would put in place a $3.5m programme
led by the Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency
Management.
GNS and other government agencies would also be involved.
A coordinator in Wellington would liaise with the Pacific
countries and government organisations.
"It will be primarily focused around government organisations
but there'll be scope for NGO involvement as appropriate," Mr
McCully said.
The new programme would be a comprehensive and regional
approach focused on tsunami protection, prediction, warning
and public education.
Mr McCully will discuss the new programme when he visits
Lalomanu this afternoon.
Lalomanu was one of the worst hit villages during the tsunami
in Samoa almost a year ago.
"I am not happy that we have done sufficient (work) yet to
upgrade tsunami warnings and tsunami preparedness within the
region," Mr McCully said.
"What I've asked our people to do is to replace what was a
piecemeal and ad hoc small programme with a much more
extensive but much more adequate programme."
It would include a range of specific projects, he said.
Next year the Defence Force would carry out an operation in
Tokelau and tsunami work could be tacked on, Mr McCully said.
The funding was over three years but much of it would be
spent in the short-term.
In the Solomon Islands, Mr McCully meet new Prime Minister
Danny Philip and other government ministers after the recent
election there.
He said it set the scene for a good working relationship.
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