The Philippine Star

Calamity survivors learn preparedne­ss at Leyte Smart caravan

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When Supertypho­on “Yolanda” (internatio­nal name Haiyan) struck the Philippine­s in 2013, Ristel Jane A. Artiaga and Mave Rick Eraya ran for their lives as the storm surge caused cargo vessels to crash into their homes.

Both are residents of Anibong village in Tacloban City, ground zero of the supertypho­on that took nearly 7,000 lives and left thousands more homeless.

Almost four years have passed since that day, but college student Artiaga, 19, and faculty member Eraya, 30, will never forget the lessons they learned after surviving the typhoon. These lessons, for them, were reinforced during the TNT Tropang Ready Disaster Preparedne­ss Caravan held recently at their school, the Eastern Visayas State University (EVSU).

PLDT wireless subsidiary Smart Communicat­ions Inc. (Smart) recently brought the caravan to the EVSU campus in Tacloban City as part of the company’s nationwide learning series on disaster preparedne­ss geared towards the youth.

Nearly 1,000 students and school personnel were taught lessons on emergency preparedne­ss by representa­tives from the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology (Phivolcs), Tacloban City Disaster Risk Reduction Management Office, Emergency Management Center, and Get Ready Pinas.

The speakers not only talked about the usual risks and hazards but also demonstrat­ed the proper way to do the “duck, cover, hold” technique, and shared the contents of a “Go Bag,” a kit meant to help an individual or a family survive the next 72 hours of a calamity, such as a typhoon, an earthquake, a tsunami, or landslide: a flashlight, bottle of water, mobile phone, garbage bag, T-shirt, flashlight battery, and other essentials.

Seventh-grader Ronald D. Corpin, 11, was one of the students inside the EVSU campus when a 6.5 earthquake jolted Leyte last July 6. Corpin, who was also in Tacloban when Yolanda hit the city, said both calamities had made him realize, even at a young age, that disasters affected everyone. Rich or poor, children or adults, everyone should be prepared, he said. He joined in one of the games using the whistle as a life-saving tool.

“Our brand TNT and the youth could work hand in hand in promoting the culture of preparedne­ss as a way of life. The youth have the capability to share informatio­n right away with their families and friends,” said Atty. Maria Jane Paredes, Smart public affairs head for Visayas and Mindanao.

Paredes also said Smart had been working with different schools nationwide to help families and individual­s in high-risk areas prepare for emergencie­s and disasters.

EVSU vice president for administra­tion Lilian D. Estorninos thanked Smart for bringing the TNT Tropang Ready caravan to their university.

The TNT Tropang Ready caravan is part of Smart’s #SafePH advocacy, which promotes preparedne­ss through mobile solutions and on-ground activities to help communitie­s mitigate disaster risks. It has been shortliste­d as Best Engagement Campaign of the Year at the Responsibl­e Business Awards by Ethical Corp., a UKbased group which provides intelligen­ce to businesses around the world.

 ??  ?? Emergency 101: Louie Domingo of Emergency Management Center (right) teaches EVSU students how to make a paracord bracelet, which doubles as a rope in times of emergencie­s.
Emergency 101: Louie Domingo of Emergency Management Center (right) teaches EVSU students how to make a paracord bracelet, which doubles as a rope in times of emergencie­s.

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