. Earth Science News .




.
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
More help arrives for Philippine flood victims
by Staff Writers
Cagayan De Oro, Philippines (AFP) Dec 23, 2011


More than 1,000 people are missing in the Philippines after deadly floods, the government said Friday, doubling the feared death toll as relief groups rushed in aid for desperate survivors.

Water and toilets are urgently needed to head off potential epidemics, while survivors of the the weekend disaster require more temporary shelters, said Angela Travis, a local spokeswoman for the United Nations Children's Fund.

"The water situation is still difficult and we are worried about what this means for their health," Travis told AFP, with firetrucks having to distribute water after taps were damaged.

She said those sleeping in schools also faced "the likelihood of a secondary displacement" once classes resume after the Christmas holidays.

Nearly half a million people were affected by floods wrought by tropical storm Washi, UN agencies say, leaving nearly 50,000 at evacuation centres and thousands of others forced to live with relatives or on the streets.

As weary survivors of a disaster that swept away coastal shantytowns prepared for a bleak Christmas, authorities said there were now 1,079 people missing after the weekend's deluge, leaping from 51.

The confirmed death toll meanwhile rose to 1,080 from 1,010, more than half of them from the major port cities of Cagayan de Oro and Iligan.

The crisis prompted President Benigno Aquino to appeal Friday for the nation of 94 million to help the devastated south as Filipinos prepared for lengthy Christmas holidays.

"I have only one request to each one of you: let us not hesitate in showering them with gifts and acts of kindness," he said in a videotaped Christmas message.

With fears mounting over the health risks of unsanitary conditions, Oxfam said it will install latrines to compliment the near 200 portable toilets that Unicef has pledged to deliver to evacuation centres on Sunday.

"They're (the victims) resorting to unhygienic practices like not washing hands, which could lead to outbreaks of diseases," Oxfam country director Snejal Soneji told AFP.

The UN, which launched a $28.6 million aid appeal on Thursday, likened the force of the disaster to that of a tsunami.

The UN refugee agency on Friday airlifted the first batch of 42 tonnes of emergency shelters, blankets, and kitchen items to Manila for distribution in the flood areas.

The big jump in the number of missing came as rural families reported large numbers of relatives who had gone to work in the two cities worst hit and remained unaccounted for, civil defence official Ana Caneda said.

She said survivors who were recovering from shock or injuries have also only just realised that they have missing family members.

However, civil defence chief Benito Ramos told AFP that the list was "just an estimate" and that no one could say for sure how many people had really been lost.

Authorities have warned that many of the dead may never be found after being swept into the sea as Washi brought heavy rains, flash floods and overflowing rivers -- striking as slum-dwellers slept.

Among the missing is rickshaw driver Gilbert Olano, whose grainy photographs bearing his name, age and relatives' contact numbers were being posted across Cagayan de Oro by his wife Arlene Olano, 41.

"How can we celebrate Christmas without my husband?" the mother-of-three told AFP.

The family, among the many poor migrants who put up shacks in low-lying areas over the past decade, saw their house in the Tibasak shantytown swallowed up and taken away by the rising river before dawn Saturday.

The area is now an empty field of mud, with armed police guards stationed to stop survivors from rebuilding in an area deemed too dangerous.

"I don't ever want to go back there. I hope the government will make good on its promise to relocate us," said Olano, who said the family had to line up for food rations after being left with nothing but the clothes they were wearing.

"Sometimes it takes an hour. Sometimes we run out of food because the menfolk jump the queue. What can I do? I am just a woman."

Ramos, the civil defence chief, warned there would be no immediate relief as relocation sites were not ready as yet.

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Room at the inn for Fukushima believers
Tokyo (AFP) Dec 23, 2011
Christmas for one homeless pastor and his itinerant flock, forced to flee when Japan's nuclear crisis erupted, will have echoes of its origins this year as they gather in a shelter far from home. The reverend Akira Sato says he and his 50-strong congregation are expecting an "unforgettable" Christmas a long way from the Fukushima Daiichi Seisho (1st Bible) Baptist Church, which lies in the s ... read more


DISASTER MANAGEMENT
More help arrives for Philippine flood victims

Room at the inn for Fukushima believers

Fukushima reactors may take 40 years to dismantle

UN calls for Philippine flood aid

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Canada hunts for rare earth metals as China cuts back

Landmark discovery has magnetic appeal for scientists

New Take on Impacts of Low Dose Radiation

Need a new material? New tool can help

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Nitrogen from humans pollutes remote lakes for more than a century

Data-driven tools cast geographical patterns of rainfall extremes in new light

IDFC: India's water supply at risk

What are the prospects for sustaining high-quality groundwater

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Season's greetings from the other extreme

Will Antarctic worms warm to changing climate

Using new technology to record Antarctic Ocean, ice temperatures

Central Asian glaciers resist warming

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
More Canadian farmers going high-tech

Southampton researchers help to outline world's land and water resources for food and agriculture

Chinese scientist gets 7 years for stealing US secrets

New insight into why locusts swarm

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Christmas Eve aftershock rattles tense N. Zealanders

Tanzanian deluge kills 23

Indonesia girl reunited with family after 2004 tsunami

Powerful quakes send terrified N. Zealanders fleeing

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Bongo party wins landslide in Gabon vote: official

Fighter jets kill 10 in south Somali air raid: witnesses

First Djibouti troops join AU Somalia force

US special forces in Central Africa for LRA rebel hunt

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Human skull study causes evolutionary headache

Malaysian 'lords of the jungle' cling to ancient ways

Mind reading machines on their way: IBM

I wanna talk like you


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement