UNHCR’s response to the Tsunami emergency in Indonesia and Sri Lanka, December 2004 - November 2006

Author(s)
Lambert, B. & Pougin de la Maisonneuve, C.
Publication language
English
Pages
53pp
Date published
01 Apr 2007
Type
Evaluation reports
Keywords
Coordination, Cluster coordination, Disasters, Tsunamis, Forced displacement and migration
Countries
Indonesia, Sri Lanka

Work on this independent evaluation began on 22 November 2006, with fieldwork
taking place from 25 November to 13 December. Its main purpose was “to gain
lessons learned for future operations concerning natural disasters.” Since the
Tsunami operation, UNHCR has committed itself to the Cluster Approach within the
UN by taking the lead in three clusters, Camp Management, Protection and
Emergency Shelter. A particular concern was to examine implications of the cluster
approach to IDP emergencies.
The Indian Ocean Tsunami of 26 December 2004 resulted in the loss of 228,000 people
with some one million being made homeless in Indonesia and Sri Lanka. In the days
that followed, UNHCR decided to become involved in a significant way in the
humanitarian response. It took on a major role in the provision of shelter,
complemented in Sri Lanka by activities in protection and logistics support.
In taking this decision, considerations included firstly, the immediate moral
imperative of helping relieve suffering in one of the world’s largest ever disasters,
secondly, the longer-term protection imperative of maintaining positive relations
with countries where UNHCR needed to carry out its traditional mandate and thirdly
the strategic organizational imperative, at a time of UN reform, of indicating a
practical organizational capability which would be valued whatever the eventual
outcome of such reform.