Eight die as mob storms Philippines rice store in wake of Typhoon Haiyan

Source: Pano feed

Eight people were crushed to death as a huge crowd of typhoon survivors stormed a rice warehouse near the devastated city of Tacloban.


eight-die-as-mob-storms-philippines-rice-store-in-wake-of-typhoon-haiyan-1260942-queu-for-food-2-11427

The incident came as survivors of Typhoon Haiyan became increasingly desperate, with minimal amounts of water, food and medical supplies reaching the hardest hit areas.


“One wall of our warehouses collapsed and eight people were crushed and killed instantly,” said Rex Estoperez, spokesman for the National Food Authority, the government’s rice trading agency said.


Police and soldiers were guarding the warehouse in Alangalang town, 17 kilometres from Tacloban, but were overpowered by the crowd, who carted off more than 100,000 bags of rice, Estoperez added.


“There must have been so many people to carry away so many bags of rice,” he said, adding that each bag weighed 50 kilograms.


“Our staff were there but they could not do anything without risking their safety.”


The United Nations fears that 10,000 people may have died in Tacloban alone when Super Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest storms ever recorded, smashed into the Philippines’ central islands on Friday.


The typhoon left huge areas isolated and hundreds of thousands homeless and hungry.


Relief operations have begun picking up pace, but aid has failed to reach many areas.


Since the storm, people have broken into homes, malls and garages, where they have stripped the shelves of food, water and other goods. Authorities have struggled to stop the looting. There have been unconfirmed reports of armed gangs involved in some instances.


Aviation authorities said two more airports in the region had reopened, allowing for more aid flights.


US Brigadier General Paul Kennedy said his troops would install equipment at Tacloban airport to allow planes to land at night. Tacloban city was almost completely destroyed in Friday’s typhoon and has become the main relief hub.


“You are not just going to see Marines and a few planes and some helicopters,” General Kennedy said. “You will see the entire Pacific Command respond to this crisis.”


A Norwegian ship carrying supplies left from Manila, while an Australian air force transport plane took off from Canberra carrying a medical team. British and American navy vessels are also en route to the region.


The damaged airport on Tacloban, a coastal city of 220,000, houses makeshift clinics and thousands of people looking for a flight out. A doctor here said supplies of antibiotics and anesthetics arrived yesterday for the first time.


“Until then, patients had to endure the pain,” said Dr Victoriano Sambale.


The winds levelled tens of thousands of homes in region, which is used to typhoons. In some places, tsunami-like storm surges swept up to one-kilometre inland, causing more destruction and loss of life. At least 580,000 people have been displaced. Most of the death and destruction appears concentrated on the islands of Samar and Leyte.


The damaged infrastructure and bad communications links made a conclusive death toll difficult to estimate.


The official toll from a national disaster agency rose to 1,883 overnight. President Benigno Aquino III told CNN in a televised interview that the toll could be closer to 2,000 or 2,500, lower than an earlier estimate from two officials on the ground who said they feared as many as 10,000 might be dead.


“There is a huge amount that we need to do. We have not been able to get into the remote communities,” UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said in Manila, launching an appeal for $301 million to help the more than 11 million people estimated to be affected by the storm.


“Even in Tacloban, because of the debris and the difficulties with logistics and so on, we have not been able to get in the level of supply that we would want to. We are going to do as much as we can to bring in more,” she said. Her office said she planned to visit the city.


Relief officials said comparing the pace of this operation to those in past disasters was difficult.


In Indonesia’s Aceh, the worst-hit region by the 2004 tsunami, relief hubs were easier to set up than in Tacloban. The main airport there was functioning 24 hours a day within a couple of days of the disaster. While devastation in much of the city of Banda Aceh was total, large inland parts of the city were undamaged, providing a base for aid operations and temporary accommodation for the homeless.




Đăng ký: VietNam News