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10,000 feared dead from Haiyan

November 10, 2013

Thousands of people are feared dead in the Philippines as a result of one of the worst typhoons ever to hit the archipelago. The resulting destruction is making it difficult for rescuers to reach the affected areas.

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Residents gather coins and other salvageable materials from the ruins of houses after Super Typhoon Haiyan battered Tacloban city in central Philippines November 10, 2013. One of the most powerful storms ever recorded killed at least 10,000 people in the central Philippines province of Leyte, a senior police official said on Sunday, with coastal towns and the regional capital devastated by huge waves. Super typhoon Haiyan destroyed about 70 to 80 percent of the area in its path as it tore through the province on Friday, said chief superintendent Elmer Soria, a regional police director. REUTERS/Erik De Castro (PHILIPPINES - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT)
Image: Reuters

Tacloban after the typhoon

A senior police officer in the Phillippines said on Sunday that around 10,000 were feared dead on the island of Leyte alone.

"We had a meeting last night with the governor and based on the government's estimates, initially there are 10,000 casualties (dead)," Chief Superintendent Elmer Soria told reporters in Tacloban, the capital of Leyte province early on Sunday. "The devastation is so big."

He said Governor Dominic Petilla's figure was based on reports from village officials. The city administrator in Tacloban, Tecson Lim told the Associated Press that 300 to 400 bodies had already been recovered there.

Tacloban bore the brunt of Haiyan, a category 5 typhoon, which barreled into the Philippines on Friday, crossing the country from east to west in a matter of hours. It produced winds of 235 kilometers per hour (147 miles per hour) with gusts of 275 kilometers per hour, and a storm surge that caused a six-meter (20-foot) rise in sea waters.

Earlier, the Philippine Red Cross had estimated that at least 1,000 had died in Leyte and the nearby province of Samar. However, they also stressed that volunteers had not yet had the chance to count the bodies that they were helping to retrieve.

"There are a lot of dead bodies. We haven't counted them yet. We are too busy to count," the DPA news agency quoted Red Cross chairman Richard Gordon as saying.

"We are managing the dead bodies, we don't want them scattered there," he added.

Interior Secretary Manuel Roxas, who traveled to Tacloban on Saturday to survey the situation, said earlier that the devastation in the region meant it was still too far early to compile a reliable death toll.

"The rescue operation is ongoing. We expect a very high number of fatalities as well as injured," he said. "All systems, all vestiges of modern living - communications, power, water - all are down. Media is down, so there is no way to communicate with the
people in a mass sort of way."

The Leyte governor's figures, as well as the Red Cross estimates contrast sharply with the official confirmed death toll.

President Benigno Aquino said the government was certain that the final death toll would be "be substantially more" than the current official count of 151, but declined to estimate what that might be.

Despite a death toll that may reach into the thousands, it's thought that many more could have been killed. Philippine authorities had evacuated almost 800,000 people from their homes in advance of the typhoon.

As emergency services and aid agencies worked to rescue survivors and repair the damage on Sunday, people in Vietnam were braced for Haiyan to make landfall there.

pfd/mr (AFP, AP, dpa)