Yolanda survivors desperate for aid

Agence France-Presse

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More than 10,000 may have been killed; authorities struggle to cope with the massive disaster

DECIMATED. Residents walk through debris and toppled power lines in Tacloban City, Leyte on November 10, 2013, three days after devastating Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) hit the city on November 8. AFP/Ted Aljibe

TACLOBAN CITY, Philippines – Survivors of a super typhoon that may have killed more than 10,000 people in the Philippines were growing increasingly desperate for aid Monday, November 11, as authorities struggled to cope with potentially the country’s worst recorded natural disaster.

As the sheer scale of the devastation slowly became clear, rescue workers appeared overwhelmed in their efforts to help countless survivors of Super Typhoon Yolanda (international codename Haiyan), which sent tsunami-like waves and merciless winds rampaging across a huge chunk of the archipelago on Friday, November 9.

Hundreds of police and soldiers were deployed to contain looters in Tacloban, the devastated provincial capital of Leyte, while the United States announced it had responded to a Philippine government appeal and was sending military help.

“Tacloban is totally destroyed. Some people are losing their minds from hunger or from losing their families,” high school teacher Andrew Pomeda, 36, told Agence France-Presse on Sunday, November 10, warning of the increasing desperation of survivors.

“People are becoming violent. They are looting business establishments, the malls, just to find food, rice and milk…. I am afraid that in one week, people will be killing from hunger.” (READ: Tormented typhoon victims scour for food)

President Benigno Aquino III said while visiting Tacloban on Sunday that looting had become a major concern, after only 20 officers out of the city’s 390-strong police force turned up for work. (READ: Aquino asked to declare ‘martial law’ in Tacloban)

“So we will send about 300 police and soldiers to take their place and bring back peace and order,” he said.

Haiyan, which moved out of the Philippines and into the South China Sea on Saturday, made landfall in Vietnam early Monday, US meteorologists said.

The US Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) said in an update at 2100 GMT the storm “is currently making landfall” approximately 97 miles (156 kilometers) east south-east of the capital Hanoi, with sustained winds of 75 miles (120 km) per hour.

The typhoon had weakened at sea, striking Vietnam as the equivalent of a category-one hurricane – the weakest on the one-to-five Saffir-Simpson wind-speed scale.

Even so, more than 600,000 people were evacuated, with flooding and heavy rain expected.

The Vietnamese government website said Sunday that five people had died while preparing for the storm.

Farther north, six members of a cargo boat were also missing off the Chinese province of Hainan, state media in China reported.

‘Reaching them is difficult’

Up to four million children could be affected by the disaster, the United Nations Children’s Fund warned Sunday.

“We are rushing to get critical supplies to children who are bearing the brunt of this crisis,” said UNICEF Philippines representative Tomoo Hozumi.

“Reaching the worst-affected areas is very difficult,” he said. “But we are working around the clock.”

Authorities were struggling to understand the sheer magnitude of the disaster, let alone react to it, with the regional police chief for Leyte saying initial government estimates showed 10,000 people were believed to have died in that province alone.

Chief Superintendent Elmer Soria told reporters in Tacloban that the typhoon destroyed up to 80 percent of the structures in its path.

On the neighboring island of Samar, a local disaster chief said 300 people were killed in the small town of Basey.

He added another 2,000 were missing there and elsewhere on Samar, which was one of the first areas hit when Yolanda swept in from the Pacific Ocean as a category-five storm with maximum sustained winds of 315 km (195 miles) an hour, according to the JTWC.

Dozens more people were confirmed killed in other flattened towns and cities across a 600-km stretch of islands through the central Philippines.

As the scale of the disaster began to emerge, an international aid effort ratcheted up.

In Washington, the Pentagon announced that US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel had responded to a request from the Philippines for military aid and directed the US Pacific Command to deploy resources.

President Barack Obama said he was “deeply saddened” and added that Washington was “ready to further assist the government’s relief and recovery efforts.”

UN leader Ban Ki-moon also promised that humanitarian agencies would “respond rapidly to help people in need”, while the European Commission said it would give three million euros ($4 million) to help relief efforts.

British Prime Minister David Cameron called Aquino to extend his sympathy, and offered an emergency support package worth six million pounds ($9.6 million). (READ: After Yolanda, int’l community offers sympathy, aid)

Deadliest natural disaster

The Philippines endures a seemingly never-ending pattern of deadly typhoons, earthquakes, volcano eruptions and other natural disasters.

It is located along a typhoon belt and the so-called Ring of Fire, a vast Pacific region where many of Earth’s earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.

But if the death toll of more than 10,000 is correct, Yolanda would be the deadliest natural disaster ever recorded in the country, worse than the 1976 Moro Gulf tsunami that killed between 5,000 and 8,000 people.

Yolanda’s maximum sustained wind speeds made it the strongest typhoon in the world this year, and one of the most powerful ever recorded.

Witnesses in Tacloban recalled waves up to 5 meters (16 feet) high surging inland. Aerial photos showed entire neighborhoods destroyed, with trees and buildings flattened by storm surge.

The Philippines country director of the World Food Programme, Praveen Agrawal, who visited Tacloban, said the devastation resembled that of a tsunami.

“All the trees are bent over, the bark has been stripped off, the houses have been damaged. In many cases they have collapsed,” he told Agence France-Presse.

“The huge waves came again and again, flushing us out on the street and washing away our homes,” Mirasol Saoyi, 27, told Agence France-Presse near Tacloban’s seaside sports stadium, where thousands of people gathered.

“My husband tied us together, but still we got separated among the debris. I saw many people drowning, screaming and going under…. I haven’t found my husband.” – Rappler.com


Help the victims of Typhoon Yolanda (international codename: Haiyan). Visit Rappler’s list of ongoing relief operations in your area. Tell us about your relief and recovery initiatives, emailmove.ph@rappler.com or tweet us @moveph.

Visit rappler.com/typhoon-yolanda for the latest updates on Typhoon Yolanda.


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