Christmas in mud as rain pelts Typhoon Yolanda zone
I have been talking to my Red Cross friends and colleagues in Tacloban city and in other eastern islands affected by the incredibly destructive Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) and they describe the heavy rains for the past three days and how the people are living in atrocious condition.
The Philippine Red Cross (PRC) is continuing large scale relief distributions of food parcels, NFI and shelter materials, with support from IFRC, ICRC and various partner national societies. As of 24 December, up to 197,793 food parcels (reaching approx. 988,965 people) and 52,773 tarpaulins have been distributed. Cash distribution to 58,000 of the worst affected families is underway. In Tacloban PRC health clinics have served 4,535 people in total. Other health activities carried out by the PRC Leyte chapter include blood dispensing, management of human remains, and support of the local authorities with mass immunization campaigns.
Management of human remains was a massive task carried out by PRC volunteers
I am working for the Swiss Red Cross and we have supported the PRC to provide shelter repair kits and corrugated iron sheets to 3000 families on Bantayan Island and provided quality Swiss made tents to IFRC. On Monday I go with my boss Beatrice Weber to Coron in northern Palawan where we are about to distribute 2000 shelter repair kits, 20,000 CI sheets and unconditional cash grants to over 2000 families.
I would like to share this article with you about the miserable conditions typhoon affected families had to endure over the Christmas holidays.
TACLOBAN CITY, Philippines – Survivors of the Philippines' deadliest typhoon spent a gloomy Christmas Day surrounded by mud Wednesday, December 25, as heavy rain drove many inside their flimsy shelters, dampening efforts at holiday cheer in the deeply devout nation.
Groups of children in plastic raincoats braved the incessant rain in the devastated central city of Tacloban, knocking on doors in trick-or-treat fashion and beseeching pedestrians for candies, coins and other Christmas presents.
But housewife Susan Scala sat glumly under a white tarpaulin in one of Tacloban's many tent cities for those made homeless by Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan). At a time when her family should be celebrating, all she could think of was her missing husband.
"Even if it's not Christmas I don't stop thinking about him," the mother of five said of her husband Oscar, a telephone utility worker believed lost at sea when giant waves whipped up by the November 8 storm swept away homes in the city's San Jose slum.
Like many of the city's survivors, the miserable weather made Scala nervous. "This incessant rain is scary. It reminds me of what happened (during the typhoon)," the 53-year-old said.
Yolanda left more than 6,100 people dead and nearly 2,000 others missing, many of them from Tacloban and nearby towns, in the storm-prone country's deadliest typhoon disaster.
About 4.4 million others were left homeless across the central islands and now live in tents provided by aid agencies or rough shacks fashioned by survivors from the wreckage of destroyed homes and fallen trees.
At the city's ruined Sagkahan fish port, 67-year-old widow Emiliana Aranza pulled sweets and shortbread from jars at her makeshift store outside her shanty to give to the children who knocked on her counter.
"It's a sad Christmas Day. We have lost our home and the government will not allow us to rebuild here as it's too close to the shore," she told Agence France-Presse.
But she said sharing what was left of her possessions had an uplifting effect.
"There are still a lot of reasons that we should be thankful to God," Aranza said, including the fact that her two adult children and their 13 sons and daughters, who now have to live together in the cramped shanty, survived the disaster.
"Because of the typhoon, members of my family are now tightly knit. Gone are the petty quarrels," she added.
Scala said her family ate a traditional midnight meal on Christmas Eve in keeping with tradition in the largely Catholic nation. But they had to make do with tinned sardines and steamed rice, part of the weekly aid rations from the government and humanitarian agencies.
For breakfast on Christmas Day, she said her family ate the previous night's leftovers and would have to make do with instant noodles for lunch.
She has no idea where she will get the money to build a new house or whether she will be able to send her two school-age children back to school.
The Papal Nuncio to the Philippines, Archbishop Giuseppe Pinto, acting as a representative for Pope Francis, celebrated Christmas mass in Tacloban and urged the faithful not to lose hope.
"Do not despair, do not be overcome by adversity... I now reassure you once again: the church will never forget you. We will never forget you," he told worshippers.
The Save the Children charity had planned to host an event with sports and art activities to cheer up about 300 children on Christmas in the storm-ravaged city of Ormoc, said program manager Reggie Aquino.
But local officials in the city 45 kilometers (28 miles) from Tacloban cancelled the event due to the rain.
Instead, the charity held the event in a tent for children in the nearby town of Kananga where there was just heavy drizzle.
In central Tacloban, Maria Meneses, 31, dived into a pile of garbage outside a department store, along with half a dozen or so other residents left impoverished by Yolanda.
"This is for my daughter," she said, showing a salvaged pack of two tiny candy-colored cake candles that she had spirited into her pink handbag.
"I was waiting for the store to open to buy batteries for my daughter's walkie-talkie toy and told myself, 'Why not, some of those items thrown in among the trash are still in good condition'."
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