TYPHOON HAIYAN RIPS THROUGH CENTRAL PHILIPPINESTyphoon Haiyan is a Category 5 storm, the strongest t
TYPHOON HAIYAN RIPS THROUGH CENTRAL PHILIPPINESTyphoon Haiyan is a Category 5 storm, the strongest typhoon of 2013 and said to be the “most powerful ever” to make landfall (with winds near 195-200 mph). Perspective: Superstorm Sandy was at 95mph when it hit New Jersey; Hurricane Katrina at 129mph when it hit land.Pre-emptive evacuations affect more than 161,000 families or more than 790,000 people in 37 provincesTyphoon Haiyan as seen from spaceHaiyan makes 6 landfalls - it affected an island chain in the central Philippines, making landfall in six islands. It gained wind power as it traversed through waters in between.Haiyan traverses areas affected by magnitude 7.1 earthquake - The earthquake left more than 200 dead dead on October 16; 1000 injured; 350,000 displaced. The survivors have been living in tents and evacuation areas. It passed through Leyte, Samar, Cebu (2.5 million residents), among others. All with densely populated cities, some of which are the poorest provinces in the country.100 people killed in Tacloban — first estimate of casualties in the city reported today, November 9. Because the communication lines are down, the news centers have yet to take stock of the full extent of the damage. But the numbers are still expected to rise. The devastation was described as if a tsunami had wracked through it.2:03PM 11/9: An estimated 4 million people have been affected by the typhoon4:20PM 11/9: 90% of Baco Town in Oriental Mindoro flooded4:55 PM 11/9: Bodies still scattered in Leyte as Visayas in shock5:19PM 11/9: Negros Occidental under a state of calamity7:34PM 11/9: Local officials expect the number of bodies found in Tacloban to reach 500eta: 7:45PM 11/9: Iloilo and Palawan declare state of calamityeta: 8:04PM 11/9: Update: 134 reported deadeta: 8:30PM 11/9: Thousands homeless in Ormoc, LeyteThe victims need all the help they can get. Cities have been leveled, buildings made of concrete were destroyed by strong winds and storm surges. Communications have yet to be reestablished in most of the areas affected by the typhoon. The full picture left behind by Haiyan has yet to be established yet the devastation reported on television is already extensive. The government is bracing for large-scale relief operations. Virtually 1/3 of the country has been ravaged by this natural disaster. And we need help. HOW THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY CAN HELPdonations via the Philippine Red Cross (including PayPal)donations via Habitat for Humanitydonations via ANCOP Foundation USAeta: donations via UNICEF Philippineseta2: donations via CARE Australiaeta2: donations via Caritas Internationalis eta2: donations via GMA Network (credit card)eta2: donations via World Visioneta2: donations via AmeriCareseta2: donations via Samaritan’s Purse (Canada)eta2: donations via Canadian Red Cross (or you can text REDCROSS or ROUGE to 30333 to donate $5)FOR THOSE IN THE PHILIPPINEStext donations via GlobeRed Cross and DSWD relief operations (infographic)list of ongoing relief operations via Rapplerdonations via ABS-CBN Newseta: relief operations via University of the Philippineseta: relief operations via the Department of Educationeta: pick-up locations for donations via Air 21HOW TO FILE FOR MISSING PERSONSvia GMA Networketa: via Philippine Red Crosseta: via Google Person FinderPlease reblog and add other details I might’ve missed! -- source link
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