By Luis Burón B. UNDRR - The Americas and the Caribbean
PANAMA CITY, Panama, April 14,  2020 - The COVID-19 pandemic is  creating complex economic and social challenges for countries in Latin America  and the Caribbean which should cooperate more closely to reduce risk, said  speakers at an inaugural event. 
Comprehensive regional  strategies would help protect the region's most vulnerable from future  outbreaks as well as hazards such as hurricanes, said speakers at the "Virtual  Dialogue: The Americas and the Caribbean in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic"  event.
"The  risks we face today are complex, reflecting a much more interconnected reality  as we see today with COVID-19," said Raul Salazar, head of the United Nations  Office for Disaster Risk Reduction's (UNDRR) Regional Office for the Americas  and the Caribbean. 
  
  "These  risks generate cascading effects that are replicated in all aspects of our  societies. Facing the reality and complexity of risk today requires  multi-sectoral and multilateral cooperation." 
The Virtual Dialogue was  organised by UNDRR, alongside the Coordination Center for the Prevention of  Disasters in Central America and the Dominican Republic (CEPREDENAC) and the Central American Integration  System (SICA).
The meeting, which involved  representatives from national risk management agencies, was designed to help  countries formulate a coordinated response to the pandemic which is sweeping  the region.
  The  harsh economic impact of COVID-related lockdowns showed countries need to  better prepare for the financial impact of future events, said speakers. 
  
  "Just as  we can say that no disaster is natural, we can affirm that some epidemics are  also economic," said Carlos Villalba, national director for prevention and disaster  risk reduction at Argentina's Undersecretariat for Risk Management and Civil  Protection. 
"We all  must develop comprehensive response platforms. We have to do things before  events happen. We have to do better during the next pandemic." 
HARSH  REALITY 
  Speakers  at the event said COVID-19 showed countries needed to formulate pandemic plans  that better addressed the economic needs and daily realities of the most  vulnerable who often cannot afford to stay at home, said speakers. 
"We have  a society and a sector of our population that lives hand to mouth and has had  to go out, in breach of protocols, in search of their livelihoods," 
  said  Maria Alexandra Ocles, from Ecuador's Secretariat for Risk Management. 
  
  "We must  implement strategies to avoid further contagion but based on a vision that  includes the most vulnerable."  
The  complex, cross-border nature of the pandemic underscored the need for a  joined-up regional strategy to tackle the virus, Claudia Herrera, executive  secretary of CEPREDENAC, told the event. 
A  Central American regional contingency fund now totalled $1.9 billion and would  be used for health programmes, the protection of medical teams and stronger  information campaigns, she explained. 
The fund  would also be used to strengthen preparation, mitigation and humanitarian  assistance, she added. 
"We  must join efforts to move forward with a unified and collaborative  approach," said Herrera. 
HURRICANE  SEASON 
  In a  multi-hazard region, the virus also risks complicating efforts to prepare  countries ahead of the approaching Atlantic hurricane season, said speakers.
"We  are also preparing for the hurricane season. We will face risks other than  COVID-19, and the Caribbean states must be ready to face those risks,"  said Ronald Jackson, executive director of the Caribbean Disaster Emergency  Management Agency (CDEMA).
He  explained how the Caribbean is centralising efforts to tackle the pandemic,  enabling countries to exchange information and better coordinate joint  purchases of medical equipment. 
When the pandemic finally  fades and lockdowns loosen, countries in the region should grab the opportunity  to rethink and restructure as they adapt to the new normality, said speakers. 
NOT THE LAST 
"We must re-emerge with a  new concept of humanity. We must review the collective attitude of all  sectors," said Vinicio Cerezo, SICA secretary general. 
"We must review the  concepts that we have become accustomed to such as the role of the state, the role of education in society and the importance  of working together to resolve complex situations."
The unprecedented global  impact of the pandemic has shown there is no time for complacency once this  virus fades, and the region has to be prepared for the next major challenge,  said speakers. 
  
  "The most important lesson learned is that in  a globalised world, this pandemic will not be the last," said Andrew Slaten,  deputy director of the United States Federal Emergency Management Agency  (FEMA).
"We have  to start an international dialogue, hemispheric at least, to plan government  preparation for the next pandemic, which will surely happen." 
  
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