5 hours of ‘Yolanda’ pounding Daanbantayan town | Inquirer News

5 hours of ‘Yolanda’ pounding Daanbantayan town

/ 06:56 AM November 10, 2013

DAANBANTAYAN –   For five hours,  wind and rain  pounded this northern town 120 kilometers from Cebu City, leaving residents, who are used to strong storms, in disbelief.

Gusts toppled century-old acacia trees in the plaza and houses, leaving thousands homeless. Power and  phone signals cut off.

“Naa man sad ko sa pagkahitabo sa Ruping pero mas kusog ni nga bagyo (I was here when Ruping happened in 1990 but this is stronger),” said  Lando Layos, a resident in his 50s.

Article continues after this advertisement

Supertyphoon ‘Yolanda’ made landfall in this first-class municipality at 9:40 a.m. on Friday.

FEATURED STORIES

Mayor Augusto Corro said he had never seen a more devastating typhoon.

In the municipal hall, where the mayor and disaster team workers waited out the storm, the wind sounded like non-stop pounding and screeching.

Article continues after this advertisement

Jalousies on the second floor ended up broken including the full glass window of the mayor’s office.

Article continues after this advertisement

Gusts dragged parked motorcycles and a  Cebu Daily News pickup panel  truck a few feet. Roofing sheets were seen flying in the wind.

Article continues after this advertisement

Ten-year-old Rovie Jan Monterde and her younger sister Roxanne Jane hugged  each other tightly inside the Daanbantayan Presidencia (town hall) where they and several hundred others were also holed up from 8 a.m. to 12 noon last Friday.

The girls earlier got separated from their mother who had asked them to get plates from their coastal house.

Article continues after this advertisement

The two sat on a chair against the wall, and covered their ears.

“Ganahan na mi mubalik ni mama (We want to go home to mama),” said  Rovie Jane.

By 10 a.m., the ceiling of the nearby sports complex collapsed, causing evacuees there to run outside.

To guide them, rescue workers instructed them to  hold on to  a thick rope, because the wind was strong enough to carry off a small child. By noon, they had been transferred  to another building.

Uprooted

No deaths were recorded as of Saturday. Fourteen persons were brought to the district hospital for treatment after  being wounded by broken glass and G.I. roofing blown off houses.

About 10,000 residents of coastal barangays were evacuated to school buildings and the town’s sports complex in front of the municipal hall.

The storm easily uprooted  century-old acacia trees in the town plaza and  knocked over palm trees and electric posts along the road to nearby towns, isolating Daanbantayan. (As of yesterday , Medellin Mayor Ricky Ramirez said   road access to Medellin has been cleared.)

Winds whipped off roofs and reduced over a thousand houses to wooden planks.

Residents like 48-year-old Soledad Doble scrambled for shelter after their homes  were flattened.

She tried to recover a few of her family belongings from their house that was flattened by “Yolanda” the next day.

“Lisud lagi kaayo mi mga kabus. Asa man mi mangita ug kwarta pantukod ug bag-o nga balay? Sakit gyud pag-ayo. (It’s so hard for the poor like us. Where will we find money to build a new house? It hurts us very much),” Doble said.

But Doble said she is thankful since her husband and seven-year-old son were safe.

“We’ll just stay with a relative. We’ll try to build a new house in two months. Anyway, there’s wood here that can still be used,” she said.

Blocked

The town’s plaza, once filled with decorative lamp posts, flowering plants and trees, was left  in shambles.

Fallen acacia trees lay in front of the  Daanbantayan church.

By Friday noon, power and communications were down.

Isolated by the storm,  Cebu Daily News photo editor Tonee Despojo and this reporter had to abandon the company’s vehicle and walk 16 kilometers to the next town of  Medellin  to catch a bus  to Bogo City at 4 p.m. since roads were blocked by fallen trees and power lines.

The team ended up in barangay Curva, Medellin town and rode the bus to Bogo City.

Collapse

“Our calamity fund of P7 million is definitely not enough for this damage.  I prefer to call this devastation,” said Mayor Corro.

He said would ask for  assistance from the Cebu provincial government.  However, he couldn’t reach Gov. Hilario Davide III on the phone as, lines were down on Friday.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

As of 9 p.m. last night,  no phone calls could still get through Daanbantayan town.

TAGS: Cebu, disaster

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.