Prepositioned Rotary Emergency Response Kits in Labasa and Suva were amongst the first items of support that communities
on the island of Vanua Levu have received following Cyclone Yasa’s destructive forces on 17 December.
Vanua Levu was amonst the worst affected. The main damage is loss of homes, schools and other infrastructure mostly in
rural communites in addition to severe damage to crops and land. The loss of income to the rural community as a result
of Covid is now exaserbated by Yasa.
Taveuni Island was also badly hit with severe crop and land damage, but unlike Vanua Levu damage to homes and
infrastructure was minimal. Taveuni have adopted a “Build Back Better” philosophy in the past decade and the results are
clearly evident. Spokesperson Stuart Batty says “Rotary has supported Taveuni communites throughout this period
insisting on “Build Back Better”. If the same philosophy was adopted elsewhere in Fiji and across Pacific countries as a
whole, New Zealand and others donors would no longer face an almost annual call to replace and rebuild.
Worrying for donors is the intensity of Cyclone Yasa so early in the 6 month cyclone period and the liklihood of another
category 5 cyclone causing major damage before the end of May 2021.
”Rotary has prepositioned Emergency Response Kits in Vanuatu, Fiji, Tonga, Samoa and the Cook Islands ready to respond
as soon as the country’s National Disaster Management Office gives the go ahead. Batty who has been engaged in response
to cyclones for the past twenty years says “the level of preparedness by governments and communities across the Pacific
improves with every passing year and it too contributed to the impact of Cyclone Yasa which would have been far greater
without communities being prepared.”