Death,
hunger and looting: Typhoon-ravaged Philippines declares state of
national calamity
In
the wake of Typhoon Haiyan, which left thousands dead and many more
displaced and survivors battling for survival amid devastation and
chaos, the Philippines has declared a state of national calamity to
help restore order to the reeling nation.
RT,
11
November, 2013
In
a primetime television speech delivered Monday, President Benigno
Aquino said: "We declare a state of national calamity to hasten
the action of the government to rescue, provide help and rehabilitate
the provinces affected by [Haiyan]."
The declaration will
also help the government control the prices of staple goods, with
many in the country reduced to begging for food and water. Aquino
called for patience as the scope of the damage frustrated efforts to
coordinate relief operations.
“The extent of the
devastation brought us back to a situation where information was
passed on from one person to another. There was no television, radio
and internet,” he said.
Noting how the devastation reduced people to word-of-mouth
communication, Aquino vowed help would arrive in the coming days.
"My message: Staying calm, prayer, and helping
each other are what will lift us from this challenge,"
he said.
A
body of a dead man is seen at the bay of Tacloban, eastern island of
Leyte on November 10, 2013.(AFP Photo / Noel Celis)
Counting
the dead, accounting for the missing
Three
days after the typhoon made landfall, authorities are struggling to
come to grips with the aftermath of one of the strongest typhoons
ever recorded.
Forty-one of the country’s 80 provinces were
affected, with Secretary to the Cabinet Rene Almendras saying that in
the worst affected areas, the destruction had been “total.”
An
estimated 10,000 people are believed to have been killed in Tacloban
– a city of over 200,000 southeast of the capital, Manila – which
bore the brunt of the storm.
Flattened by massive waves and battered
by winds reaching speeds up to 235 miles an hour, Tacloban remains
littered by the dead, some covered with tarps, others left lying out
in the open with looks of horror reportedly etched on their faces. The United Nations said officials in Tacloban had seen one mass grave
of 300 to 500 bodies, Reuters reported. Relief workers fear that
ground water may be contaminated by decaying bodies, and fears are
growing of a massive public health crisis.
The city has also
been gripped by looting, with authorities dispatching police and
military reinforcements to restore order. A Philippine Red Cross
truck carrying medical supplies was reportedly attacked while heading
to the city. Manila has said it will not hesitate in deploying more
police officers if necessary. Locals have already reportedly formed
local militias and have promised to shoot looters to protect their
property.
Residents
watch as others throw looted goods from a warehouse in the town of
Guiuan, Eastern Samar province in the central Philippines on November
11, 2013.(Reuters / Ted Aljibe)
So
far, Tacloban is relying almost entirely for supplies and evacuation
on just three military transport planes flying from nearby Cebu.
Aquino said 24,000 family food packs had been distributed in Tacloban
on Sunday, while 18.7 billion pesos ($430 million) had been set aside
from calamity funds, contingency funds, and savings for places hit by
Haiyan. He said 22 foreign countries had provided aid.
Around
2,000 people, meanwhile, remain missing in the seaside town of Basely
alone, which is located about 10 kilometers across a bay from
Tacloban. Other coastal areas caught on Haiyan's path are likely to
have suffered similar levels of destruction, though efforts to survey
the damage or make a full account of the dead have been severely
dampened.
The country’s military has thus far only
been able to confirm 942 deaths, with military spokesman Lt. Jim
Alagao telling AP that another 275 people were officially reported
missing.
The Red Cross earlier confirmed that 1,200 people had been
killed.
Both the official and unofficial death tolls are likely
climb once officials reach more remote areas. Guiuan, a town of
40,000 in eastern Samar province, was largely decimated, although it
does not figure into the casualty tabulations.
Cargo
ships washed ashore are seen four days after super typhoon Haiyan hit
Anibong town, Tacloban city, central Philippines November 11,
2013.(Reuters / Romeo Ranoco
"The
only reason why we have no reports of casualties up to now is that
communications systems ... are down,"
Colonel John Sanchez posted on the Philippines Armed Forces’
Facebook page, Reuters reported.
Farther
west on the on the islands of Cebu and Panay, which also suffered
direct hits from the typhoon, authorities have been hampered in their
ability to assess the devastation.
Overall,
more than 600,000 people were displaced by the storm across the
country, with some lacking access to basic amenities such as food,
water or medicine, the UN says.
This
aerial photo shows destroyed houses along the water in the town of
Guiuan in Eastern Samar province in the central Philippines on
November 11, 2013 only days after Super Typhoon Haiyan devastated the
town on November 8. (AFP Photo/Ted Aljibe)
Massively
disrupted transportation and communications links have equally
affected the ability for authorities to recover the dead and deliver
relief to affected areas. Thirty provinces remain without
electricity, and around half that number are having problems with
phone and Internet connections. Although telecommunication firms
believe service should be restored within days, restoring the
national power grid in its entirety could take up to two months.
American
military search-and-rescue helicopters, surveillance planes and
Marines headed towards the central Philippines on Sunday to survey
the devastation and assist survivors whose neighborhoods were
completely inundated.
President
Aquino said 21 other countries had provided aid, including Indonesia,
the UK, Japan, Singapore, New Zealand and Hungary.
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