Hurricanes Harvey and Irma were hard, but most of the world’s disasters are ignored

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Associated Press
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Local disasters get the most coverage in the US, while some countries actively suppress bad news in the name of political stability

Associated Press |
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Disasters such as flooding in Bangladesh are largely ignored by the international media.
What a disastrous few weeks. Historic hurricanes, massive earthquakes, and large-scale wildfires have all struck the Americas at the same time, grabbing headlines and inspiring fundraising efforts. The reporting has been extensive and the outpouring of generous homegrown support seems endless.
 
American society might be uniquely created to work together during crises, with national self-reliance a distinct part of the country’s character, heritage and mythology. American leaders call attention to disasters and ask communities and their political representatives for help and money. A free, open and independent media report it all.
 
Elsewhere in the world, however, bad instincts or habits lead political and corporate leaders to mislead, hide, and deny disasters or nearing doom. Russia and China are particularly good examples of countries who do this, but it is generally true for less democratic and minimally accountable governments and where disaster can translate into political crisis or even the threat of a regime change.

In the former Soviet Union, the initial reaction and official denial of the Chernobyl nuclear meltdown and crisis set in motion the conditions for the eventual downfall of the entire empire. In a new biography about Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, the Chernobyl cover-up was considered the turning point that put Gorbachev on the political reform path toward a greater openness that became unstoppable.

Nowadays, Russians are more willing to focus on disaster reporting and government failure. Their reporting highlights race and class inequities and blames political systems and failing leadership - but only if these disasters and failures are happening in other countries. Preferably in the United States.
 
China’s lack of preparation, warning, and response to many earthquakes and flooding causes local anger and confusion. A 2008 Sichuan province earthquake killed nearly 70,000 people, but the government reaction was to shield failure and silence critics. Dissent is hidden, if not completely crushed. A tightly controlled and censored media environment further assures that news travels slowly and is effectively countered when it runs contrary to national political narratives.
SCMP photographer Felix Wong was denied entry into Macau for posing 'a risk to the stability of internal security'.

A recent example of this was when at least four Hong Kong journalists were denied entry to Macau to cover the clean-up efforts for Typhoon Hato. The official reason given for their bans was it "posed a risk to the stability of internal security".

Disaster avoidance and denial are not exclusive authoritarian national traits, however. Following a recent earthquake and tsunami, Japan’s government and TEPCO power generating company denied the dangers and misled the public about nuclear fallout from a failing Fukushima nuclear power plant. Apologies followed, but the damage was already done.
 
Social media picks up some of the information slack, but rumour fills in where facts are muddled. In environments where there is a lack of official information, misinformation and falsehood start to circulate. People get misled. Confusion kills. What can be done to prevent bad information from worsening the effect of bad news?

Soviet or Chinese-style bad-news boycotts are not the answer. But social media platforms with billions of members - many of them trusting and easy to fool - should build backup information systems to protect the public. Television broadcasters have long used 4-10 second delays to prevent inappropriate or inaccurate live material from going on-air. Social media need to use some of these same techniques. Whether artificial intelligence, human editors, or machine learning to prevent rumour and inaccuracies from gaining too many views is not for the public to figure out, but the public needs to consider a regulatory fix.

Worldwide, however, crisis management and warning systems do not suffer from too much, too quick or grossly inaccurate information. In fact, most global disasters are neither reported on nor actively hidden as the majority of natural crises go unnoticed by nearly everyone who is unaffected.
 
Countries suffering from widespread disaster actively and regularly seek international attention - often with no response - in the hopes they can attract global empathy and assistance. These nations are not only victimised by disaster, they are victims of a distracted world, suffering quietly alone without news coverage or celebrity support to spotlight their hardships. These overwhelmed countries experience what aid professionals call “silent disasters.”

Silent disasters represent the 91 percent of worldwide natural emergencies that regularly go unreported in any mass media, according to the International Red Cross. Right now, for example, South Asia is experiencing much greater death and destruction than that wrought by Hurricane’s Harvey and Irma.

Bangladesh, Nepal and India are struggling to get noticed or receive basic help for the reported 41 million people directly affected by recent monsoon flooding and landslides that killed nearly a thousand people. The United Nations reports these South Asia floods also destroyed tens of thousands of homes, schools and hospitals. 
 
Natural and manmade disasters can fully overtake a nation’s attention, be totally denied or never make it onto the radar of a global public’s consciousness. The one universal truth is that, ultimately, everyone suffers.
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