The death toll from Super Typhoon Yolanda has reached 3,974, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said Sunday. A report by radio dzBB’s Rodil Vega said the new figure was announced late afternoon. President Benigno Aquino III on Sunday went to at least two areas in Eastern Visayas that suffered heavy damage from Yolanda. These included Guiuan in Eastern Samar and Tacloban City in Leyte. Meanwhile, Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office head Ramon Carandang noted a rationing of sorts of fuel in Tacloban City. “In Tacloban, bring your vehicle to a gas station, you can buy a full tank, but if you are filling up a container, you can only buy P500,” he said. — BM, GMA News
Yolanda survivors arrive in Manila. A young survivor who was evacuated from a disaster zone in Tacloban City is carried into an Army truck with her family after they arrived via a military plane at Villamor Air Base in Manila on Tuesday, November 12. Rescue workers are still trying to reach towns and villages in the central Philippines that were cut off by super typhoon Yolanda as relief efforts intensified with the help of US military. Reuters/Cheryl Ravelo At least 200 residents of Tacloban City, which was ravaged last week by Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan), arrived in Metro Manila Thursday evening aboard a C-130 plane. The Tacloban residents included the elderly and children who were traumatized by the devastation caused by Yolanda, radio dzBB reported early Friday. Representatives of some government agencies were on hand at Villamor Air Base to assist them at the Villamor Air Base, the report said. Some of the Tacloban residents were quoted in the report as saying their ordeal lasted two to three days as they tried to make sense of what happened to them. An earlier dzBB report said some of the Tacloban residents admitted they do not have a place to stay while in Metro Manila. They are to be temporarily sheltered at the Department of Social Welfare and Development’s facility at Jose Fabella Hospital in Manila, the dzBB report said. Tacloban City was among the areas hit hardest by Yolanda, which ravaged parts of Visayas and Southern Luzon last week. As of Read More …
Officers of the Philippines’ major telecommunications firm on Sunday said restoration of their mobile services is “problematic” in Tacloban City in Leyte, where some 10,000 people are feared dead due to Yolanda (Haiyan). Smart Communications’ Ramon Isberto said they could not restore mobile service in all areas yet, due to a lack of electricity. Altough 85 percent of Smart’s service in Central Visayas is functional, he said restoring services in Eastern Visayas remains problematic, and that their service in Tacloban is expected to be restored in one to two days. Meanwhile, in an interview on dzBB, Globe’s Corporate Communications Head Yolly Crisanto said Tacoban City is still an area of concern. Super Typhoon Yolanda cut mobile phone services early last Friday, with power outages affecting 67 Globe cell sites in Samar and Leyte, even as Smart’s service in Leyte was degraded. Smart Communications shipped personnel and equipment to Tacloban City using a C130 military aircraft, Isberto told GMA News Online in a text message. Isberto also said they could not restore mobile service in all areas yet, due to a lack of electricity. On the other hand, Globe said their communication services in Iloilo and Roxas City have been restored, while service in other areas will be restored in two days. It said telco equipment was shipped to Tacloban on Sunday morning through a Philippine Navy ship. In a message on Facebook, Globe said 20 percent of all 2G and 3G sites affected in the Visayas region and 30 percent Read More …