Nov 212013
 

By Jason Gutierrez

TACLOBAN(AFP) Santo Nino church stands battered but tall in the ruins of its typhoon-shattered parish, a 124-year-old beacon of physical and spiritual sanctuary for a devout, traumatised community.

A priest (left) invites evacuees staying in the church after surviving Super Typhoon Haiyan, to attend Sunday mass inside the Redemptorist Church in Tacloban city, central Philippines November 17, 2013. The Philippines is facing up to an enormous rebuilding task from Typhoon Haiyan, which killed at least 3,681 people and left 1,186 missing, with many isolated communities yet to receive significant aid despite a massive international relief effort. (MNS photo)

A priest (left) invites evacuees staying in the church after surviving Super Typhoon Haiyan, to attend Sunday mass inside the Redemptorist Church in Tacloban city, central Philippines November 17, 2013. The Philippines is facing up to an enormous rebuilding task from Typhoon Haiyan, which killed at least 3,681 people and left 1,186 missing, with many isolated communities yet to receive significant aid despite a massive international relief effort. (MNS photo)

At the height of the super typhoon that laid the Philippine city of Tacloban to waste last week, 250 men, women and children were sheltering inside the walls of the Catholic church.

As the storm waters rose, Father Oliver Mazo, 37, said he led them to the cramped living quarters on the second floor.

“I blessed the room and we all huddled together,” Mazo told AFP.

“The wind was devastating, really terrible and we could hear trees falling and crashing against the walls. There was a lot of screaming,” he recalled.

“Fortunately, all those who were here were saved, and I believe what saved us is our prayer,” he added.

The Philippines is the Roman Catholic Church’s most important outpost in Asia, with Catholics making up nearly 80 percent of the country’s 100 million people.

In the aftermath of the storm that destroyed their homes, shattered their livelihoods, and left thousands dead, many in Tacloban have looked to the Church for solace.

As sunlight poured through the gaping holes of the storm-punctured roof, men and women laboured to clear the mud and debris strewn across the floor of the church.

They worked around parishioners kneeling and saying the rosary, praying for the souls of those who died and giving thanks for those who survived.

Mazo acknowledged that for some, the destruction wrought by the typhoon posed an enormous test of their faith.

“I tell people not to despair, because there is a reason this happened,” he said.

“We don’t question the will of God and it does not mean that those who perished were sinners, but it was simply their time,” he said.

Another parish priest Amadeo Alvero recalled the horror he witnessed as he moved around what was left of Tacloban in the immediate aftermath of the typhoon.

He saw bodies floating in the storm waters or tangled in the debris, horribly injured people with no prospect of any immediate medical care, and stunned survivors mute with shock and disbelief.

“I went around trying to bless the dead and dying. But there were just so many,” Alvero said.

“This kind of catastrophe pushes anyone to his spiritual and psychological limit, and it is no different for people here, especially the deeply religious who in their hearts believe that the good shall be saved,” he said.

Although most of the roof covering was ripped off by the 315 kilometre (195 mile) an hour winds that whipped across the central Philippines, the timbered lattice on which it rested remained largely in palace, casting a grid-like shadow onto the muddied, marble floor below.

The elevated altar and painted wall shrines were almost untouched, and their bright colours gleamed in the sunlight as the volunteers swept, mopped and cleared the debris.

Santo Nino has been the focus of the parish’s close-knit Catholic community for generations.

“I have been coming here everyday since I was little,” said Lucrecia Cinco, 75.

“There have been many family baptisms and weddings here. Every member of our family has a history with this church.”

Cinco and 10 family members, including five grandchildren, evacuated their home before the storm hit, but as the wind intensity grew they realized the shelter they had chosen was too weak and made their way to the church instead.

“Do I still believe in God? Yes. But I am left wondering why this has to happen to the good people here,” she said.

“I have seen many storms in my life, but nothing like this.”

Nov 192013
 
Typhoon survivors turn cave-dwellers

A member of the Belgian state rapid reaction unit, the Belgian First Aid and Support Team (B-FAST), carries tent poles at a makeshift hospital, jointly set up with German NGO International Search and Rescue (ISAR-Germany), for Typhoon Haiyan victims in the yard of the Metropolitan Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Palo, near Tacloban in central Philippines November 16, 2013. (MNS photo) MERCEDES, November 18, 2013 (AFP) – Victims who survived the Philippines’ super typhoon by huddling in a cave as a tsunami-like wave obliterated their community have now made it their home – reduced to Stone Age conditions with nowhere else to go. Manuel Isquierdo and his wife sought refuge in the limestone den as Haiyan – one of the strongest storms ever recorded – flattened the town of Mercedes on Samar island, washing away residents’ livelihoods in the devastating early hours of November 8. “It was past midnight when my wife and I decided to run up to the cave behind our house,” the fisherman told AFP. “We were just in time. Our house crumpled to the ground soon after,” the 38-year-old added. The couple were joined by two other families and spent more than six hours in the dark, damp cavern as rising storm surge waters edged dangerously closer and closer to its entrance, frightened that they would drown or be swept out to sea. “We could hear the typhoon outside. It sounded like a bulldozer,” Isquierdo said. “We were afraid of the sea, afraid that the storm Read More …

Nov 162013
 
Drilon wants to use funds for unfilled gov’t posts for Yolanda rehab efforts

A resident holding an umbrella walks on ruins of houses which were devastated by Typhoon Haiyan, near a coastal town in Tacloban city, central Philippines November 13, 2013. Desperation gripped Philippine islands devastated by Typhoon Haiyan as looting turned deadly on Wednesday and survivors panicked over delays in supplies of food, water and medicine, some digging up underground water pipes and smashing them open. Five days after one of the strongest storms ever recorded roared over cities and towns in the central Philippines, survivors in remote regions complained they had yet to receive any aid.(MNS photo) MANILA, Nov 14 (Mabuhay) – Senate President Franklin Drilon on Thursday proposed the use of funds for unfilled government posts next year for rehabilitation efforts in areas hit by recent natural disasters, including super typhoon Yolanda. In a statement, Drilon proposed that the Senate realign P15 billion from the proposed Miscellaneous Personnel Benefits Fund (MPBF) next year to create a calamity assistance and rehabilitation effort (CARE) fund. The MPBF is a stand-by allocation for the filling up of unfilled government posts, and for the creation of new positions in the bureaucracy. “The 2014 national budget must provide for funds badly needed by our countrymen, who suffered the misfortunes brought about by the series of massive natural and man-made disasters,” the Senate leader said. He added that allocations for rehabilitation efforts in next year’s spending plan, such as the P7.5-billion calamity fund, seem not enough considering the extent of the damage caused by Yolanda and Read More …

Nov 162013
 
Binay visits victims of typhoon in Capiz

Residents carry a coffin containing the body of a victim of Typhoon Haiyan during a funeral in Tanauan, Leyte, central Philippines November 14, 2013. (MNS photo) MANILA, Nov. 14 (Mabuhay) – After visiting Iloilo on Wednesday, Vice President Jejomar Binay on Thursday flew to another Yolanda-hit province- Capiz, to continue his conduct of ocular inspection and oversee the ongoing relief efforts for the survivors. The vice president arrived with his team at Roxas City, the Capiz’ capitol, at around 1 p.m. today. While at Capiz, Binay will meet with Gov. Victor Tanco to update him on housing sector’s assistance for Yolanda victims. He is also set to meet with Cuartero Mayor Tito Mayo, Dumalag Mayor Amado Eriberto Castro, Jr. and Dao Mayor Joselito Escutin in their respective municipalities. Moreover, Binay will distribute some relief goods to the typhoon victims. The whole province of Capiz was declared under state of calamity since Sunday after the super typhoon affected 90 percent of its towns. The Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (PDRRMC) said the typhoon totally damaged 20,000 houses, affecting 92,753 families composed of 400,000 individuals. According to provincial disaster council’s latest record, the death toll in the province climbed to 42 and 34 persons were reported injured. (MNS)

Nov 122013
 
Tacloban faces ATM looting, fuel shortage

Residents stand on the ruins of their house amidst other destroyed houses after Super Typhoon Haiyan battered Tacloban city in central Philippines November 10, 2013. One of the most powerful storms ever recorded killed at least 10,000 people in the central Philippines province of Leyte, a senior police official said on Sunday, with coastal towns and the regional capital devastated by huge waves. Super typhoon Haiyan destroyed about 70 to 80 percent of the area in its path as it tore through the province on Friday, said chief superintendent Elmer Soria, a regional police director. (MNS photo) MANILA  (Mabuhay) – Tacloban is now facing law and order problems and a risk of a fuel shortage, according to Southern Leyte Rep. Roger Mercado. Mercado said he has received reports that people have resorted to looting automated teller machines (ATMs) out of despair. “I hope the Office of the Civil Defense will focus on this. We also asked the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) to send troops in the area to maintain peace and order,” he said. An earlier clip showed the looting at Gaisano mall in Tacloban City after the onslaught of super typhoon Yolanda as hundreds of residents took advantage of the breakdown in law and order out of despair. Mercado also appealed to the private sector to send help, especially as supplies for basic goods are nearly dissipated. “We are also seeing long lines in gas stations. I fear a shortage of fuels in the entire region 8,” Read More …