Typhoon Haiyan: Philippines Destruction 'Absolute Bedlam'
Posted by Muhammad Irfan on Monday, November 18, 2013 with No comments
We are so very hungry and thirsty'' one survivor told the BBC's Jon Donnison in Tacloban |
The head of the Red Cross in the Philippines has described the devastation caused by Typhoon Haiyan as "absolute bedlam".
Officials estimate up to 10,000 people have died in Tacloban city and elsewhere. Hundreds of thousands of people are displaced.
Rescue efforts are being hindered by damage to roads and airports.
The storm has now made landfall in north Vietnam, near the Chinese border, but has weakened to a tropical storm.
One of the most powerful storms on record to make landfall,
Haiyan - named "Yolanda" by Filipino authorities - barrelled into the
eastern coastal provinces of Leyte and Samar on Friday.
It then headed west, sweeping through six central Philippine islands.
Supplies
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Tacloban has been flattened. Driving down the main high street, hardly a single building is left standing.
People say this town was hit by a wall of water when the typhoon hit on Friday. There is the stench of rotting corpses. Driving in from the airport, we saw scores of bodies lying by the roadside. For three days they have been there, with no one to bury them.
People are desperate for food, clean water and shelter. At the badly battered airport, a makeshift hospital has been set up. We saw two young women giving birth, laid out among the debris.
Aid is getting in, but slowly. And this is just one town, in one province. No-one knows the full extent of the devastation elsewhere.
More than nine million people
have been affected in the Philippines. Many are now struggling to
survive without food, shelter or clean drinking water.
A picture is slowly emerging of the full damage wrought by the storm:
- The exposed easterly town of Guiuan, Samar province - population 40,000 - is said to be largely destroyed
- Tacloban, Leyte province, was largely flattened by a massive storm surge and scores of corpses are piled by the roadside, leaving a stench in the air as they rot, say correspondents. Hundreds of people have gathered at the airport desperate for food and water, others trying to get a flight out
- Disaster worker Dennis Chong told the BBC that assessments in the far north of Cebu province had shown some towns had suffered "80-90% damage"
- Baco, a city of 35,000 in Oriental Mindoro province, was 80% under water, the UN said.
A huge international relief effort is under way, but
rescue workers have struggled to reach some towns and villages cut off
since the storm.
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Kevin Vacca US missionary, Maya, northern CebuPeople are not receiving food or water... I'm worried it may become a mob situation - we need the military to get there as soon as possible”
"There's an awful lot of
casualties, a lot of people dead all over the place, a lot of
destruction," Richard Gordon, head of the Philippine Red Cross, told the
BBC.
"It's absolute bedlam right now, but hopefully it will turn out better as more and more supplies get into the area."
"The situation is bad: the devastation has been significant.
In some cases the devastation has been total," Secretary to the Cabinet
Rene Almendras told a news conference.
Mr Gordon said roads had now been cleared to allow relief
workers to get to some of the hardest hit areas, but that they expected
to find many more casualties.
"It's only now that they were able to get in and we're
beginning just to bring in the necessary food items... as well as water
and other things that they need."
Forecasters predicted a tropical depression would move into
the south and central Philippines on Tuesday, potentially bringing heavy
rains that would further hamper relief efforts.
Jane Cocking, the humanitarian director for Oxfam, said her
colleagues witnessed "complete devastation... entire parts of the
coastline just disappeared, and sizable trees just bent over and [were]
thrown about like matchsticks."
A Philippine military spokesman was quoted as saying on
Monday that 942 people had died in the typhoon's aftermath, though it is
clear the official death toll will rise significantly.
Almost 630,000 people have been reported displaced.
'Unprecedented' storm
Some are questioning what more authorities could have done to
prepare for this, just the latest in a string of disasters to hit the
nation of more than 7,000 islands.
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Senen Mangalile Philippines Consul General to the UKThe world has not seen a storm like this before”
Authorities had evacuated
hundreds of thousands of people before the typhoon arrived, but many
evacuation centres - schools, churches and government buildings - proved
unable to withstand the winds and storm surges.
Many survivors in stricken areas heeded official urgings to
stockpile supplies - but found that they were washed away along with the
rest of their possessions.
Haiyan brought sustained winds of 235km/h (147mph), with
gusts of 275 km/h (170 mph), with waves as high as 15m (45ft), bringing
up to 400mm (15.75 inches) of rain in places.
"The world has not seen a storm like this before," said Senen Mangalile, the Philippines Consul General to the UK.
Steven Godby, a disaster management expert at Nottingham
Trent University, told the BBC the typhoon was "probably the most
intense and strongest storm of this type to make landfall".
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This list is not comprehensiveInternational aid
- Australia: Aus$10m ($9.4m; £5.8m), including medical personnel
- China: $200,000 (£125,000)
- European Commission: 3m euros (£2.5m; $4m)
- Indonesia: Aircraft, personnel, drinking water, food, generators, medicine
- Japan: 25 emergency medical personnel
- New Zealand: NZ$2.15m (£1.1m)
- Taiwan: $200,000
- UK: £6m ($9.6m) non-food aid package
- UN World Food Programme: an initial $2m
- US: 90 marines and sailors; emergency food, water, shelter and hygiene materials
- Vietnam: $100,000
"We've seen storms like this
perhaps on rare occasions that have had that kind of intensity out at
sea but for it to come ashore with that kind of strength is almost
unprecedented," Dr Godby said.
Officials said looting was widespread and order was proving
difficult to enforce, but correspondents say many ordinary people are
simply scavenging for the food and water needed to survive.
Hundreds of soldiers have been deployed to try to restore
order in Tacloban, but one resident told AFP that people were becoming
violent out of desperation.
"I am afraid that in one week, people will be killing from hunger," secondary school teacher Andrew Pomeda, 36, said on Sunday.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino said there was a
possibility that martial law or a state of emergency would be declared
in the city.
In some areas, the dead are being buried in mass graves.
American military aircraft and ships are being deployed to
provide help. Aid is being flown into the only regional international
airport at Cebu, with relief efforts focusing on Tacloban.
Continue reading the main story
Deadly typhoons
- Sept 1937 Hong Kong typhoon - 11,000 dead
- Sept 1959 Typhoon Vera - deadliest to hit Japan, killing 5,238 people
- Aug 1975 Typhoon Nina - about 229,000 die in China after collapse of Banqiao dam
- Nov 1991 Typhoon Thelma - deadliest in the Philippines to date, killing 5-8,000
US President Barack Obama has issued a message saying he was "deeply saddened by the loss of life and extensive damage".
Other countries have also pledged millions of dollars in
assistance. Australia has approved $9m in humanitarian aid to the
Philippines, while New Zealand has pledged over $1m.
Kristalina Georgieva, the EU humanitarian aid commissioner,
said relief efforts would be guided by three priorities: to establish
access, then offer immediate aid, then shelter.
Typhoon Haiyan has now made landfall in Vietnam, near the
tourist destination of Ha Long Bay, with sustained winds of up to 140
km/h (85mph).
Some 600,000 people were evacuated in northern provinces of the country.
Are you in the Philippines? Have you been affected by the typhoon? Send us your comment using the form below.
Categories: INTERNASIONAL, PHILIPPINES