As the body count rose to 823 late yesterday,  authorities expect that the casualties from flash floods that devastated  two port cities in Mindanao spawned by Typhoon Sendong will continue to  pile up in the coming days as officials said more are missing than  reported since entire families were believed swept to sea as they slept  in coastal slums.
Towns in Cagayan de Oro and Iligan cities which  were worst hit by the devastation prepared mass burials for decomposing  bodies with authorities saying unclaimed cadavers piling up in  mortuaries were posing health risks and had to be buried.
Several  television footage showed decomposing bodies lined up in different  centers where the dead were delivered for identification, underlining  the serious tragedy that some of the survivors compared to the recent  tsunami that hit parts of northern Japan last March. One footage from an  Iligan mortuary showed a 
corridor lined with bodies wrapped in white plastic bags bound with tan-colored packaging tape.
The  National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC)  reported Monday afternoon that bodies of 823victims were thus far  recovered.NDRRMC executive director Benito Ramos said most of  the fatalities were from Region 10. He said many of the bodies found  were already decomposing. Ramos added his agency had lost count of  the number of missing people. He called to the public for donations of  food, clothing and blankets for people now staying in temporary  shelters. Burials were expected to take place starting Tuesday, local officials said.
The disaster area is normally bypassed by typhoons that ravage other parts of the country every year.
Teresita  Badiang, an engineer at the Iligan mayor’s office, said the city had  begun constructing two concrete communal tombs where cadavers would be  placed side by side “so that their burial will be dignified.”
The disaster council said at least 227 people died in Iligan.
In  Cagayan de Oro, where the disaster council placed the death toll at  336, Mayor Vicente Emano said a mass burial would be held within the  week but aides said the exact location had not been finalised.
Dr  Jaime Bernadas, the department of health’s director for the region, said  cadavers were still being processed prior to “temporary burial” in the  city.
Health officials were taking DNA samples and photographs of  victims. “We are giving time for relatives to claim (the bodies),” he  said.
About 47,000 evacuees are now huddled in evacuation centres  in Washi’s wake, mostly in the northern coast of Mindanao, a vast  poverty-stricken island troubled for decades by a Muslim separatist  insurgency.
Dr Eric Tayag, head of the national epidemiology  center and Department of Health (DoH) spokesman, said the government was  taking steps to prevent outbreaks of cholera, dysentery, dengue and  respiratory problems particularly in congested evacuation centres.
“Around 10 days after this flooding there might be an epidemic of water-borne diseases,” Tayag warned on television.Philippine  Red Cross chief Gwendolyn Pang said strict guidelines had to be  followed in mass burials, including photographing corpses, listing  identifying marks and laying them a meter apart for possible exhumation.  “I’m sure their families will look for them,” she said. President Aquino is set to visit the stricken zone today after ordering a review of the country’s disaster defenses.
Ramos,  the government’s disaster agency chief, said most of the victims were  “informal settlers” — a term typically used for slum squatters who are  often unregistered by authorities.
Authorities likened tropical  storm Sendong to Ondoy, one of the country’s most devastating storms  which dumped huge amounts of rain on Manila and other parts of the  country in 2009, killing more than 460 people.
The Department of  Budget and Management (DBM), for its part, vowed the fast-track release  of P1.297 billion calamity fund to help victims of the tropical storm  that ravaged Cagayan de Oro, Iligan and several areas in Mindanao.
Budget  and Management Secretary Florencio Abad said “the government is  generously equipped to mobilize and support disaster relief efforts in  Cagayan de Oro, Iligan, and other Sendong-affected areas.” 
“We are ensuring the quick release of these funds so that victims will receive swift and proper assistance,” he said.  Abad  also said that the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD),  Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), Department of National  Defense (DND), and the Department of Education (DepEd) “are also  adequately supported by separate Quick Response Funds (QRFs), which will  guarantee direct and immediate support to Sendong-stricken areas.”
“In  addition to the Calamity Fund and the QRFs, we also have the Local  Government Support Fund shares of all affected local government units,  for whom President Aquino will provide Special Allotment Release Orders  (SAROs) and Notices of Allocation (NCAs) tomorrow,” he said.
Abad  said “if additional disaster-response funds are required, the  Administration has sufficient reserves to augment the Calamity Fund and  QRFs to expedite relief operations to all affected areas and  communities.” 
Relatively, Abad said that for next year the  calamity fund was increased by P2.5 billion to P7.5 billion relative to  this year’s budget.
The governments of France , United Kingdom  and Japan joined the growing international outpouring of support and  sympathies for the victims and survivors of the deadly storm that  battered Mindanao and some part of Visayas over the weekend and feared  to have killed at least 1,000 people.
Philippine government  officials on Monday said the death toll is nearing 700 as more bodies  are being retrieved two days after tropical storm Sendong dumped heavy  rains Friday to Saturday, causing rivers to overflow that inundated many  villages and destroyed vital infrastructures.
Earlier, the United States and China extended their condolences and pledged assistance to Manila ’s relief efforts. The  National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) also sent a 15-man team on a  weeklong assignment to Cagayan de Oro and Iligan to help identify bodies  through photographs, fingerprints, dental records and DNA tests on  tissue samples.
An NBI Disaster Victim Identification team based  in Cagayan de Oro has already identified 203 out of 249 bodies recovered  in Cagayan de Oro, as of Dec. 18, 6 p.m.
“We have to identify  first the bodies. We might as well do it now because if not, we might  have to exhume them again,” said NBI deputy director for technical  services Reynaldo Esmeralda said.
NBI-Medico-Legal team Division  Chief Dr. Alvin David said he has sent a 15-man team belonging to the  agency’s Disaster Victim Identification Team (DVIT) to help Cagayan De  Oro authorities identify hundreds of corpses.
David explained that  they will be conducting specimen harvesting test coming from the bodies  of the dead victim to get DNA samples coming from the bone, leg muscles  and liver tissue.
Members of the House of Representatives crossed partylines yesterday to help victims of typhoon Sendong in Mindanao.
Led  by Speaker Feliciano Belmonte, the 285-strong Lower House came up with a  resolution that they would contribute P20,000 each from their salaries  and another P1-million each from their priority development assistance  fund to help the typhoon victims. “The situation needs an  immediate national response. We have decided to give our all-out  efforts, not just as an institution but as individuals,” Belmonte said  in a press conference yesterday at the House media center. The  Speaker also revealed that like Cagayan Rep. Rufus Rodriguez and the  other lawmaker from the hard hit areas in Mindanao and the Visayas, he  was in touch with Aquino early the day after the catastrophe. “The  President is on top of the whole thing. He has mobilized the different  agencies of government to help the areas affected,” Belmonte said as he  continued to coordinate with the various political parties in the House  of Representatives on ways to rebuild the areas affected. The  Speaker said that the cash donations will be distributed not only to  Cagayan de Oro and Iligan cities but also to other areas hit by the  storm and the subsequent flooding that resulted in the death of hundreds  of residents and is still causing damage to private and public  infrastructure.
Likewise, the Speaker said that in the long term,  he is leading a move to convince each member of the House to give  P1-million each from their respective Priority Development Assistance  Funds reserved for hard projects to be used in the rehabilitation of  public infrastructure in the devastated areas.
Zambales Rep. Mitos  Magsaysay was among the first to respond from the opposition bloc in  the House even as she urged Filipinos to mobilize themselves into action  and help the victims of typhoon Sendong.
“What happened was truly  a tragedy especially this close to Christmas. My prayers go out to  those who have lost their homes and their loved ones in the floods,” she  said as she expressed faith in the resilience of Filipinos and their  strength in times of disasters.
Rep. Juan Edgardo Angara, for his  part, urged the government to enroll those who have lost homes to  typhoon  Sendong  in its P40-billion Conditional Cash Transfer program  as it is the best source of long-term aid for the victims.
He said   Sendong victims exceed the official definition of what a poor is that  would qualify them for the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, CCT’s  official name.They need not be identified via the DWSD’s  household  targeting system.
Sen. Edgardo J. Angara expressed deep sympathy for the victims of the devastation.
“We  mourn with those who lost their loved ones in the floods and extend all  the help we can muster,” said Angara who also lamented  that “this  isn’t the first time we faced such a tragedy. The costs are too high for  us not to use what we have learned from past experiences in better  preparing ourselves for future typhoons.”
The Chair of the  Congressional Commission on Science, Technology and Engineering (COMSTE)  noted reports that a joint weather monitoring mission between the US  and Japan predicted that ‘Sendong’ would usher heavy rains similar to  ‘Ondoy’ (International Name: Ketsana).
Analyzing satellite data  gathered on ‘Sendong,’ the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) of  the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the  Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) saw heavy rain falling at  around 50 mm per hour. Rains from ‘Ondoy’ fell on Metro Manila at 56.83  mm per hour in September 2009.
In contrast, the national weather bureau Pagasaestimated only 10-25 mm per hour of rainfall from ‘Sendong’.
“Clearly,  we still need to improve our disaster management and risk reduction  systems,” said Angara. “Government must push for concerted effort not  only in improving our forecasting technologies but also in seeking the  help of other nations, whenever we lack the infrastructure and  expertise.”
Vice President Jejomar Binay also appealed for aid for  victims of flashfloods brought about by Typhoon Sendong in Cagayan de  Oro (CDO) City and Iligan City. Binay said any kind of relief assistance would greatly help the victims. “Our  kababayans in CDO and Iligan are in dire need of our help. Donations,  whether in cash or in kind, would go a long way towards easing their  suffering,” he said. Binay said that Christmas is the season of  giving and hoped that the spirit of the holiday season “touch would  touch generous hearts to help those in need.” He also asked for prayers for those who died in the floods.
The  Vice President flew to CDO early yesterday morning and personally  distributed 2,880 bags of relief goods to Kagay-anons staying at the  evacuation centers in Macasandig, City Central Elementary School and  West City Elementary School.
He also went to funeral homes and  extended cash assistance and his condolences to families who lost their  loved ones in the wake of the massive floods.
Meanwhile, Binay  ordered the Office of the Vice President distribute 5,000 bags of relief  goods to victims in Iligan City; 5,000 to Dumaguete City; and another  10,000 bags to CDO. “The relief goods will be available on Dec. 22nd,” Binay said.
Gerry Baldo, Pat C. Santos, Michaela P. del Callar, AFP
12/20/11
http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20111220hed1.html
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