Philippines emerges from flood-inducing typhoons
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Volunteers learn how to purify water during a training event held by
UMCOR Philippines. The United Methodist Committee on Relief is using
volunteers to help distribute supplies to some 11,000 families affected
by recent typhoons there.
UMNS photos courtesy of Ciony Eduarte, UMCOR.
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A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom*
Nov. 13, 2009
Residents of the Philippines are trying to dry out and rebuild after
being battered by multiple flood-inducing typhoons this fall.
The United Methodist Committee on Relief has begun distributing
emergency supplies to more than 11,000 displaced families and expects
to be involved in long-term recovery efforts.
Melissa Crutchfield, who coordinates the agency’s international
disaster response, said about $25,000 had been dispatched to the UMCOR
Philippines Office for the relief work.
UMCOR also has applied for $40,000 in funding from Muslim Aid, and
it is expecting a response soon to a proposal that it submitted to
Action by Churches Together International. “That will expand our
operations tenfold,” she added.
An additional $10,000 was sent to Global Medic, which “has worked
with us on emergency clean water provision in the early days of the
emergency, training our volunteers and providing us with some
purification packets and filters to distribute with our relief
efforts,” Crutchfield said.
In the Philippines, Ciony Eduarte, UMCOR Philippines office manager,
and Belmar Bayombong, UMCOR Philippines technical consultant, are
coordinating the volunteers who package and distribute the supplies.
Students and faculty from Union Theological Seminary in Manila and
Philippine Christine University – including some 9- to 12-year-olds
from the university’s elementary department -- have helped organize
supplies for distribution. Each relief package provides three days of
food assistance and other supplies for a family of five.
Coming in waves
The damaging storms came in waves across the Philippines. On Sept.
26, Tropical Storm Ketsana caused the country’s worst flooding in 40
years, displacing nearly half a million people in the Manila area and
the province of Luzon.
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A volunteer for the United Methodist Committee on Relief looks over
land flooded by recent typhoons in the Philippines.
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On Oct. 3, Typhoon Parma caused additional flooding and landslides
in the Cagayan Province, farther north on Luzon, compounding the damage
caused by Ketsana and delaying relief efforts in some of the most
vulnerable areas. Sixteen people died, and hundreds of thousands were
displaced.
Typhoon Lupit weakened and veered away from the Philippines on Oct.
23, but a fourth storm, Typhoon Minirae, also known as Santi, struck
Central Luzon on Oct. 31, resulting in fresh damage to some of the
affected areas.
“During the typhoon Santi, we also experienced the strong winds and
rains, many trees fell, and the entire UTS campus was filled with
fallen leaves and branches,” Eduarte reported. “We don’t have
electricity and water on that Saturday. We use a small radio for news
and updates being run by eight batteries.”
The number of deaths attributed to all of the storms includes some
1,100 killed in landslides and floods or by bacterial infections from
contaminated water.
Figures released by the Philippines government on Oct. 14 showed
662,274 families affected by all of the storms in 27 provinces
throughout the country’s northern region. Besides the loss of homes and
infrastructure, rice fields were flooded and lives disrupted.
How to help
To identify families needing assistance and monitor the aid, UMCOR
has worked with the government’s Department of Social Welfare and
Development at each evacuation center and beneficiary community. Other
local counterparts and volunteers at each site include school
principals, pastors and community organizations.
Churches also have become places of refuge, Eduarte reported. The
sanctuary of The Lord Almighty United Methodist Church in Sta. Lucia
Calumpit Bulacan provided space for 40 flood-affected families in
October.
Donations to support ongoing relief work in the Philippines can be made to Philippines Emergency, UMCOR Advance #240235. 
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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