What is the Copernicus EMS rapid response service activated to trace the Iranian President | Explained thehindu.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thehindu.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
EU space technology is increasingly becoming an essential cog in the machinery that manages responses to emergencies like floods and fires from providing information to firefighters to alerting citizens of danger.
Slovenia | Floods – DG ECHO Daily Map | 07/08/2023 - Slovenia reliefweb.int - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from reliefweb.int Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SUPPORT from the international community continue to offset the effects of Typhoon “Odette” (international name: Rai) almost two weeks after its onslaught. Taiwan, for its part, has sent two shipments of relief goods totaling 10 metric tons worth $50,000, which were airlifted to the Philippines from Pingtung Air Force Base…
(File photo from Presidential Photographers Division) MANILA - At least US$107.2 million or approximately PHP5.35 billion is needed to help about 530,000 Filipinos in the worst typhoon-hit areas in Caraga and Eastern Visayas for the next six months, the United Nations Philippines said Friday. The number, drawn from the UN's newly launched Humanitarian Needs and Priorities Plan, is based on preliminary assessment findings and early estimates of people in need in the aftermath of the catastrophic Typhoon Odette. The United Nations Office of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA) said the USD107.2 million funding requested would prioritize life-saving and protection programs, focusing on displaced persons, host communities, and indigenous people, among others. "Combining poverty indicators and severe wind strength exposure, the document targets at least 530,000 people in the worst affected areas in CARAGA and Region VIII, as well as in other hard-hit regions. In four to six weeks from th