[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 172 (Tuesday, December 21, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S10923-S10924]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FLOODING IN COLOMBIA
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, I want to take a minute to call attention
to a humanitarian disaster that has received only passing mention in
the international press and which many Senators may be unaware of.
On December 7, Colombia's President Juan Manuel Santos declared a
state of ``economic, social and ecologic emergency'' as a result of
massive flooding which he called a ``public calamity.''
Heavy rains over a period of months have caused landslides that have
swept away homes and rivers to overflow their banks, and now large
areas of the country are inundated with water. According to a December
17 report by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs which is assisting the Colombian government, so far 2.1 million
people have been affected by the flooding, 270 have died, 62 are
missing, and more than 300,000 houses have been damaged or destroyed.
Thousands of miles of roads have been obstructed, damaged or destroyed.
Twenty-eight of the country's 32 departments, which comprise 61
percent of the country, have been affected. President Santos said the
number of homeless from the flooding could reach 2 million, and that
``the tragedy the country is going through has no precedents in our
history.'' What's worse, the rains are expected to continue through
next June.
[[Page S10924]]
I do not have to remind anyone here of our close relationship with
Colombia. I also know Colombia has emergency response capabilities
which may not exist in remote areas of other countries similarly
affected by severe flooding or other natural disasters, such as
Pakistan. I was pleased to learn that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
has people in Colombia because the devastation is on a scale more
massive than any developing country could deal with alone. There may
also be other ways we can provide assistance.
I also use this opportunity to note what appears to be the growing
number and intensity of natural disasters around the world that are
straining the international community's emergency response
capabilities. While no single weather event can be definitively
attributed to climate change, scientists have long predicted an
increase in the frequency and severity of extreme weather events as a
result of global warming. They also predict that as many as 200 million
people could be displaced by natural disasters and climate change by
2050. That would cause incalculable havoc for many countries.
President Santos, who to his credit has been out in the countryside
with people who have lost family members, homes and, in many cases,
everything they own, said he canceled his trip to the U.N. Climate
Change Conference in Cancun so he could deal with the devastation that
climate change is causing in his own country. Pakistani government
officials likewise blamed climate change for the massive floods there
that have affected more than 20 million people over the past several
months.
Whatever the cause, and there isn't time today to discuss my views
about the role that deforestation and the burning of fossil fuels play
in global warming, the world's climate is unquestionably changing. And
a disproportionate number of recent climate related disasters has
occurred in the world's poorest countries where most people's lives
depend on agriculture. They have seen their homes destroyed, crops
drowned in water and buried in mud, and what few possessions they have
swept away. Other countries have suffered years of drought, and water
sources that have sustained life for centuries have dried up. In as
little as 25 years, glaciers that millions of people and their
livestock depend on for drinking water have shrunk to a fraction of
their size.
These issues are going to occupy our time and severely tax our
resources for the foreseeable future, and we and other countries
urgently need to develop plans to try to prevent and adapt to climate
change and to respond when disaster strikes.
I am encouraged that there is a new field of research specifically
focused on better understanding, preventing and responding to large
scale displacement of people as a result of climate change and natural
disasters. Nongovernmental and international organizations are working
to develop strategies to protect the world's most vulnerable people
from this growing threat. We need to support this and work together.
I commend President Santos who has not only helped to alert the world
to a catastrophe that had previously gone largely unnoticed outside his
country, but who has taken other important steps in his first months of
office that have won the respect and support of the Colombian people.
His efforts to diffuse tensions with Colombia's neighbors, to begin
tackling head on the daunting economic, social and judicial challenges
facing Colombia, and to appoint several top officials who have the
necessary qualifications and integrity, are admirable.
After a decade of Plan Colombia, U.S.-Colombia relations are entering
a new phase. While there will likely continue to be issues about which
we disagree, I look forward to working with President Santos and his
government on a wide range of issues of mutual interest and concern.
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