Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.02.2010, Blaðsíða 9

Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.02.2010, Blaðsíða 9
The earthquake in Haiti occurred at 16:53 local time on January 12, 2010. It had the cata- strophic magnitude of 7.0. The International Red Cross estimate that about three million people are affected by the quake; Haitian officials anticipate that the disaster will eventually claim between 100.000 and 200.000 lives. The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 01 — 2010 9 Following the massive earthquake in Haiti on January 12, the Icelandic Search and Rescue (ICE-SAR) team was the first international team to ar- rive at the scene. The team landed in the country’s capital Port-au-Prince just 24 hours after the earthquake hit. Iceland’s fast response was noted all over the world. “What usually delays the deploy- ment of rescue teams is bureaucracy, i.e. the time it takes the government to decide to send aid,” says ICE-SAR PR- officer Ólöf Snæhólm Baldursdóttir. “The short chain of command in Ice- land and the effective work of public officials made the fast response pos- sible.” Just after the news of the earth- quake Minister for Foreign Affairs, Össur Skarphéðinsson, was up all night with his staff to smooth things along. While awaiting response from officials, the rescue team was at an alert status and spent the night pre- paring for the mission at the ICE-SAR headquarters. Icelandair had a plane ready to transport the team and the team’s equipment is ready at Keflavík airport at all times. Funds for the transportation costs were secured from the government very early on. Pure costs were lower than could be expected, as members of the rescue team all work on a vol- unteer basis, and ICE-SAR teams buy and own all their equipment. “It has taken years of meticulous plan- ning and training to organise this and countless hours of fundraising for the equipment,” says Ólöf. The team sent to Haiti consisted of 35 people. It operates as an inter- national special unit within ICE-SAR and is specialised in rescue missions in ruins. It is also a registered team under the UN umbrella. TAKING CHARGE ANd RESCUING LIvES The Icelandic team took control of the international search and rescue (SAR) camp upon arrival in Haiti. They set up a base camp and were involved in the coordination of activities for all the international SAR teams. “Taking charge of the camp was a logical thing to do after being the first to arrive,” Ólöf explains. During their first rescue mission in Port-au-Prince the ICE-SAR team rescued three women from the ruins of a four-story building. They were also the first international aid to arrive in the town of Léogane, which is situ- ated near the earthquakes epicentre. There they found no survivors in the rubble, but the team provided medical assistance to a large number of injured people in the city. All things consid- ered, the members of the Icelandic team remained in good condition throughout their stay. “There are a lot of difficulties fac- ing rescue teams that arrive in a di- saster area. The overall situation, the horrible consequences of the earth- quake on top of physically and men- tally challenging work from sunrise to sunset accompanied by only 4–6 hour sleep every night is the most difficult thing.” Although news coverage from Haiti portrayed the safety situation in the country as extremely critical after the earthquake, the ICE-SAR team reported that they were received with nothing but gratitude and warmth by the local population. “The team has an extensive safety plan, and they usually worked with armed guards from the UN Peace Corps,” says Ólöf. The ICE-SAR team left Haiti on January 20th, about a week after their arrival. It is a rule of thumb that ur- ban SAR teams cease operations 48 hours after the last rescue of a survi- vor. The Icelandic camp with part of their equipment was left behind since it was used as a nerve centre for all in- ternational search and rescue teams. “There was not much more for the ICE-SAR team to do and we will not send more people to Haiti. Now other organisations will deliver aid to those who survived.” Feature | Icelandic Rescue Teams LOUISE PETERSSON FROM ICE_SAR Search and Rescue in Haiti Icelandic rescuers first to arrive after earthquake hits The History of ICE-SAR The rescue teams of Iceland all coexist under the umbrella organisation ICE-SAR (Icelandic name: Landsbjörg), the Icelandic Association of Search and Rescue. The mission: to save lives and valuables and to prevent accidents. ICE-SAR is part of a long tradition the origins of which date back to 1918, when the first rescue team was established in the Westmann Islands. It was started mainly because of frequent ship losses and deaths of fishermen. Today, all fishermen must participate in extensive sea survival training by law. Before they go out to sea for the first time, they attend the basic sea survival course at the Maritime Safety and Survival Training Centre, founded by ICE-SAR in 1985. Students learn how to use, among other things, life rafts, lifejackets, survival suits and flares. This has resulted in record lows of serious accidents at sea in recent years. For example, back in 1985 Iceland was losing twenty people at sea every year: today it’s down to two or three persons yearly. Last year was the first recorded one that absolutely no one died at sea. Today there are around 3.000 active rescuers involved in the different rescue teams across the country. They are on standby for emergencies day and night all year round. In recent years there has been an increased specialisation within the rescue teams. Every team has members equipped for certain tasks: avalanche rescue, rescue at sea, first aid groups, search groups, search dog groups, urban search and rescue, diving groups, etc., etc. More on ICE-SAR: www.landsbjorg.is Be prepared Be prepared. Read information about the area you are visiting, and Iceland in general, so you know what to expect. Believe what you read! Too many travellers get into trouble because they fail to acknowledge how harsh the environment can be. Have a travel plan and let someone in on it. Info on safe travel in Iceland can be found on www.safetravel.is. Be equipped Bring all the necessary equipment, such as a compass, GPS navigator, map, some means of communication (satellite phone/spot emergency button) and know how to use it. Pack clothes for all weather conditions and remember that it can snow in Iceland in the summertime. Bring plenty of food, including an emergency stash. Be smart Remember that the roads in the highlands are only made for 4x4 jeeps. If you get into trouble while driving, stay in the car and call 112 for assistance. Keep in mind… …that river crossings keep changing in Iceland. On warm summer days the flow increases as the day progresses. Also, heavy rain often causes rivers to swell which can make them impossible to cross even with large and well equipped vehicles. Underestimating water volume in rivers has resulted in deaths. Better to be safe than sorry As previously stated, numerous travellers on this island tend not to recognise how harsh the environment is. For all travellers who realise the dangers inherent in Icelandic nature and wish to come out alive, ICE-SAR has a travellers reporting service. People who plan to wander in the highlands and wilderness can register at the ICE- SAR office in Reykjavík. Basically, if you don’t report back at a given time when you’ve finished your trip an investigation will start and a search will be launched. Better to be safe than sorry, right? A new question has arisen in Iceland. It goes something like this: What does it mean to be Icelandic? Or better: What are Icelanders made of? What is their true nature? Indeed a very basic, stupid question that gives way to many answers, spun up of homemade topics and creative generalisations about nations. Now, I said NEW question and I said ARISEN. The question is of course not new and it has resurfaced rather than arisen after the financial collapse. Every nation about to become a nation or wanting to be one, or having recently become one, ponders this question relentlessly. Nations without states define themselves over and over in the battle for independence, and so did Iceland. The twentieth century saw the publication of a fundamental book in Icelandic thought, a book revolving around questions of this sort: Icelandic Culture by Sigurður Norðdal, Volume I. There were supposed to be more volumes but they were never published, nor written. Why? For many reasons, but as time went by and 1944 faded into the past, the question will have seemed less and less relevant. Author Guðbergur Bergsson gave some brilliant suggestions on more negative and ironic notes before the matter was finally put to sleep and people turned to pondering on the wonders of the rich in recent years. The thing became self-evident (and two folded): Icelanders were a fierce nation with innovative Viking spirit, conquering the business world with their natural skills for battle, a mentality moulded by harsh nature over the centuries. And so on. More or less the empty phrases president Ólafur Ragnar and his merry Vikings were using in their shameless exploit of Icelanders’ national pride. Those jingles had no relation to the topics Icelanders most commonly used about themselves in previous times, that they were modest (bragging was a mortal sin), hard working, honest and content, serious and prone to literature and tradition. They had become Viking superheroes. Now, for those who did not believe that, the question was put to sleep by its complete opposite: What a load of utter crap, non-believers would think, what stupid arrogance, how completely boring and superficial, what misuse of history by the few and rich for the many and stupid. Icelanders as a nation are really just a bunch of arrogant hick bastards. Either way, the matter is dead. End of subject. No need to think about it anymore. Now you see it rising. What does it mean to be Icelandic? The complex of tiny nations comes out in force with that question again, scrutinizing the international media to see how others see it—and not always liking it. Criminals and terrorists, thieves, reckless, risk-taking and irresponsible? Neigh! We are not like that! Nobody wants to see themselves like that, obviously. Try something else on for size. How about romantic elf-believers, can that go? Oppressed minority? Could we be modest and kind? (Ehrm... well). Readers? Searchers? Naive, cunning? Easily deceived or passionate? Foxes or bears, wolves or chicken? Revolutionaries? Home-educated economists or environmentally aware ecologists? Mental slaves or lone rangers? Angry crowd or intellectual elite? The possibilities are endless. The matter is open for debate. Opinion | Hermann Stefánsson To Be Icelandic, That Is A Question Travelling Tips

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