Computer users can now zoom down into displacement camps in Darfur, Chad, Iraq, Colombia and elsewhere on Earth in a new on-line programme unveiled Tuesday by Internet search giant Google and the United Nations refugee agency.
Google Earth Outreach gives the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian agencies the ability to use Google Earth and Maps to graphically bring home their work in some of the world’s most remote areas.
The online visitor can descend from the ‘macro-view’ over a refugee camp to examine schools, water points and other infrastructure, or can view videos, background on the UNHCR and other actors, maps and other elements enriched with pop-up information.
NYTTIGT VÆRKTØJ
UNHCR’s technical experts said that as it grows, the Google Earth programme will allow the agency and its humanitarian partners to build and share with each other a visual, geographic record of the joint efforts on the ground.
Such shared records could include, they said, cross-border mapping of population flows as well as the location of displaced persons in relation to their places of origin, to be used for logistical planning for repatriation operations, for example.
According to UNHCR, 350 million people around the world have already downloaded Google Earth, which allows viewers to zoom in on localities from satellite eye’s view.
Mere om Google Earth Outreach: http://earth.google.ch/outreach
Kilde: www.un.org