Wednesday 17 December 2014

Typhoon Hagupit deals double blow to communities struggling to recover from Haiyan

Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.

 The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.

Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions (photo above) on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.

Many residents moved to evacuation centres to shelter from the typhoon, especially people in small coastal villages in the likely path of the typhoon.

Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.


According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.



 
amilies made homeless by Typhoon Hagupit pose beside the sign for the school where they were evacuated to shelter from the storm. The small coastal town was in the path of the typhoon, which made landfall in early December. Kate Marshall/IFRC - See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.FiGN0BEz.dpuf
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land. - See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.FiGN0BEz.dpuf
Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC - See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.FiGN0BEz.dpuf

Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC - See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.FiGN0BEz.dpuf

Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC - See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.FiGN0BEz.dpuBased on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land


Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.

Published:
16 December 2014 21:39 CET
Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC

By Kate Marshall, IFRC
Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.
- See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.IJWZ8eAG.dpuf
Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.

Typhoon Hagupit deals double blow to communities struggling to recover from Haiyan

Published: 16 December 2014 21:39 CET
Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC

By Kate Marshall, IFRC
Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.
- See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.IJWZ8eAG.dpuf

Typhoon Hagupit deals double blow to communities struggling to recover from Haiyan

Published: 16 December 2014 21:39 CET
Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC

By Kate Marshall, IFRC
Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.
- See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.IJWZ8eAG.dpuf

Typhoon Hagupit deals double blow to communities struggling to recover from Haiyan

Published: 16 December 2014 21:39 CET
Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC

By Kate Marshall, IFRC
Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.
- See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.IJWZ8eAG.dpuf

Typhoon Hagupit deals double blow to communities struggling to recover from Haiyan

Published: 16 December 2014 21:39 CET
Representatives from the Philippine Red Cross rapid assessment team from Catarman chapter, update chairman Richard Gordon and secretary-general Gwen Pang on their findings after Typhoon Hagupit lashed the provincial capital. Kate Marshall/IFRC

By Kate Marshall, IFRC
Since Typhoon Hagupit struck the Philippines just over a week ago, the Philippine Red Cross has had three rapid response teams on the ground to assess the impact on the worst affected areas, including the easternmost island group of Samar where the typhoon first made landfall.
Initial reports indicate that overall damage from Typhoon Hagupit was not as bad as first feared, but in parts of Samar – still bearing the scars of Typhoon Haiyan – the picture is very different. Families grappling with high poverty rates are struggling to recover, especially in communities along the coast and in isolated mountain pockets. The effects of a protracted armed conflict in some parts of Samar exacerbate their plight.
Based on government figures, nearly one-third of the 3.85 million population affected by Hagupit live in Samar.
The Philippine Red Cross has so far provided more than 44,000 hot meals, 7,900 food packs and more than 51,000 litres of drinking water, as well as blankets, mats and other non-food items. Last week, it dispatched a convoy loaded with food and basic items as well as ambulances, water tankers and fuel trucks to the Bicol and Samar regions.
Last week Richard Gordon and Gwendolyn Pang, the chairman and secretary-general of the Philippine Red Cross, and Kari Isomaa, the IFRC’s Head of Delegation in the Philippines, were taken to see conditions on the ground and hear first-hand reports from staff and volunteers in Catarman, provincial capital of Northern Samar, followed by visits to Dolores and Borongan in Eastern Samar. A day earlier, a joint team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Philippine Red Cross also conducted an aerial assessment of remote areas in Northern Samar; two other ICRC teams covered Eastern and Samar province by land.
Food crops have been badly affected. Rice fields where new seedlings had been planted weeks before were washed away and banana trees flattened. Locals have erected signs saying ‘Help us’ along the side of the road and many people are making do with what little they have left in the way of food and shelter.
Shelter and food needs also remain in many mountainous areas that experienced flash flooding from heavy rain. The rain turned into rivers of mud as it coursed down the mountainside, affecting many communities in its path. Mr Gordon warned that some of these areas will take time to be fully assessed, either because a bridge has been destroyed or because they are in remote valleys that can take days to reach by foot.
According to the Government there are still about 172,000 people receiving some kind of help either inside or outside an evacuation centre. Most of them are in Samar.
In Dolores, Gordon and Pang stopped to talk to representatives of families who were pre-emptively evacuated to the local elementary school. Concerned parents told the Philippine Red Cross leaders they had been told to leave so classes could resume but they had no choice but to remain in the overcrowded school as Hagupit had destroyed their homes.
For Samar, tents and shelter repair items from Philippine Red Cross stock are being dispatched with other emergency supplies including sleeping kits, tarpaulins, hygiene kits and jerry cans.
The ICRC is providing 150 tonnes of rice and sardines, as well as water-treatment equipment to the Philippine Red Cross for distribution to affected families in the coastal areas of Northern and Eastern Samar.
- See more at: http://www.ifrc.org/en/news-and-media/news-stories/asia-pacific/philippines/typhoon-hagupit-deals-double-blow-to-communities-struggling-to-recover-from-haiyan-67778/#sthash.IJWZ8eAG.dpuf

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