Quantcast
Article Index |Advertise | Mobile | RSS | Wireless | Newsletter | Archive | Corrections | Syndication | Contact us | About Us| Services
 
  Breaking News :    
Advertisement
Pacquiao
Property Guide

INQUIRER ALERT
Get the free INQUIRER newsletter
Enter your email address:




 
Inquirer Headlines / Regions Type Size: (+) (-)
You are here: Home > News > Inquirer Headlines > Regions

  ARTICLE SERVICES      
     Reprint this article     Print this article  
    Send Feedback  
    Post a comment   Share  

  RELATED STORIES  





imns



Food gets scarce in Cotabato as floodwaters continue to rise

By Edwin Fernandez, Nash Maulana, Charlie Señase
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 01:18:00 07/12/2008

Filed Under: Food, Flood, Regional authorities

COTABATO CITY ? The supply of food for flood victims here is running out as floodwaters continue to rise, a city hall official said yesterday.

At least 15,000 people were displaced after the swollen Rio Grande de Mindanao submerged 90 percent of the city.

Flooding from the excess water from the river, which stretches from Agusan and is considered Mindanao?s longest body of water, is made worse by the entry of seawater during high tide.

Eduardo dela Fuente, Mayor Muslimin Sema?s secretary, said their stock of food was good only for a few days.

Dela Fuente explained that each family receives about three kilograms of rice, five cans of sardines and two noodles every two days, which drains the stock intended for relief assistance.

?Every two days the city disaster office is spending some P800,000. The funds are dwindling but relief goods come in trickles,? Dela Fuente said.

He said the city might have to stop distributing food to the victims unless donations come in.

Dela Fuente however added some organizations, such as the GMA Foundation, have promised to deliver food.

He said the two tons of food packs donated by GMA Foundation were being kept at the Villamor Airbase because there were no planes available to fly them out.

The Archdiocese of Cotabato and other groups have also put up feeding programs for the displaced families.

But Dela Fuente said these would definitely not last long.

Government engineers said they needed to dredge the Rio Grande to drain water flooding the city?s more than 30 villages, but that would take some time.

Water lilies have blocked at least a 6-hectare area in the river.

?We are working double time here, we need volunteers who own chainsaws that could be used to cut the water lilies into chunks so it can be carried by water current to the seas,? Col. Rolito Abad, commander of the Army?s 603rd Infantry Brigade, said.

Abad heads the ?Task Force Water Lilies,? a body formed to clear the river of these obstructions.

Public Works Secretary Hermogenes Ebdane, who visited Cotabato City on Thursday, said two dredgers were waiting to be brought here from Davao City.

But Sema said he was told it would take a week to tow the dredgers from Davao.

Two persons had already died from the floods.

The latest fatality was a 9-year-old girl, who drowned in a swollen creek in Barangay Poblacion 9 here on Tuesday.

Senior Supt. Willie Dangane, city police director, said Rose Rakma was playing with other children when she was swept away by the raging waters.

?Her body was retrieved hours later in another village,? he said.

The girl became the second victim of drowning since the floods spawned by Typhoon ?Frank? submerged the city.

Last week, a wheelchair-bound elderly woman also drowned when floods submerged her home in Barangay Rosary Heights here.

As this developed, the Sangguniang Panlungsod, chaired by Vice Mayor Japal Guiani Jr., has approved the release of P2 million from the city?s calamity funds to distribute food to some 20,000 residents displaced by the floods.

The SP also set aside P1 million for medicine purchase.

Guiani also urged village officials to use their 5 percent calamity fund to augment the calamity budget from the city government.

As of yesterday, classes remained suspended in schools here.



Copyright 2012 Philippine Daily Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.

Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk.
Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate.
Or write The Readers' Advocate:

c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer
Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets,
Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94

Share

RELATED STORIES:

OTHER STORIES:


  ^ Back to top

© Copyright 2001-2012 INQUIRER.net, An INQUIRER Company

The INQUIRER Network: HOME | NEWS | SPORTS | SHOWBIZ & STYLE | TECHNOLOGY | BUSINESS | OPINION | GLOBAL NATION | Site Map
Services: Advertise | Buy Content | Wireless | Newsletter | Low Graphics | Search / Archive | Article Index | Contact us
The INQUIRER Company: About the Inquirer | User Agreement | Link Policy | Privacy Policy

Advertisement
Philippine Fiesta
TAGAYTAY FONTAINE VILLAS
DZIQ 990
Pacquiao