Tiny victim of the killer typhoon: Devastated father carries his dead daughter to morgue as desperate young survivors plead for help
- Typhoon Haiyan was a maximum category-five storm with gusts of up to 235mph
- Authorities say in the city of Tacloban, Leyte, alone, 10,000 could be dead
- 'Two out of five bodies are of children' emergency worker says
- Bodies were seen floating in flooded streets in reminder of 2004 Tsunami
- Britain has pledged more than £10 million in aid and support for the Philippines and is sending war ship to area
- US released immediate $100,000 and deployed USS George Washington, carrying 5,000 sailors and 80 aircraft
- UN says 2.5m people need of food aid and UNICEF estimate 1.5 m children affected
- Aid agencies say about 10million people in the region could be left needing aid
- A team of about 90 US Marines and sailors have been dispatched to the nation
- Hundreds of thousands of people in South-East Asia have been evacuated
Thousands of children have been killed after the devastating Typhoon Haiyan flattened the Philippines, destroying towns and wiping out families.
In one heartbreaking photo, a man waded through water cradling the lifeless body of his daughter as he took her to the morgue.
A survivor of the category-five storm described the grim scenes in the city of Tacloban, saying: 'Two out of every five corpses I saw were kids.'
Lynette Lim, the Asia communications manager for Save the Children said: 'The water was knee high and there were bodies floating in the streets. I saw several dead children.
'Children are particularly vulnerable in disasters. We fear for how many children have been washed away in floods, crushed under falling buildings and injured by flying debris. Many are separated from their families amid the devastation, and all are in desperate need of food, water and shelter.'
In the worst-hit areas, 235mph winds created 20ft waves that are thought to have killed between 10,000 and 15,000 and left 500,000 homeless after their houses were reduced to splinters.
A father carries the lifeless body of his
daughter on the way to the morgue after super typhoon Haiyan hit
Tacloban City in Leyte province
A woman and child get on board an air force
rescue plane bound for Cebu Island at an airport in Tacloban City.
Charities are extremely concerned for the children in the
typhoon-country, as they are particularly vulnerable
Children wait for medical airlift in the
devastated town of Guiuan, eastern Samar province. Youngsters have been
washed away in floods, crushed under falling buildings and injured by
flying debris
Survivors cover their noses from the stench of
bodies left on streets of typhoon-ravaged Tacloban city. Families all
are in desperate need of food, water and shelter
Safe delivery: Cheers broke out this morning
when 21-year old Emily Ortega gave birth to a baby girl in the city of
Tacloban. The expectant mother had to swim through floods
Distressed: A distraught mother cuddles her sick baby aboard a military helicopter
Desperate: A baby cries as she is held by her
mother as Filipino residents queue for a seat onboard a military C-130
plane at the airport of the super typhoon devastated city of Tacloban
Vulnerable: A child waits with fellow survivors
at the airport. Aid agencies say they are particularly concerned about
the elderly, disabled and children
Super-typhoon Haiyan struck with such force on Friday that entire villages were flattened, ships were swept inland and corpses were left hanging from trees.
Desperate survivors of the devastating Philippines typhoon told how they had to steal from the dead to eat.
The Disasters Emergency Committee, made up of 14 UK charities, has made an emergency appeal for funds as fears continue that the death toll from the typhoon will rise and it is estimated that more than 10 million people will be left in need of aid.
The UK is deploying a Royal Navy warship and donating £10 million of humanitarian assistance in aid for the victims, Prime Minister David Cameron said.
Britain will also deploy RAF military transport aircraft to aid recovery efforts, earmarking at least one C-17 cargo plane to move humanitarian aid and large equipment.
Meanwhile, Australia announced assistance of 10 million Australian dollars (£5.8 million) and the US government is organising emergency shipments of critically needed material and issuing an immediate 100,000 US dollars (£62,000) for relief efforts.
Japan said it will fly a relief team over to the ravaged country and Taiwan is sending 200,000 US dollars (£125,000) in aid.
The USS George Washington, which carries 5,000 sailors and more than 80 aircraft, has also been deployed by America to help distribute aid and evacuate injured survivors.
Handicap International said it was sending a team of emergency specialists to support the organisation's staff already working in the country. These specialists will help the most vulnerable individuals, such as people with disabilities, older people and children.
'The devastation is worse than in Bandah Aceh, Indonesia, following the 2004 tsunami,' Edith van Wijngaarden, the charity's programme director in the Philippines, said.
'I'm particularly worried about the most vulnerable individuals. When nothing is left standing and the local infrastructure has been destroyed, people with disabilities, older people and children are particularly vulnerable.'
Help: The British Royal Navy warship HMS Daring
docked is being sent to the Philippines with a RAF C-17 plane to aid in
relief efforts
AFTER: Cargo ships washed ashore four days
after super typhoon Haiyan hit Anibong town. Dazed survivors begged for
help and scavenged for food, water and medicine today
BEFORE: The port and shanty housing in
Tacloban city before Friday's catastrophic events. In the worst-hit
areas, 235mph winds created 20ft waves that are thought to have killed
between 10,000 and 20,000 and left 500,000 homeless
AFTER: This aerial photo shows the
devastation on Victory Island off of the town of Guiuan in Eastern Samar
province, central Philippines
BEFORE: Guiuan Bay, island before the devastating typhoon. Desperate survivors told how they had to steal from the dead to eat
In need: Typhoon survivors take shelter from the
rain as they queue up in the hopes of boarding an evacuation flight in
Tacloban
Battle for survival: Survivors are desperately
trying to find shelter and enough food and clean water in the devastated
city of Tacloban
Wanting out: Thousands of typhoon survivors swarmed the airport on Tuesday seeking a flight out, but only a few hundred made it
Poignant: A young child dressed in a Christmas hat walks through the wreckage caused by the super typhoon
Tim Harding, from Sunderland, said he was one of many foreigners who were volunteering at a Manila Red Cross centre.
Mr Harding said he had planned to have a holiday with his wife, who is originally from the Philippines, but it had instead become a volunteer mission.
'It's good to see everyone getting on, doing a job where race, nationality, income level, nothing matters at all,' he said.
'There's only one priority here and that's to get together, get stuck in and do the greater good.'
Mr Harding said he would help wherever he could for the next few weeks, a mindset shared by other foreigners hailing from not only the UK, but elsewhere in Europe and the world.
'There's a lot of panic going on here,' he said.
'Although we just got some good news a few minutes ago that a three-year-old child had actually been rescued in the debris at a place in Tacloban city. There was a big cheer that went up.'
Hungry: Typhoon victims queue for free rice at a
businessman's warehouse in Tacloban, as aid agencies warned about food
shortages in the city
Makeshift: The dire shortage of shelter in Leyte province has left survivors forced to use the wreckage of houses
Scavenging: A young boy pushing a trolley in search of water passes a coffin containing a victim of Typhoon Haiyan in Tacloban
In shock: Thousands of children have died in the disaster and aid agencies are warning they are particularly vulnerable
Alone: A young boy uses the remains of some parts of a house to shield him from the rain in Tacloban city
Evacuation: An ill baby, attached to a drip, disembarks from a Philippine Air Force C-130 cargo plane at Villamor Airbase
'Everywhere we went, people told us between 10 and 50 people had been killed in their communities,' said Miss Lim told The Telegraph.
'Most of the families who had decided to evacuate ahead of the storm left one member behind to guard their homes and possessions. Unfortunately, most of them died.'
Dazed survivors walked the streets ‘like zombies looking for food’ while looters ransacked shops and mobs attacked aid trucks loaded with food, tents and water.
Reports of lawless gangs targeting ATMs and electrical shops forced President Benigno Aquino to deploy police and army troops to the area to restore calm.
Supplies: Members of the Japanese Disaster
Relief Team carry goods as they arrive to help victims of Typhoon
Haiyan. Militaries and iinternational groups are rushing assistance to
the region, but little has arrived
Stress: The struggle for survival causes tensions at the airport as hundreds of people try to board evacuation planes
Concern: Vulnerable people, including the elderly, children and breastfeeding women queue for hours for a seat on a plane
Destroyed: Cars, vans, trees and houses have all been wrecked by the typhoon - one of the strongest storms ever recorded
Many areas were left without clean water, electricity or food and relief workers said some regions were still cut off by the damage and debris following what could be the most powerful storm ever recorded.
The death toll may soar once the true extent of the damage is known.
Britain has begun implementing a £6 million 'rapid response' to the crisis in the Philippines, the International Development Secretary has said.
Justine Greening said NHS experts had been flown with shelter kits and water purification facilities to Tacloban, where 10,000 people are believed to have died after Typhoon Haiyan struck the six central Philippine islands on Friday.
The British response is being co-ordinated with aid agencies that already have a presence 'on the ground', the minister told ITV's Daybreak.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he told Philippine Foreign Minister Albert del Rosario that the United States is fully committed to helping the Philippines recover from one of the most powerful typhoons on record.
Empty coffins lie on a street near houses damaged after super Typhoon Haiyan battered the country
A man paints a message on a baskeball court that reads 'Help SOS We Need Food' at Anibong in Tacloban
Residents watch as others throw looted goods
from a warehouse in Guiuan town. Authorities appealed for calm in the
chaotic aftermath
An
aerial shot from a Philippines Air Force helicopter shows the
devastation left by typhoon Haiyan in Guiuan, Eastern Samar province,
central Philippines
Blown
inland: A ship lies among the ruins of a built-up area of Tacloban
after the vessel was swept inland. This photograph was taken by the
Philippines Air Force
This aerial shot shows destroyed houses on Victory Island near the town of Guiuan in Eastern Samar province, central Philippines
The U.S.
government is organizing emergency shipments of critically needed
material to provide shelter to the hundreds of thousands of displaced
Filipinos and food and hygiene supplies to thousands of families, Kerry
said in a statement. He said he assured del Rosario "of our full commitment to providing all necessary assistance.'
In the province of Leyte, 10,000 are feared to have died in Tacloban, 580km (360 miles) southeast of Manila, where survivors said waves hit their homes ‘like a tsunami’, destroying everything.
Reports from one town showed apocalyptic scenes of destruction in another region that has not been reached by rescue workers or the armed forces.
'The situation is bad, the devastation has been significant. In some cases the devastation has been total,' Secretary to the Cabinet Rene Almendras told a news conference.
The United Nations said officials in Tacloban, which bore the brunt of the storm on Friday, had reported one mass grave of 300-500 bodies.
More than 600,000 people were displaced by the storm across the country and some have no access to food, water, or medicine, the UN says.
A
battered town in Samar province in central Philippines. Dazed
survivors begged for help and scavenged for food, water and medicine on
Monday, threatening to overwhelm military and rescue resources
Ships that washed ashore into a coastal community after Typhoon Haiyan hit the province of Leyte in central Philippines
Force of nature: One of the many ships that have been swept into Tacloban by the power of the typhoon
US Marines stack gear onto a pallet during
preparations for disaster relief for the Philippines at Marine Corps Air
Station (MCAS) Futenma in Ginowan, Okinawa Prefecture, southern Japan
City of the dead: Dazed survivors survey the
damaged houses in Tacloban city, Leyte province. At least 10,000 people
are believed to have died there
Typhoon victims ask for water and food from soldiers (not pictured) outside the gate of a government compound in Tacloban
Dozens of residents clamoured for help at the airport gates.
'Help us, help us. Where is President Aquino? We need water, we are very thirsty,' shouted one woman. 'When are you going to get bodies from the streets?'
Haiyan is estimated to have destroyed about 70 to 80 percent of structures in its path as it tore into the coastal provinces of Leyte and Samar. The damage to the coconut- and rice-growing region was expected to amount to more than 3 billion pesos ($69 million), Citi Research said in a report, with 'massive losses' for private property.
Most of the damage and deaths were caused by huge waves that inundated towns and swept away coastal villages in scenes that officials likened to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Bodies litter the streets of the Tacloban, rotting and swelling under the hot sun and adding to the health risk.
International aid agencies said relief resources in the Philippines were stretched thin after a 7.2 magnitude quake in central Bohol province last month and displacement caused by a conflict with Muslim rebels in southern Zamboanga province.
Survivors in Tacloban told reporters they
are so desperate for food that they have been forced to loot shops and
steal from the dead
A Filipino woman carries her child after feeling ill waiting for food outside the airport
Desperate measures: A Filipino father and
his children wait for food relief outside their makeshift tent.
Survivors have foraged for food as supplies dwindled, with some
uncovering the bodies of the dead
Action: President Benigno Aquino has
deployed troops to the area in a bid to restore calm after Philippines
Red Cross aid trucks were attacked by hungry mobs
A survivor salvages belongings from her damaged home as she surveys the chaos
'I am afraid that in one week, people will be killing from hunger.’ Mirasol Saoyi, 27, said: ‘The huge waves came again and again, flushing us out on the street and washing away our homes.
‘My husband tied us together but still we got separated among the debris. I saw many people drowning, screaming and going under... I haven’t found my husband.’
Despite mass burials, the dead remain piled by roads and trapped under wreckage. Families clawing at the ruins to find survivors or food were overpowered by the reek of the rotting bodies.
Village councillor and father-of-four Edward Gualberto said he stepped on corpses as he took food from the remains of their homes.
He added: ‘I am a decent person. But if you have not eaten in three days, you do shameful things to survive. We have no food, we need water. This typhoon has stripped us of our dignity, but I still have my family and I am grateful for that.’
Aftermath: Resident gather in the remains of
a structure in Tacloban. Those left homeless have been forced to
plunder the houses belonging to the dead. One local councillor admitted
he has stepped on corpses in a desperate bid to find food saying: 'If
you have not eaten in three days, you do shameful things to survive'
Remains: Survivors have begun find corpses
as they rummage through the wreckages of houses in a bid to find food to
feed their starving families
Making do: Survivors have been forced to
forage for food and supplies after many homes were submerged by flood
water and landslides
Survivors queued for handouts of rice, covering their faces with rags to keep the stench of death out.
Shopkeepers said looters forced their way into stores that had survived the storm, only to be ransacked. There were reports of ATM machines being broken open.
Soldiers are trying to restore order but pastry shop owner Emma Bermejo said: ‘People are dirty, hungry and thirsty. A few more days and they will begin to kill each other. This is shameful. We have been hit by a catastrophe and now our businesses are gone. Looted. I can understand if they take our food and water, they can have it. But TV sets? Washing machines?’
The Philippines president is considering
introducing martial law in Tacloban city (pictured), where up to 10,000
people are feared dead
Holy house: Churches in the storm torn city
have become temporary aid centres offering washing facilities and
handing out emergency food supplies
Shelter from the storm: While the Catholic
church in Tacloban has welcomed victims, many buildings have been broken
into by desperate looters
Jenny Dela Cruz, who is eight months pregnant, added: ‘All we can do is survive the day, but I don’t know what will happen tomorrow or the day after – or if we can continue surviving.’
The storm was last night expected to hit Vietnam, where up to 700,000 people have been evacuated.
The UN has said that 2.5m people are in need of food aid in the Philippine and UNICEF have estimated 1.5 m children live in affected areas.
A team of about 90 U.S. Marines and sailors have been dispatched to the Philippines on Sunday, part of a first wave of promised American military assistance for relief efforts.
This image taken by astronaut Karen L.
Nyberg and released by NASA shows Super Typhoon Haiyan from the
International Space Station yesterday
The Marines said a team of U.S. forces from the 3rd Marine Expeditionary Brigade left for the Philippines from a U.S. base in Okinawa, Japan, aboard two KC-130J Hercules transport aircraft.
Today, survivors queued in lines, waiting for hand-outs of rice and water. Some covered their faces with rags in a futile attempt to keep out the stench of the dead.
Others trekked for three hours to reach the airport in the hope of evacuation. Roads to and from the city were left impassable by debris and fallen trees.
Washing still hangs on the lines but dozens
of bamboo houses have been flattened by the storm in Baladian in the
municipality of Concepcion, Iloilo Province
Loss: A mother weeps beside the dead body of her son at a chapel in the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan in Tacloban
Authorities in the city estimated 10,000 people were killed - almost one in 20 of its 220,000 population.Thousands more were reported missing in neighbouring Samar province and almost half a million people were left homeless, according to the national disaster agency.
Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said the devastation was overwhelming, adding: ‘It’s really horrific. It’s a great human tragedy.’
Typhoon Haiyan was expected to hit Vietnam tonight and authorities have evacuated almost 700,000 people from their homes, although the winds were said to have weakened significantly.
Mass burials are underway in Tacloban but hundreds of bodies remain piled along roads and pinned under debris.
A ship was washed ashore in the huge storm.
Surging sea water strewed debris for miles and survivors said the
devastation was like a tsunami
The storm is one of the most powerful ever
recorded and huge waves swept away entire coastal villages and destroyed
up to 80 per cent of the area in its path
Aerial photographs revealed scenes of utter devastation with few buildings left standing.
Among the tragic images that were emerging was the sight of a distressed man carrying the body of his drowned six-year-old daughter.
One young mother fought back tears as she told how the typhoon had killed 11 members of her family, including her two-year-old daughter.
Jenny Dela Cruz, who is eight months pregnant, told the BBC: ‘I can’t think, I don’t know what to do.
‘Right now all we can do is survive the day but I don’t know what will happen tomorrow or the day after that, or if we can continue surviving.’
Among the tragic images that were emerging was the sight of a distressed man carrying the body of his drowned six-year-old daughter.
One young mother fought back tears as she told how the typhoon had killed 11 members of her family, including her two-year-old daughter.
Jenny Dela Cruz, who is eight months pregnant, told the BBC: ‘I can’t think, I don’t know what to do.
‘Right now all we can do is survive the day but I don’t know what will happen tomorrow or the day after that, or if we can continue surviving.’
More than 330,900 people were displaced and 4.3million 'affected' by the typhoon in 36 provinces, the UN has said
Residents try to salvage belongings in
Tacloban city, Leyte province. Rescuers have not even been able to
contact some towns on the coast where the storm first hit
Villagers walk past a body of victim laying on a pier in the super typhoon devastated city of Tacloban, Leyte province
Bodies have been seen floating down the streets and hanging from trees, cars lying upside down and houses reduced to a pile of soggy mud and brick.
Eastern islands and the centre of the Philippines were battered by winds in excess of 200mph.
This afternoon, Haiyan made landfall in Sanya in south China's Hainan province.
The typhoon, which is the 30th to hit China this year, is now making its way towards Vietnam and mainland China - with locals bracing themselves for the onslaught of the deadly storm.
Chinese authorities have issued a level three emergency response throughout the country, ordering fisherman to shelter their boats to prevent any damage.
This afternoon, Typhoon Haiyan - believed to
be the strongest storm to ever hit land - made landfall in Sanya in
south China's Hainan province
Workers remove a tree that fell onto a car during the deadly storm, which is the 30th typhoon to strike China this year
As
well as the massive numbers feared dead in Tacloban, there are concerns
hundreds more have been killed in remote coastal areas.
Because communications were cut, the number killed might not be known for several days, but from numerous towns and villages across the country today, the shocking figures began to reach rescue centres - including a report from Basey town on Samar Island that 300 were confirmed dead and another 2,000 were missing.
On the island of Leyte, regional governor Dominic Petilla reported that the deaths there were mostly caused by drowning and collapsed buildings.
Mr Leo Dacaynos of the provincial disaster office on Samar Island said yesterday that the storm surge resulted in sea waters rising to 20ft, totally submerging small towns and villages.
Because communications were cut, the number killed might not be known for several days, but from numerous towns and villages across the country today, the shocking figures began to reach rescue centres - including a report from Basey town on Samar Island that 300 were confirmed dead and another 2,000 were missing.
On the island of Leyte, regional governor Dominic Petilla reported that the deaths there were mostly caused by drowning and collapsed buildings.
Mr Leo Dacaynos of the provincial disaster office on Samar Island said yesterday that the storm surge resulted in sea waters rising to 20ft, totally submerging small towns and villages.
The typhoon is now making its way towards
Vietnam and mainland China - with locals bracing themselves for the
onslaught of the deadly typhoon
Heavy winds had already caused damage to
China's Hainan island before the super typhoon made landfall. Above, a
billboard is blown over by the strong winds
In Tacloban city, which has a population of 200,000 some 360 miles south east of Manila - it was feared the death toll would be very high, although Interior Secretary Max Roxas, who arrived there at the weekend, said it was too early to know how many people had died there.
‘We expect a very high number of fatalities as well as injured,’ he said.
‘All systems, all vestiges of modern living - communications, power, water, all are down. Radios are down so there is no way to communicate with the people in a mass sort of way.’
A man carries boxes of milk as he passes by ships washed ashore by enormous waves in Tacloban city, Leyte province
One survivor said the scenes of utter devastation caused by the typhoon was 'like the end of the world'
Aid agencies have made emergency appeals for
funds and are trying to reach survivors who are in desperate need of
clean water and shelter
Bodies still lie in the roads and thousands
of homes lie destroyed near the fish port after super Typhoon Haiyan
battered Tacloban city
Capt John Andrews, deputy director general of the Civil Aviation Authority, said he had received reliable information by radio from his staff that more than 100 bodies were lying in the streets of Tacloban.
The city’s airport was described as looking like a muddy wasteland filled with debris that included buckled tin roofs and overturned cars.
Airport manager Efren Nagrama, 47, said water levels rose up to 13 feet.
'It was like a tsunami. We escaped through the windows and I held on to a pole for about an hour as rain, seawater and wind swept through the airport,' he said.
'Some of my staff survived by clinging to trees. I prayed hard all throughout until the water subsided.'
Local and foreign medical teams prepare to board a Philippines air force C-130 transport plane in Manila
Survivors walk towards the evacuation center
to get relief goods after super Typhoon Haiyan battered Tacloban city,
central Philippines
City administrators in Tacloban said about
400 bodies have been collected so far but said the death toll in the
city alone could be 10,000
A girl looks out from a makeshift shelter in
Tacloban. The World Food Programme said it was airlifting 40 tonnes of
high-energy biscuits to the region
A woman holds her umbrella stands on debris
of houses in Tacloban. Millions of people are believed to have been
'affected' by the storm, including hundreds of thousands who have lost
their homes
Mila Ward, 53, a Philippine-born Australian, said that as she travelled to the airport to catch a military flight back to Manila ‘we saw may bodies along the street.
‘They were covered with just anything - tarpaulin, roofing sheets, cardboard.There would have been well over 100 bodies along the way.’
Adding to the misery of people who were forced to flee their homes from the approaching storm were reports last night that looters were raiding houses, grocery stores and petrol stations that were still standing.
‘When I saw those big waves coming in I immediately told my neighbours to flee,’ said Floremil Mazo, a villager in south east Davao Oriental province.
The National Disaster Agency said that up to four million people in the country of 96million were affected by the storm - the worst to ever hit land - by losing their homes, having their possessions damaged and, in extreme cases, losing their lives.
Children pull sacks of goods they recovered from abandoned stores as they go past the rubble of houses in Tacloban
A woman mourns in front of her husband's dead body, which lies no the street under tarpaulin alongside other bodies
An injured Filipino boy stands in front of
the rubble of houses in Tacloban - destroyed by the typhoon that has
left thousands of people dead
A man with an injured leg is carried through the devastation of former residential roads in Tacloban
‘The devastation is… I don’t have the words for it,’ said Interior Secretary Roxas. ‘It’s really horrific. It’s a great human tragedy.’
Tecson John Lim, the Tacloban city administrator, believed the death toll in the city alone could be 10,000.
The storm was expected to hit the coast of Vietnam tomorrow, people there have been were warned that before heading for community shelters they had to bring enough food and necessities to last for three days.
And those who did not move from their homes voluntarily would be forced, said the government.
Operation: A Vietnamese soldier carries a young girl from a lorry as villagers are evacuated to a safe place by the military
Desolation: This picture shows an flattened area of the destroyed Tacloban city covered by debris and flood water
Flattened: A Filipino boy stands among the
debris in Tacloban, Leyte - one of the worst areas hit by category five
storm Typhoon Haiyan
Death: It has been estimated by the Red Cross that 1,000 of the 1,200 people killed by the typhoon were residents of Tacloban
Widespread: This picture shows acres of flooded rice fields in the Iloilo Province, another area devastated by the typhoon
The World Food Programme said it was airlifting 40 tonnes of high-energy biscuits, enough to feed 120,000 people for a day, to the Philippines, as well as emergency supplies and telecommunications equipment.
Officials in China, as well as neighbouring Laos and Cambodia are currently taking precautions in an attempt to soften the impact of the ferocious storm.
Humanitarian experts say they expect the number of casualties to be 'massive'. A Red Cross spokesman said: 'We now fear that thousands will have lost their lives.'
The UK has sent a team of three experts to the country today to assess the extent of the damage, after which the Government will decide upon its response, a spokesman for the Department for International Development (Dfid) said.
Plans: An elderly woman is taken from her home
in Danang, Vietnam, as the government begins to evacuate 100,000 people
lying in the path of typhoon Haiyan
From above: An aerial view shows badly
damaged houses, including many without a roof, and blocked roads in the
Philippine province of Iloilo
Recovery: A child is lifted to safety from a
house in Tacloban, left, and two residents sit on the pavement in front
of their home in the same city, right
International Development Secretary Justine Greening has also pledged £6million worth of
emergency aid.
She said: 'My thoughts are with the people of the Philippines, in particular those who have lost loved ones. UK support is now under way.
'Many thousands of people in remote, hard-to-reach communities have lost their homes and everything they own. They are living in the open and completely exposed to the elements.
'The absolute priority must be to reach them with shelter and protection as soon as possible.
'UK support will provide urgently needed access to clean water, shelter, household items and blankets.
She said: 'My thoughts are with the people of the Philippines, in particular those who have lost loved ones. UK support is now under way.
'Many thousands of people in remote, hard-to-reach communities have lost their homes and everything they own. They are living in the open and completely exposed to the elements.
'The absolute priority must be to reach them with shelter and protection as soon as possible.
'UK support will provide urgently needed access to clean water, shelter, household items and blankets.
Flattened: The typhoon has ravaged most of the city of Tacloban and destroyed the airport
Ruins: A resident sifts through rubbish inside his ruined home, flattened by 235mph winds in the devastated city of Tacloban
Scale: This image shows the enormous Typhoon Haiyan taken by Astronaut Karen L. Nyberg aboard the Internatioal Space Station
Satellite: A picture posted on Twitter by
NASA at 8.00pm GMT shows the centre of the moving across the South China
Sea towards the coast of Vietnam
Loss: A pregnant woman, left, walks around the
remains of her home while a young boy, right, walks past a crushed car
in the destroyed town of Tacloban
Temporary: Bodies of victims lay in a deserted chapel in Tacloban. A woman and child, right, view the distressing scene
Flooding: Locals in Coron, Palawan, walk
among damaged buildings and flooded streets after the typhoon - one of
the most powerful to ever hit land
Terrifying: Filipino children are seen in
the city of Tacloban, Leyte. Behind them is a scene of devastation with
homes flattened and debris lying in the street
Picking up the pieces: Some residents try to go about their daily business despite the large-scale destruction
Tragedy: Bodies of residents can be seen in the
streets of Tacloban, while one local is forced to transport a body in a
wheelbarrow
Collapsed: A resident walks past her
destroyed home - flattened by piles of wood and branches from nearby
trees - in Tacloban city
'We are also sending additional humanitarian experts from the UK to work with the DfID team and international agencies, including ensuring partners are prioritising the protection of vulnerable girls and women.'
Vice mayor Jim Pe of Coron town on Busuanga, the last island battered by the typhoon, said most of the houses and buildings there had been destroyed or damaged.
Five people drowned in the storm surge and three others are missing. He said: 'It was like a 747 flying just above my roof.' adding that his family and some of his neighbours whose houses were destroyed took shelter in his basement.
In the aftermath, people were seen weeping while retrieving bodies of loved ones inside buildings and on a street that was littered with fallen trees, roofing material and other building parts torn off in the typhoon's fury.
Workers: Local Red Cross staff place sand bags on the roof of a house in Danang, Vietnam
Debris: Helicopters hover over the damaged area of Tacloban city, which was battered with strong winds yesterday
Victim: A resident walks past dead bodies that lie on the street in Tacloban city, Leyte province
Schools, offices and shops in the central Philippines were closed before the storm landed.
Hospitals, soldiers and emergency workers on standby for rescue operations.
'We can hear the winds howling but the rains are not too strong. We have encountered several distress calls regarding fallen trees and power lines cut. We don't have power now,' Samar Vice Governor Stephen James Tan said in a radio interview yesterday.
Upside down: A devastated airport in Tacloban city, Leyte province - where roofs were ripped on hundreds of houses
Shock: These two pictures show the devastation
in Coron, Palawan where buildings have been flattened, left and right,
leaving residents helplessly walking the streets.
Rebuilding their lives: Two men in Iloilo move some of their belongings through flood waters covering the streets
Devastation: Debris which was
washed in by the storm litters the road by the coastal village in
Legazpi city. Residents now face a long clean up operation
Hanging on: A fisherman in Manila is forced to
cling on to his equipment, left, while there was little hope for other
less stable buildings in the storm's path, right
Higher ground: Residents of Legaspi, Albay
province, south of Manila resident, were forced to flee the coast as
Haiyan continued to pound the sea wall today
Downpour: As well as strong winds, the
typhoon brought with it torrential rain which caused landslides in rural
parts of the country
Terrifying: Residents run for their lives as
the terrible gusts of the typhoon buffet the popular tourist city of
Cebu. Trees and roofs were torn off by the storm
Blocked: Residents clear the road in the island province of Cebu after a tree was toppled by strong winds during typhoon Haiyan
The
developing country is particularly vulnerable because it is often the
first major landmass for the storms after they build over the Pacific
Ocean.
The Philippine government and some scientists have said climate change may be increasing the ferocity and frequency of storms.
Others say Pacific waters were an important reason for the strength of Haiyan, but added it was premature to blame climate change based on the scanty historical data available.
The poverty-stricken country has already endured a year of earthquakes and floods, with no fewer than 24 disastrous weather events.
The Philippines suffered the world's strongest storm of 2012, when Typhoon Bopha left about 2,000 people dead or missing on the southern island of Mindanao.
The Philippine government and some scientists have said climate change may be increasing the ferocity and frequency of storms.
Others say Pacific waters were an important reason for the strength of Haiyan, but added it was premature to blame climate change based on the scanty historical data available.
The poverty-stricken country has already endured a year of earthquakes and floods, with no fewer than 24 disastrous weather events.
The Philippines suffered the world's strongest storm of 2012, when Typhoon Bopha left about 2,000 people dead or missing on the southern island of Mindanao.
The Philippines has known disaster at the hands of mother nature as recently as 2011 when typhoon Washi killed 1,200 people, displaced 300,000 and destroyed more than 10,000 homes.
In September, category-five typhoon Usagi, with winds gusting of up to 149 mph, battered the northern island of Batanes before causing damage in southern China.
Bopha last year flattened three coastal towns on the southern island of Mindanao, killing 1,100 people and wreaking damage estimated at $1.04 billion.
Cambodian authorities said they were closely watching the development of the world's biggest storm to materialise.
Storm trackers have predicted the storm could reach China on Tuesday, but the wind speeds will have dropped to between 25 and 35mph.
HOW YOU CAN HELP
TO donate to the Disasters Emergency Committee's Philippines Appeal, visit www.dec.org.uk, call the hotline on 0370 60 60 900, or go to any high street bank or Post Office. You can also donate £5 by texting the word SUPPORT to 70000. Stay up to date with developments at www.twitter.com/decappeal or at www.facebook.com/DisastersEmergencyCommittee
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