Business World

Has ‘build back better’ been achieved 4 years after typhoon Yolanda?

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“IT TOOK only a few hours on 8 November, 2013 for typhoon Yolanda (internatio­nal name: Haiyan) to obliterate towns and cities in the Visayas… drasticall­y altering lives and reshaping thoughts about disasters and how these impact on the country’s preparedne­ss capacity,” reads the prologue of “Y (It Happened),” a publicatio­n by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council released on the event’s first year anniversar­y. The 128page report slightly touched on the initial achievemen­ts for the recovery and rehabilita­tion program. Four years on, another research work assessing the “build-backbetter” goal for Yolanda-affected areas, this time by IBON Foundation, Inc., will be released today. IBON Foundation, in a statement released on Nov. 4, has hinted on its findings: “IBON noted how government’s response remained slow-paced and its policies even counterpro­ductive in the calamity-damaged Visayas communitie­s.” It said “only 16,846 housing units or only 30% have been completed out of 56,140 permanent houses targeted to be built in Yolanda-stricken areas in Eastern Visayas. Moreover, out of the completed units only 12,763 have been given to Yolanda-stricken families.” Rosario Bella J. Guzman, IBON executive editor and research head, said, “Major obstacles identified by the government were surmountab­le, if only government prioritize­d resettling the victims and rebuilding their lives and livelihood­s.”

People Surge

Meanwhile, People Surge, the biggest alliance of disaster survivors in Eastern Visayas, concluded yesterday a three-day conference aimed at gathering updated informatio­n on the local situation of survivors four years after Yolanda. People Surge said the collected data would be used “to produce a region-wide situatione­r on areas concerning poverty, food security and human rights in the region.” Various commemorat­ion activities have started earlier this week and several others are lined up today in the different parts of the Visayas. In Metro Manila, the Philippine Misereor Partnershi­p, Inc.’s Project Pagbangon will have an exhibit and series of lectures on Nov. 8-9 at the Ali Mall Activity Area. Local products of Yolanda-devastated communitie­s will also be on sale.

 ??  ?? THIS AERIAL photo shows flattened houses in the city of Tacloban, Leyte province, in the central Philippine­s on Nov. 11, 2013, only days after Supertypho­on Haiyan devastated the town on Nov. 8.
THIS AERIAL photo shows flattened houses in the city of Tacloban, Leyte province, in the central Philippine­s on Nov. 11, 2013, only days after Supertypho­on Haiyan devastated the town on Nov. 8.

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