Houston Chronicle Sunday

Islanders recovering from super typhoon

Military planes bring supplies, food and water for rebuild

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher and Audrey McAvoy

Many people in a U.S. Pacific territory ravaged by a deadly super typhoon lost everything, but residents say they are resilient and must focus on the long recovery ahead.

The U.S. government is sending supplies to the Northern Marianas as residents dig through crumbled houses, smashed cars and fallen utility poles after Super Typhoon Yutu struck Thursday as a Category 5 storm.

“The rebuilding of this island is beginning already as time waits for nobody,” Jan Reyes, who lives on the territory’s most populated island of Saipan, wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “Despite the casualties, we the people of the Commonweal­th of the Northern Mariana Islands are resilient people.”

To help the recovery, military planes brought in food, water, tarps and other supplies.

U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency spokesman David Gervino said the agency is focused on helping restore power, opening sea and airports, and ensuring cellphone towers can operate on emergency power until electricit­y returns.

Super Typhoon Yutu packed maximum sustained winds of 180 mph as it passed over the islands of Tinian and Saipan, the National Weather Service said. By Saturday, power was still out across Saipan, with 50,000 residents, and Tinian, with 3,000 people.

The strongest storm to hit any part of the United States this year overturned cars, crushed small planes, ripped off roofs and killed a woman who took shelter in an abandoned building that collapsed. Others were injured, including three people who needed surgery.

Many homes were destroyed because some families can’t afford concrete homes that conform to building codes meant to withstand typhoon winds, said Edwin Propst, a member of the territory’s House of Representa­tives.

Some people build houses with concrete foundation­s and walls but the structures have wooden or tin roofs.

Reyes and her family lost everything.

“Everything my family and I have bought and added to our home over 13 years laid on the flooded floor as every window in our house shattered,” Reyes wrote.

A cousin was trapped under debris for seven hours, Reyes said.

Her family rode out the storm in a hotel room, overturnin­g a bed to create a barricade against the wind, rain and debris. When the worst passed, she said it took half an hour to navigate fallen poles and trees for what would normally be a five-minute drive to their home.

“The foundation of our culture is selflessne­ss and family values, and this is what has always helped us get through hard times,” she wrote. “We will always remain hopeful and prepared for the worst. This is our way of life.”

People in the islands are used to riding out monster storms, but many said Yutu was the worst they have experience­d.

Because of severe weather, people “listen to warnings from local officials, they take shelter when directed to do so, they stock up on supplies in advance of the storm,” Gervino said.

The territory’s only hospital, in Saipan, said it saw 133 people in its emergency room Thursday, and three patients had severe injuries that needed surgery.

FEMA has 220,000 liters of water and 260,000 meals stored on Guam for shipment to the Northern Marianas, a half-hour plane ride away.

More than 800 people were in shelters across the islands, and space was running out, officials said.

 ?? Edwin Propst / Associated Press ?? Destructio­n on the island of Saipan after Super Typhoon Yutu swept through the Commonweal­th of the Northern Mariana Islands last week.
Edwin Propst / Associated Press Destructio­n on the island of Saipan after Super Typhoon Yutu swept through the Commonweal­th of the Northern Mariana Islands last week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States