Jakarta Globe – AFP, December 18, 2013
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| A typhoon survivor decorates a Christmas tree amidst the rubble of destroyed houses in Tacloban on December 17, 2013. (Reuters Photo/Erik De Castro) |
A day after
the nation ended its 40-day mourning period for thousands of typhoon dead,
President Benigno Aquino appealed for more foreign aid and private-sector
pledges to revive hundreds of devastated communities.
“The task
immediately before us lies in ensuring that the communities that rise again do
so stronger, better and more resilient than before,” he told foreign diplomats
and aid officials in a speech at the launch of the initiative.
“We know
that it is more efficient to prioritize resilience now, rather than to keep
rebuilding,” he said, in a nod to the country’s location as the frontline state
for Pacific storms and typhoons.
Haiyan left
nearly 8,000 people dead or missing after winds of up 315 kilometers per hour
struck an area described by the United Nations as about the size of Portugal in
the central islands on November 8.
Giant
tsunami-like waves created by storm surges as well as the ferocious winds
wrecked 1.2 million houses, displacing 4.4 million people in some of the
country’s poorest regions, according to a recovery plan released by the
economic planning department.
With nearly
six million jobs lost, Haiyan may also trim economic growth by 0.3 percentage
points this year and next, according to the document.
Aquino said
the typhoon, one of the strongest ever to hit land and already the
second–deadliest natural disaster in the history of the Philippines, caused
$12.9 billion in damage and destruction.
In terms of
fatalities it is now second only to a tsunami which hit the major southern
island of Mindanao and left between 5,000 and 8,000 people dead following a
major undersea quake in 1976.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry visited the typhoon-devastated central city of
Tacloban on Wednesday, expressing shock at what he called “stunning”
devastation.
The
economic planning department said the rehabilitation plan calls for spending
360.9 billion pesos ($8.17 billion) over a four-year period, until 2017.
The
government is allocating a total of 125.1 billion pesos for the effort, with
the spending spread over this year and next, an expense that it said was
“expected to impact on the fiscal deficit in the next two or three years.”
Foreign and
local donors as well as the private sector are being asked to help, the plan
said, but no breakdown was given.
“Every
dollar of funding assistance will be used in as efficient and as lasting a
manner as possible,” Aquino pledged Wednesday.
In his
speech he thanked the global community for the outpouring of support for
typhoon victims but stressed there is still much more to do.
“Your help
is all the more necessary today, because in confronting the escalating effects
of climate change, the resources of countries like the Philippines will be
strained to the limit,” he said.
He said the
plan involves meeting immediate as well longer-term needs as devastated
communities try to return to normal, with food aid expected to be needed until
March next year at the latest.
“From now
until December 2014 we will be preoccupied with critical immediate investments
such as the rebuilding and repair of infrastructure and the construction of
temporary houses,” he said. “Large investments will be spread over multiple
years and will hopefully be completed by 2017 if not earlier.”
Apart from
the physical rebuilding, the plan involves creating new jobs, aid to vulnerable
workers in agriculture and the service sectors, and funds to deal with health,
social and environmental issues.
The United
Nations this week launched a $791 million aid appeal to take care of the
survivors’ needs over the next 12 months, an amount that UN spokesmen said will
complement the government’s rehabilitation plan.
Agence
France-Presse

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