PHILIPPINES: Typhoons present "greatest humanitarian challenge in recent history"
 Photo: Jason Gutierrez/IRIN  | | A distraught looking young girl and her mother join a food distribution line for flood victims in Manila | MANILA, 23 October 2009 (IRIN) - Pummelled by back-to-back typhoons and facing another, the Philippines is experiencing its toughest humanitarian challenge in recent history, Josette Sheeran, Executive Director of the UN World Food Programme (WFP), said on 23 October.
The agency is providing "critical" food support to more than one million of the eight million people hit by tropical storm Ketsana and Typhoon Parma, which destroyed swathes of agricultural land, drowned significant parts of Manila and nearby provinces and caused deadly landslides in mountainous regions in the north.
According to the country’s National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC), the estimated cost of damage was about US$700 million, with many roads and bridges destroyed and buildings still submerged, particularly around Manila.
It said 186,416 people remained in 435 evacuation centres in Manila and northern Luzon provinces, although thousands had opted to stay in their partly submerged homes and were difficult to reach.
The Philippines had been struggling to provide assistance to those affected, Sheeran said, but with the "severe humanitarian impact" of the typhoons, its people were "now facing one of the greatest challenges in memory".
To date, the agency has airlifted about 5,000MT of food and relief items to the country, including rice, oil and high-energy biscuits imported from Turkey and Ecuador that could help provide nutrients to children and mothers vulnerable in evacuation camps.
Additional pledges were being received from France, Luxembourg, Poland and Germany, Sheeran said, stressing, however, that more international help was needed.
Targets revised
Kenro Oshidari, WFP Regional Director for Asia, said the UN food agency would have to revise upwards its targets in the next six months, stressing that the initial delivery of food was only meant for survivors of Ketsana.
And with Parma destroying acres upon acres of farmlands planted with corn and rice in the north, additional support would be needed for about half a million farmers whose crops had been inundated.
"The water, even after some four weeks, has not receded in many places, including rice fields. This really worries us because it is supposed to be harvest season and a lot of farmers have lost their crops.

Photo: Jason Gutierrez/IRIN  |
| Parma and Ketsana left 929 people dead and more than 8.7 million people affected, the NDCC reported on 23 October |
"We may have to provide recovery assistance for roughly six months for these farmers," Oshidari said, adding that further assessments would have to be made to determine exactly how many would need extended recovery assistance. "We may also have to revise upwards our plan of assistance to reach more people."
Preparing for Lupit
Meanwhile, thousands of residents living along coastal areas and mountainous areas in northern Luzon have been told to evacuate to safer areas as rescue and relief officials prepare for Typhoon Lupit, expected to make landfall in northern Luzon on 25 October.
Its wide outer rain bands have begun affecting the north, and at least 182 people living in a coastal area in Aparri town were evacuated after a 20m storm surge destroyed a protective dyke.
The government had earlier delivered more than 100,000kg of food and relief items in anticipation of Lupit's arrival.
President Gloria Arroyo said government was prepared for Lupit, stressing that police and the military were on standby.
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