SUMA, the Humanitarian Supply Management System,
Makes Novel Use of the Internet
El Salvador's National Emergency Committee (COEN) has activated
the country's national SUMA team, whose members are among the more than 2,000
professionals trained in Latin America and the Caribbean. The team is setting
up the SUMA system (www.disaster.info.desastres.net/SUMA)
at anticipated points of entry of international aid to sort, inventory and classify
incoming humanitarian relief. At the request of El Salvador's government, PAHO
and FUNDESUMA, the NGO that manages SUMA's logistical operations, sent a support
team from Costa Rica to help in what is expected to be a major operation.
The earthquake in El Salvador marks the first time SUMA has used
the Internet to alert disaster-stricken countries about what is on the way.
The Government of Colombia (whose national Red Cross Society helped to
create the SUMA system and has been one of SUMA's strongest supporters in the
Americas) has advised PAHO/WHO that they are using one of SUMA's specialized
modules--the warehouse module--to register donations being collected by the
Colombian Red Cross and Caracol, a local radio and TV station. Colombia will
use the Internet to forward detailed information about their shipment to El
Salvador's SUMA team, in advance of it's actual arrival.
Similarly, the National Emergency Commission in Honduras
(COPECO) has activated its national SUMA team to register data on emergency
supplies being collected at appointed locations, in coordination with the Red
Cross and the Fire Department. As the supplies are en route to the neighboring
country of El Salvador, Honduras' SUMA team also will have sent an advance report
by Internet. This pattern of sending information on donations before the supplies
actually arrive, using SUMA's standard software and criteria for classifying
and assigning priorities to the supplies, will greatly aid the recipient country
by allowing them to get the most important and urgently needed aid to those
who need it quickly.
FUNDESUMA is also mobilizing additional volunteers from the Dominican
Republic, Venezuela, Honduras, Nicaragua, Colombia and Panama to support the
team in El Salvador. The Governments of Honduras and Peru have also included
SUMA trained experts in their bilateral assistance to El Salvador.