The Philippine Star

‘Foreign disaster aid welcome if without conditions’

- By RAINIER ALLAN RONDA and GIOVANNI NILLES With Jaime Laude, Helen Flores, Marvin Sy, Paolo Romero

Social Welfare Secretary Judy Taguiwalo yesterday said the country survived typhoons Karen and Lawin without foreign aid.

Taguiwalo clarified her stance on accepting donations and assistance from the private sector and foreign institutio­ns, saying foreign aid is welcome as long as this does not come with “conditions.”

She said the government has enough funds for relief and rehabilita­tion efforts.

Sen. Ralph Recto said the government has unspent P37 billion in calamity funds as of August this year, which could be used to help the typhoon victims.

Recto said the fund – offi known as the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Fund – came from unused appropriat­ions last year as well as the current year.

For 2015, P14 billion was appropriat­ed for the fund, of which P5 billion remained unused as of December.

The remaining amount was added to the 2016 appropriat­ion of P38.9 billion, raising the fund to P44 billion.

Withdrawal­s as of end-August amounted to P6.9 billion, leaving a balance of P37 billion.

“The challenge is to open the floodgates of domestic aid funds and not to ask help from abroad,” Recto said.

The typhoons destroyed some P10.2 billion worth of agricultur­al crops and displaced more than 200,000 families in Cagayan Valley, the Cordillera­s, Central Luzon and Ilocos region.

Taguiwalo said the agency continues to distribute relief assistance to the victims. She said the government would continue to provide emergency shelter assistance to the affected families in the next days.

“Emergency shelter assistance should be ( treated as) emergency. ( It should) not (be given) three years or two years after. So we are doing our best to make sure that the Yolanda experience in terms of delayed provision of emergency shelter assistance would not be repeated,” Taguiwalo said in yesterday’s briefing at Malacañang.

The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t chief gave assurance that the DSWD would monitor the expiry dates of relief goods.

Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said President Duterte has instructed him to study the possibilit­y of restructur­ing the planting calendar in relation to the effects of climate change.

The President wanted to know if the planting period could be adjusted so farmers can harvest crops before the typhoon season.

He wanted a deeper study on the management of the Cagayan and Chico rivers, which overflowed and destroyed more than P8 billion worth of crops, and proposed dredging and desiltatio­n.

“I was baffled initially because of the great disparity between the loss of lives and the damage to agricultur­e. There was so much damage to agricultur­e and minimal to life. The government was prepared for this. The only reason why there was so much damage to agricultur­e was because we could not relocate the palay, we could not relocate the corn fields,” Piñol said.

As of yesterday morning, Taguiwalo said the Cordillera­s posted the most number of affected families, who are still in evacuation centers.

The Cordillera Administra­tive Region (CAR) recorded 66,875 affected families; Cagayan Valley has 59,319; Ilocos, 52,655, and Central Luzon, 32,419.

Except for the Cordillera­s, evacuation centers in all three regions have been vacated as the families have returned home.

The families were given P5,000 each in initial assistance so they could buy materials to repair their houses.

Taguiwalo promised a total of P30,000 in assistance to those whose houses were destroyed.

Piñol said the government would provide immediate and long-term interventi­ons for the affected communitie­s, including the food-for-work program so people can earn a living while recovering from their losses.

He said the administra­tion is looking into changing the crop insurance system from actual damage to index loses.

Verifying more fatalities

The National Disater Risk Reduction and Management Council is validating reports that 17 more persons died from landslides during the onslaught of Lawin in the Cordillera­s.

The NDRRMC has so far placed the total number of fatalities at eight.

CAR disaster officials reported that the number of Lawin- related fatalities has increased as rescue teams were able to penetrate areas isolated by mudslides in Kalinga, Apayao, Abra and Ifugao.

Several areas in the region remain without power as the typhoon knocked down power lines and posts. –

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