Typhoon Haiyan deaths in Philippines breach 6,000
14 Dec XTV
The death toll from Typhoon Haiyan that struck the central
Philippines on November 8 has passed 6,000 with nearly 1,800 people
missing, officials said on Friday.
Twenty-seven bodies, all unidentified, were among the latest to be
recovered under debris in typhoon-stricken coastal areas including the
hardest hit city of Tacloban, said Maj. Reynaldo Balido, the spokesman
for the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.
The overnight tally pushed the overall death toll to 6,009 while
1,779 others remain unaccounted for, the government agency said, making
the typhoon the deadliest natural disaster on record to hit the
Philippines.Balido said that 20 to 30 bodies were still being found
every day. Identifying cadavers in the advanced stage of decomposition
and matching them with the missing is a difficult process and the reason
why the number of the missing remains unchanged, he said.
The homes of more than 16 million people also were either flattened
or damaged by the typhoon, and officials said rebuilding will take at
least three years.
Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman said that temporary
bunkhouses and emergency shelters were being constructed and residents
given cash in exchange for work, including repacking and hauling relief
goods.“We will provide materials to rebuild their houses, however, we
stressed to the local governments that new shelters have to be built 40
meters away from the shoreline on high tide,” she said.
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