Kenya landslide death toll rises to 22
- Admin UKK
- Berita
(Reuters) -The death toll from a landslide in western Kenya's Rift Valley has risen to 22, a government spokesperson said on Sunday, following heavy rains on Saturday.
Twenty-nine people were still missing and 21 others were receiving treatment after devastating floods in Elgeyo-Marakwet County, government spokesperson Isaac Mwaura said in a statement.
Hundreds of people have been killed in recent years in landslides and flooding in Kenya, with scientists saying climate change is causing more intense and frequent extreme weather events.
In the worst incident last year, 61 people were killed in a mudslide and flash floods in central Kenya.
Landslides in the east of neighbouring Uganda have also killed at least 13 people in the last week, according to the Uganda Red Cross.
MOSCOW, 2 Nov: Angka kematian akibat Taufan Melissa di Jamaica meningkat kepada 28 orang, kata Perdana Menteri Jamaica Andrew Holness pada Ahad, lapor Sputnik/RIA Novosti.
Pada Jumaat, Menteri Penerangan Jamaica Dana Morris Dixon berkata angka kematian akibat bencana meningkat kepada 19 orang.
“Kerajaan mengesahkan 28 kematian berkaitan Taufan Melissa,” kata Holness di X.
Beliau berkata laporan menyeluruh mengenai angka kematian masih dalam proses pengesahan.
Awal minggu ini, beberapa negara termasuk United Kingdom, Kanada dan Venezuela menghantar bantuan kemanusiaan kepada negara yang terjejas akibat bencana itu.
Taufan Melissa melanda Jamaica pada Selasa sebagai ribut kategori kelima, menyebabkan banjir besar serta kerosakan teruk terhadap infrastruktur. Taufan itu kemudiannya melintasi Cuba, Republik Dominika, Haiti dan beberapa negara pulau kecil di Caribbean, menyebabkan kemusnahan di sepanjang laluannya.-TVS
Gempa 6.3 landa utara Afghanistan
- Admin UKK
- Berita
KABUL: Gempa bumi berukuran 6.3 skala Richter melanda utara Afghanistan lewat malam Ahad hingga awal pagi Isnin, menurut laporan Kajian Geologi Amerika Syarikat (USGS).
Gempa itu berlaku kira-kira dua bulan selepas gegaran kuat di timur negara itu meragut lebih 2,200 nyawa.
USGS melaporkan gempa terbaharu itu berpusat di daerah Kholm, berhampiran bandar Mazar-i-Sharif, pada kedalaman 28 kilometer. Gegaran turut dirasai oleh wartawan AFP di ibu negara, Kabul.
Pihak berkuasa tempatan menyediakan nombor kecemasan bagi membantu mangsa, namun setakat ini tiada laporan rasmi mengenai kematian atau kecederaan dilaporkan.
Di Mazar-i-Sharif, ramai penduduk dilihat keluar ke jalan raya pada waktu malam kerana bimbang rumah mereka akan runtuh.
Kerajaan Taliban, yang kembali berkuasa sejak 2021, berdepan beberapa bencana gempa besar dalam tempoh beberapa tahun kebelakangan ini. Pada tahun 2023, gempa bumi di wilayah Herat di sempadan Iran meragut lebih 1,500 nyawa dan memusnahkan lebih 63,000 kediaman.
Pada 31 Ogos tahun ini, satu lagi gempa cetek berukuran 6.0 magnitud menggegarkan timur Afghanistan dan mengorbankan lebih 2,200 orang, menjadikannya gempa paling dahsyat dalam sejarah moden negara itu.
Afghanistan yang terletak di kawasan pertemuan plat tektonik Eurasia dan India sering dilanda gempa bumi, khususnya di sekitar banjaran Hindu Kush. Negara itu kini berdepan pelbagai krisis termasuk kemiskinan melampau, kemarau teruk serta kemasukan jutaan pelarian yang dipulangkan oleh Pakistan dan Iran.
KABUL: Gempa bumi kuat dengan 6.3 magnitud melanda berhampiran bandar Mazar-e Sharif di utara Afghanistan pada awal pagi tadi, mengorbankan sekurang-kurangnya 10 orang dan mencederakan kira-kira 150 mangsa, lapor pihak berkuasa wilayah hari ini.
Kajian Geologi Amerika Syarikat (USGS) melaporkan, gegaran itu berlaku pada kedalaman 28 kilometer (17.4 batu) berhampiran Mazar-e Sharif, sebuah bandar yang menempatkan kira-kira 523,000 penduduk.
"Setakat ini, dilaporkan tujuh maut dan 150 cedera dan dipindahkan ke pusat kesihatan," kata Samim Joyanda, jurucakap jabatan kesihatan di Samangan, sebuah wilayah pergunungan utara yang berhampiran Mazar-e Sharif, kepada agensi berita REUTERS.
Beliau berkata, angka korban dan cedera itu adalah berdasarkan laporan hospital yang dikumpulkan setakat ini.
Di Mazar-i-Sharif, ramai orang berlari ke jalanan pada tengah malam, kerana bimbang rumah mereka mungkin runtuh.
Pihak berkuasa Taliban terpaksa berdepan dengan beberapa gempa bumi besar sejak kembali berkuasa pada 2021, termasuk satu pada 2023 di wilayah barat Herat di sempadan dengan Iran yang mengorbankan lebih 1,500 orang dan memusnahkan lebih 63,000 rumah.
Gempa bumi magnitud 6.0 melanda pada 31 Ogos lalu di timur negara itu, mengorbankan lebih 2,200 orang - gegaran paling dahsyat dalam sejarah Afghanistan baru-baru ini.
Gempa bumi adalah perkara biasa di Afghanistan, terutamanya di sepanjang banjaran gunung Hindu Kush, berhampiran tempat pertemuan plat tektonik Eurasia dan India.
Sejak 1900, timur laut Afghanistan dilanda 12 gempa bumi dengan magnitud melebihi tujuh, menurut Brian Baptie, seorang ahli seismologi dengan Pemantauan Geologi Britain.
Jurucakap wilayah Balkh, Haji Zaid, mengesahkan bahawa gempa bumi kuat itu turut memusnahkan sebahagian daripada makam suci Mazar-i-Sharif, merujuk kepada Masjid Biru yang terkenal.
Sementara itu, di platform media sosial X, pelbagai rakaman usaha menyelamat dikongsikan, menunjukkan cubaan mengeluarkan mangsa yang terperangkap di bawah runtuhan, serta imej serpihan bangunan yang runtuh. Satu video yang dikongsi memaparkan anggota penyelamat menarik keluar beberapa mayat dari timbunan runtuhan. - REUTERS
NOVEMBER 2 — When Asean convenes its summits—from the Asean Regional Forum (ARF) to the East Asia Summit (EAS)—the leaders often speak of “peace, stability, and prosperity”. Yet, few ask a deeper question: what kind of security framework actually guides these proceedings?
The answer, though seldom stated outright, lies in a unique blend of realism, regionalism, and constructivism—a framework best understood through Barry Buzan’s Copenhagen School of Security Studies.
The Copenhagen School, led by Barry Buzan, Ole Wæver, and Jaap de Wilde, transformed the way we think about security.
Instead of viewing it merely through tanks and treaties, they saw it as multidimensional and discursive—something that extends to economics, politics, society, and even the environment. Asean, often dismissed as slow-moving or consensus-bound, has in fact been quietly practicing this Comprehensive Security Framework for decades.
The traditional notion of security—rooted in realism—centres on protecting the state from external threats.
But Buzan expanded this to five sectors: military, political, economic, societal, and environmental. Asean’s summits, from Kuala Lumpur to Seoul, now routinely address all five.
Whether it’s maritime disputes, AI regulation, climate resilience, or pandemic recovery, the region’s leaders understand that peace is impossible if economies crumble or societies fracture.
The Asean Political-Security Community (APSC) is built on this idea. It integrates not only military dialogue but also human security—covering migration, digital safety, and disaster relief.
This multidimensional understanding is precisely what makes Asean a civilian power bloc rather than a military alliance.
Regional security complex theory in action
Buzan’s Regional Security Complex Theory (RSCT) argues that security threats are clustered geographically. Nations are most affected by their neighbours’ stability—or instability.
For South-east Asia, this is undeniably true. A coup in Myanmar, clashes along the Thai-Cambodian border, or maritime tensions in the South China Sea all reverberate across the region.
That is why Asean insists on “regional solutions to regional problems.” Its summits are not mere talk shops but mechanisms to contain insecurity within the region’s political space. This is RSCT in practice—a web of interdependence that recognises shared vulnerability.
Securitisation and desecuritisation — the Asean way
The Copenhagen School’s concept of securitization explains how political actors declare something a threat to justify extraordinary measures. Conversely, desecuritisation returns it to normal politics, encouraging negotiation and compromise. Asean’s style of diplomacy—dialogue, consensus, and non-confrontation—embodies this principle.
When leaders discuss South China Sea tensions, Asean deliberately desecuritises the issue. It avoids dramatizing it as an existential war risk, choosing instead to handle it through legal, diplomatic, and institutional means.
The same applies to cyber threats, trafficking, or even the Rohingya crisis—Asean turns potential flashpoints into managed processes rather than militarized confrontations.
This preference for quiet diplomacy and preventive dialogue is not weakness; it is strategic.
It prevents external powers from exploiting divisions while preserving regional autonomy—a hallmark of Buzan’s constructivist logic, where how issues are framed determines whether they escalate or resolve.
Comprehensive security and human resilience
Asean’s leaders have consistently emphasised “comprehensive security”—a term that captures Buzan’s multi-sectoral vision. It acknowledges that regional peace depends as much on economic resilience and environmental stewardship as on defence spending.
The Asean Outlook on the Indo-Pacific (AOIP), for instance, redefines the Indo-Pacific not as a military theatre but as a space for cooperation.
Similarly, Asean’s climate initiatives and digital governance frameworks recognize that cybersecurity and sustainability are no less vital to survival than territorial integrity.
This balance between sovereignty and solidarity reflects Asean’s genius: it adapts to the shifting nature of threats without abandoning its core principles.
In Buzan’s terms, Asean maintains a “regional security community” that privileges process over coercion and trust over threat perception.
The enduring relevance of the Copenhagen School
Critics often call Asean indecisive, but this misunderstands its method. The Asean way—of dialogue, consensus, and comity—is not paralysis but institutionalised desecuritisation.
It is the ability to contain conflict through words, not weapons. It recognises that in South-east Asia’s complex mosaic of histories and hierarchies, the loudest voice is seldom the wisest.
Barry Buzan’s framework reminds us that security is about perception as much as power.
The summits in Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, or Gyeongju succeed not by producing hard treaties but by stabilising expectations, reducing fear, and keeping communication open.
That is the essence of a Comprehensive Security Framework: one that integrates economics, environment, and identity into a single conversation on peace.
Conclusion: Asean’s quiet power
In an age of great-power rivalry and global volatility, Asean’s model of comprehensive, regional, and desecuritised security may be the most pragmatic blueprint for peace.
The Copenhagen School helps explain why. It captures the spirit of a region that has learned—through history and humility—that real security is not achieved by confrontation but by constant consultation.
Asean’s summits, therefore, are not mere gatherings. They are a living experiment in how to build security without an arms race, trust without coercion, and cooperation without domination. Barry Buzan gave the theory. Asean gives it life.
* Phar Kim Beng is professor of Asean Studies and Director, Institute of International and Asean Studies (IINTAS), IIUM.
