UN working with Philippines to respond to typhoon devastation
Philippines, 9 Nov 2013: A United Nations team arrived on Saturday in the city of
Tacloban in the Philippines to assess and respond to the damage caused by the super
typhoon Haiyan, which slammed the country since Friday.
The UN Disaster Coordination
Team (UNDAC) reported scenes of total devastation where Haiyan first struck, with
all roads from the airport to the town blocked and the only means of travelling being
by helicopter.
“The last time I saw something of this scale was in the aftermath
of the Indian Ocean Tsunami,” said the head of UNDAC, Sebastian Rhodes Stampa.
“This
is destruction on a massive scale. There are cars thrown like tumble weed and the
streets are strewn with debris.”
The UNDAC team said it is preparing the groundwork
for an inter-agency humanitarian assessment, but expressed concern that relief operations
will be “extremely difficult” due to the impassable roads.
Haiyan, known locally
as Yolanda, is one of the strongest storms ever recorded, hitting landfall with sustained
winds of 295 kilometres per hour (kph), placing it above the 252 (kph) threshold for
a Category 5 hurricane, the highest category on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind
scale.
The Philippines Red Cross said on Saturday it has received reports of
1,200 deaths in two areas hit by the typhoon, a drastic increase from the three reported
yesterday. The typhoon has passed over the Philippines and is expected to hit Viet
Nam later today.
Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in the Philippines,
Julie Hall, said the UN is working “very closely” with the Government and is ready
to respond in any way to the tragedy.
“We wish to extend our deepest sympathy
to the Government and the people of the Philippines who have been affected by this
devastating typhoon which appears to have caused significant damage across a large
tract of the Visayas.”
Haiyan is the third major crisis to hit the Philippines
in just two months. In October, the Bohol earthquake affected more than 3 million
people, triggering landslides engulfing entire homes, ripping apart bridges and tearing
down centuries-old churches. Seven cities in three different provinces were initially
affected. In September, tens of thousands were forcibly displaced by armed clashes
in Zamboanga City in the southern part of the country. Source: UN