Showing posts with label Leicester. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leicester. Show all posts

Monday, 28 May 2012

Get a radio, stop a disaster


Simple lack of warning and information is often a factor in increasing casualties from a disaster.   Now Bangladesh, one of the poorest, most low-lying and most densely populated nations on earth is trying to harness the power of radio to improve things.

Six local community stations have started broadcasting, another 8 have been approved, and applications are in for 22 more.   Bazlur Rahman, chief executive officer of Bangladesh’s Network for Radio and Communication, says most people in the countryside are illiterate, but that they ‘can easily understand weather bulletins and other instructions' when they are broadcast in local dialects.

A local fisherman said crews are encouraged to carry radios with them, so they can return home quickly if there is any danger.   One community station plans to provide a free solar-powered radio to each cyclone shelter so people can receive safety instructions while they are sheltering there.

In 1970, Bangladesh fell victim to the most disastrous storm in history, which killed up to a million people.  Most had no warning of what was happening until huge waves crashed upon them.

*From those nice people at the MACE archive - a report I did on the death of Imperial Typewriters at Leicester in 1975.

http://www.macearchive.org/archive.html?Title=22712

Saturday, 16 October 2010

Mining accidents - now the bad news

Amid the euphoria over the rescue of the 33 Chilean miners, a reminder of how dangerous mining can be – especially in China. An explosion at a coal mine at Yuzhou in Henan province has killed 20 and trapped another 17 underground.

Official reports say that 239 miners got to the surface safely, and that attempts are being made to reach the missing men. China’s mining industry is the most dangerous in the world, with more than 2,600 killed in accidents last year.

The government has tried to improve standards, closing down more than 1,500 illegal pits this year. It also brought in new regulations saying that mine managers have to go and work underground with their men. This tougher approach has helped to reduce the number of deaths from nearly 7,000 a year in 2002, but many miners are poorly trained migrant workers, and rules are often broken.

(See also my blog of Nov 23, 2009.)

*The Glasgow and Leicester edition of myvillage.com have kindly put up articles about my books.

http://glasgow.myangus.co.uk/article/glasgows-disastrous-history

http://myvillage.com/article/leicesters-disastrous-history