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He said more than 300 natural disasters around the world last year caused more than $180 billion in damage. "The linkages between disaster risk, poverty and climate change ... form a particularly tightly interlocked group of global challenges," the report said. The lead author, Andrew Maskrey, acknowledged it was impossible to halt the migration to cities by people seeking work. "But there are ways to alleviate the conditions of intense poverty if leaders choose to take the steps," he said. "It's all about whether there is the political will." Maskrey noted initiatives in several cities, including Bogota, Columbia, and Karachi, Pakistan, to try to improve conditions in squatter settlements and shantytowns. "There are all these factors coming together: urban poverty, climate change, migration to cities from rural areas," he said. "We're saying: This is bringing about a situation of impending catastrophes, but there's also something we can do about it to lower the risks."
[Associated
Press;
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