HOW DO WE TRACK DOWN DISASTER VICTIMS IN REMOTE AREAS?
HOW DO WE TRACK DOWN DISASTER VICTIMS IN REMOTE AREAS?
In our urban centres, disaster-victims can often be found with relative speed: the roads, addresses and communications are more or less in place, and rescue teams know where to look. In remote areas, however – mountain villages, far-flung barangays, communities cut off after storms and landslides – the challenge is far greater. And that leads to the question: How do we track down disaster victims in these remote, hard-to-reach zones?
The promise of technology
Today, a host of modern tools are available: remote sensing, GIS, GPS, and increasingly, AI-powered localisation systems. Put simply:
Remote sensing: satellites and drones can scan large swathes of land, detect terrain changes, collapsed structures, heat signatures or other signs of human presence.
GIS (Geographic Information Systems): integrates spatial data (maps, terrain, infrastructure) with reports and sensor inputs so that responders can visualise where victims might be stranded.
GPS: tracks the location of mobile phones or GPS-enabled devices; rescue teams use it to coordinate and pinpoint distress signals.
Advanced techniques: for example, RSSI-based localisation (using signal strength from mobile/wearable devices corrected by machine learning), sensor networks/IoT devices in the field, and AI that fuses thermal imaging, acoustic sensors and mobile signals to prioritise search zones.
All of these raise the possibility of finding survivors even when roads are gone, towers have collapsed or communication is down.
But are we really using them?
I ask because the tools may well exist within our government – via the military, the police, and our disaster-response units. Yet having them is only half the battle. The bigger question is: How do we harness them? How do we mobilise the people who have access to these tools? Because what good is a satellite scan if we don’t know who we’re looking for, or where they exactly are?
The crucial missing piece: local data
This is why, in my view, we need robust barangay-based databases. We need to always know:
Who lives in every barangay (names, numbers, vulnerable households)
Where the households are (addresses, GPS coordinates if possible)
Which households already live in known danger zones – storm-prone, landslide-prone, flood-prone.
It may well be that government agencies already hold many of these datasets. But whether they’re consolidated, up-to-date and integrated into the search-and-rescue frameworks is another question. Because in a calamity, what you need is data + technology + coordination.
How it all comes together
Imagine this workflow: After a typhoon sweeps through a remote region, drones fly over the area and produce imagery; GIS maps are updated to show collapsed bridges, flooded terrain, cut-off roads. At the same time, pre-existing barangay databases show, for example, 120 households in Barangay X with 10 tagged as “high-risk (elderly, mobility-impaired)”. Mobile phones or wearable devices register no movement. Search teams, using GPS coordinates and RSSI logic, are dispatched to likely zones. Locals with CB/VHF/UHF radios coordinate communications where cell towers are down. The result: faster, more targeted rescue.
Mobilising radio operators
Speaking of radios: when cell infrastructure is destroyed, CB/VHF/UHF radio owners become critical. They work without internet or cell service, can connect barangay-to-barangay, and many already have the skills and networks. Here’s how we might bring them into the disaster-response fold:
Map all active radio operators through ham clubs, LGU registries, civic associations.
Provide licensing support, training, and incentives (e.g., fuel stipends, gear upgrades) to those who commit to disaster roles.
Conduct joint drills involving LGUs, uniformed services and NGOs; assign roles (relay stations, mobile scouts, shelter communicators).
Develop SOPs: fallback frequencies, designated call signs, message formats for emergencies.
Equip barangays with solar-powered base stations, handheld radios, mesh Wi-Fi or satellite backups for redundancy.
Volunteers: the heartbeat of the response
The good news: We already have the legal and institutional frameworks for volunteer mobilization. For example, the Philippine Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Act of 2010 recognises the participation of civil society, volunteers and local communities in disaster risk reduction.
Studies show that LGUs and volunteers cooperate — but the relationship requires structure, support and coordination. What we need to ask ourselves: Are we fully tapping volunteers, especially in remote barangays? Are they integrated into the tech-driven systems and databases?
My suggestions
Here are some steps I believe we must take:
Audit the tools: Confirm which technology (satellite imagery, drones, GPS trackers, sensor-networks) is already available to which agencies (military, police, DRRM offices).
Build the database backbone: At barangay level create/verify registries of residents, their location, special-needs profiles, hazard-exposure status.
Link the data to the tech: Ensure that the databases feed into GIS platforms, drone flight planning, rescue-deployment software.
Empower local networks: Train radio-operators, map them, integrate them into the communication chain when digital networks fail.
Strengthen coordination: Ensure all government agencies, LGUs, volunteers and civic organisations operate under shared SOPs, interoperable systems and clear roles.
Drill and refine: Conduct regular exercises in realistic remote-area scenarios, test the tech, test the volunteers, test the communication backup. After each exercise, debrief and update the system.
Final thoughts: the human factor
Technology is only as good as the people who use it and the data that feeds it. You could have the most advanced satellite, drone and AI system – but if you don’t know who you’re looking for, or where, or the local radio-operator doesn’t know the protocol, then you may still fail to reach victims in time. And in remote terrain, every minute counts.
In the end: tracking down disaster victims in remote areas isn’t just a tech problem—it’s a data-problem, a coordination-problem and a community-engagement problem. As we face more intense storms, landslides and infrastructure-failures, we must ensure that our systems, our volunteers and our technologies are ready—and working together.
So I’ll leave you with the question: Are we truly ready? The tools may exist, the laws may be in place—but are all the gears turning in sync?
Let’s hope we are—but let’s also keep pushing until we are.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-13-2026
