‘What will happen to us when this kindness ends?’ | Inquirer News

‘What will happen to us when this kindness ends?’

/ 02:25 AM November 26, 2013

Romnick Abadines’ heart pounded as a Philippine Air Force C-130 carried him above typhoon-wrecked Tacloban City. He had never been on a plane before, never watched silvery-white clouds pass from a small, round window. It was not the first time, or the last, that he felt helpless and out of his element.

The frail, 31-year-old farmer lost his shanty to Supertyphoon “Yolanda” (international name: “Haiyan”), which flattened much of Tacloban in Leyte province and killed more than 5,200 people.

Now he lays idle in a tent shelter in suburban Manila, where he has no known relatives and little chance of finding more than menial and temporary work.

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More than 12,000 people displaced by the massive storm on Nov. 8 have made it to Manila. Most are with relatives; those with no family in the capital are in shelters. Many have no idea how or where to rebuild their lives.

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“What will happen to us when this kindness ends?” asked Maribel Villajos, a 37-year-old mother of three children who sat listlessly with her husband on cots surrounded by bags of newly donated clothes, potato chips and instant coffee sachets at the same shelter where Abadines and his family were taken.

Villajos’ husband is a carpenter, but his tools were swept away along with their house in the tsunami-like storm surge that swept far into Tacloban and ruined much of the densely populated coastal city.

Thousands of people from areas wrecked by the storm clambered aboard free C-130 mercy flights to Manila without any plan, in a desperate bid to escape the hunger, uncertainties and lingering stench of death back home.

Others arrived in Manila by bus, or fled to central Cebu province which, like the capital, is regarded by rural poor Filipinos as a greener pasture in this impoverished Southeast Asian nation of more than 96 million people.

Escape from uncertainty

They keep coming. In Tacloban, hundreds of survivors lined up on Monday outside the city’s damaged airport, waiting for a flight out.

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Survivors will be ferried out “for as long as possible,” said Eduardo del Rosario, who heads the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.

Many typhoon survivors traveled to Manila to stay with relatives, but a few dozen families have no connections to the city and now live in one of about 10 emergency shelters run by the government and private groups.

The shelter the Abadines and Villajos families live in was set up in a sprawling grade school compound. It has eight portable toilets and three televisions tuned to South Korean soap operas and the Cartoon Network.

Jennifer Dawat, 13, passed the time by making crayon drawings of the family’s happier days in Ormoc City, Leyte province. One showed a girl flying a kite beside a box-like yellow house with a blue roof and a coconut tree, and a smiling yellow sun overhead.

“That’s our house,” she said. “It’s gone.”

Walk-in volunteers drop by to hand over used clothes, children’s books and food. A cell phone company offers free calls. A local radio network parked a mobile van studio for anybody wanting to broadcast any message or recount typhoon ordeals to the public.

Metropolitan Manila welfare official Delia Bawan said the government was taking steps to provide emergency employment to the most desperate survivors who flew to Manila, although that may take some time.

Steps have also been taken to protect the displaced from trafficking syndicates, she said.

Abadines was pleasantly surprised the moment he, his girlfriend and their two children arrived at Manila’s Villamor Air Base. Government welfare staffers and volunteers welcomed them and other survivors with a long round of applause, then gave them packs of food and brought the injured to a first-aid tent.

“My worst fear was that we’ll be dumped on the streets and be at the mercy of drug addicts and criminals,” Abadines said.

But while his family’s needs are now being met, he doesn’t know what will happen next.

Aside from farming, Abadines has worked only as a tricycle driver and vegetable vendor at the public market in Palo town, near Tacloban, where his family lived.

His family was so poor that he completed only three years of grade school. He and his girlfriend have no relatives in Manila, and said their remaining relatives and friends back in Palo were in as much distress as they were.

Finding no help

Even some typhoon survivors with relatives in Manila are in the shelters. Some lost their cell phones and address books in the storm and have been unable to reach loved ones. Others found relatives, but they were unable to help.

Didith Villanueva of Hospicio de San Jose, a Manila orphanage that has provided shelter to dozens of typhoon survivors, said one family from Leyte found a relative who turned out to be a poor vendor who slept on the streets of Manila’s grimy downtown.

“Many of these survivors left their province out of desperation without any plan. They were like shooting at the moon,” Villanueva said.

The exodus is an extra challenge to President Aquino’s administration, which is feeding and sheltering tens of thousands of people in the disaster zones, collecting the dead in Tacloban City and outlying provinces, restoring power and water and laying out a blueprint to rebuild entire villages and towns.

More than a million houses were destroyed or damaged by the typhoon. Although backed by hundreds of millions of dollars in international aid, the government has been overwhelmed by the gargantuan task.

‘Not our fault’

Many survivors who fled to Manila also are overwhelmed. They must either return to the disaster areas and rebuild from nothing or try their luck in Manila or somewhere else, also with nothing.

To Abadines, the choice is simple: “It’s where we grew up and had children. We have to return.”

But his girlfriend, Lorna Ansabot, has reservations. She fears another big storm. In Manila, they could survive, she said, even if they have to scavenge for scraps in garbage dumps.

She thinks of her parents, who lived near her. She and Abadines frantically urged them to flee as the typhoon’s brutal wind started to blow and a wall of water surged in. They refused, saying they needed to watch over their piggery and some chickens.

Her parents were swept away, along with everything they owned. They have not been found.

“She became very depressed after that,” Abadines said. “But I kept telling her, ‘It’s not our fault. It’s not our fault.’”

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