"India is a country which is hit the hardest by disasters. We are ranked number three on this list of recorded incidents of disasters after the US and China. All that I am trying to say is that disasters are a very very regular phenomenon in terms of intensity and frequency (in India) and that is why India is going to be a response-based country for another 5-10 years," NDRF Director General O P Singh said during the Force's annual press conference here.
"We are learning a lot from disasters and hence we are trying to prepare ourselves better," he said, adding the force has sent proposals worth Rs 58 crore to the government to procure some smart gadgets.
Singh said the Force is looking to procure sharp snake-eye cameras which can smartly slip into crevices and small openings in rubble to see and find out people who are trapped inside.
The Force will also obtain inflatable LED balloon lights which can light up crammed and dark areas like mines and collapsed tunnels in case a rescue operation has to be launched. A ground sensor radar which can detect life and activities 20 metres deep into rubble and a 'pneumatic shoring system' will be purchased to hold the falling structure and ensure the safety of rescue teams that enter a collapsed structure.
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The NDRF is also testing two smart equipments, one for
de-contamination of an area affected by a chemical, biological or radiological attack and the other is a see-through wall detector which can relay signals about the presence of any person behind a wall from 20 metres.
"Getting new technical equipments is our index for success in the coming days," the DG Singh said.
He quoted reports to say India spends USD 9.8 billion (about Rs 64,680 crore) every year to combat disasters in various states in challenging geographical features and terrains.
The NDRF, in 2015-16 financial year, also procured 21 new types of equipments worth Rs 42 crore, he said.
Singh said the Force is making good use of social media to reach out to victims of such disasters and it did some successful reach out in this regard by using platforms like Twitter, email, Whatsapp and Facebook during the recent floods in Chennai.
However, he said, the prerogative to call in NDRF lies with various state governments and the actual response by its teams depends on prevailing traffic and other situations.
"It has to be mentioned that we are not the first responders. We are requisitioned when a state government asks the Centre," he said.
The NDRF, Singh said, is also providing psychological training to its personnel who come back after energy draining rescue operations where they have to see bodies and distress.
Singh said the Force, which has 11 operational bases in the country, is also looking to have a dedicated air connectivity through the military aircrafts of the Indian Air Force.
Talking about cooperation in this area amongst SAARC countries, the DG said a unified disaster response force of these neighbouring countries "may fructify in the next 4-5 years."
We are working in this direction and recently we had the first-ever joint exercise between the SAARC countries in Delhi, he said.
The Force said during the year, it undertook 168 relief and rescue operations and rescued over 51,000 people including a major operation when its teams were sent to Nepal in the aftermath of a powerful earthquake that struck the Himalayan nation.