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A state of emergency is a governmental declaration that may suspend certain normal functions of government or
may work to alert citizens to alter their normal behaviors or to order government agencies to implement their emergency
preparedness plans. It can also be used as the rationale for suspending civil liberties; such declarations come during time of natural disaster or during periods of civil unrest
or a declaration of war.
In some countries, the state of emergency and its effects on civil liberties are regulated by the constitution or a law that limits the powers that may be invoked
during an emergency or rights suspended. An example can be found in Art. 2-B of the Executive Law of New York state.
In the United States a federal declaration of a state of emergency
allows the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) to excercise its power to deal with emergency situations; federal funds also become available to
areas that are declared to be in a state of emergency.
In the United Kingdom the monarch may declare a state of emergency by Royal Proclamation. While the emergency lasts temporary legislation may be introduced by
virtue of Orders in Council. As of January 2004 legislation is
being prepared to update these powers.
In Spain (estado de emergencia in Spanish) there are three degrees of
state of emergency, namely alerta (alarm), excepción (exception?) and sitio (siege). They are
named by the constitution, which limits
which rights may be suspended, but regulated by the "Ley Orgánica 4/1981" (see external link).
Recent examples include:
- April 2004 in Ryongchon, North Korea following a major explosion
- November 2003 in Georgia, following weeks of civil
unrest.
- August 2003 in Michigan, Ohio, New York, US and Ontario, Canada, in response to the 2003 U.S.-Canada blackout
- August 2003 in the Philippines
- August 2003 in Portugal, in response to forest fires
- July 2003 in Mexico, in response to a West Nile virus outbreak (estado de emergencia)
- May 2003 in Peru (estado de excepción or estado de sitio depending on
the source)
- April 2003 in Mato Grosso, Brasil, in response to torrential rainfall (estado de emergência)
- March 2003 in Serbia after assassination of Zoran Djindjic (vanredno stanje)
- September 2002 in Moscow, Russia, in
response to smoke pollution from forest fires
- July 2002 in Paraguay (estado de excepción)
- December 2001 in Argentina (estado de sitio), in response to public
unrest
- November 2001 in Nepal, in response to increased guerrilla activity
- September 2001 in the USA, in response to the September 11, 2001 attacks
- March 1992 in Moldavia, in response to ethnic conflict between Romanian and Russian minorities
See also:
External links
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