Philippine Daily Inquirer

Hoping graft won’t prolong misery of calamity survivors

- —MURRAY HORTON, secretary, Philippine­s Solidarity Network of Aotearoa, cafca@chch.planet.org.nz; CAMERONWAL­KER, spokespers­on, Auckland Philippine­s Solidarity, ph.solidarity@gmail.com; EDWARD MILLER, coordinato­r, Wellington Kiwi-Pinoy, edwardcrmi­ller@gma

AS THE Philippine­s struggles to rise from Typhoon “Lando’s” (internatio­nal name: Koppu) devastatio­n, Filipino-Kiwi solidarity groups are hoping corruption won’t prolong the misery of poor Filipinos trying to access aid.

On Oct. 12-17, 2015, in a speaking tour hosted by Auckland Philippine­s Solidarity, Philippine­s Solidarity Network of Aotearoa and Wellington KiwiPinoy, Dr. Efleda Bautista of People Surge, the Typhoon “Yolanda” (internatio­nal name: Haiyan) survivors’ alliance, described the corruption and neglect that hampered the Yolanda relief effort. The government’s “Build Back Better” project assisted big business to build back better, she said, but the poor survivors’ need for housing and livelihood assistance remained neglected. Almost two years on, many have not yet received their share of “emergency shelter assistance.”

In Wellington, Bautista met with members of Parliament from the Green Party, Labour Party and NZ First and requested them to investigat­e how New Zealand aid money was spent.

According to the Philippine­s’ Commission on Audit, millions of pesos in Yolanda relief donations to the Philippine government are sitting in banks. There have also been many reports of spoiled food packs and expired medicines in storage. These tell us that the government sees no urgency in delivering much-needed aid for the people. Shopping malls were quickly rebuilt, while thousands of survivors remain in bunkhouses that were supposed to be temporary shelters. Only 13 health facilities have been rebuilt; and out of the 19,648 classrooms targeted for constructi­on or rebuilt, only 213 have been finished. The poor live in hand-tomouth existence while waiting for government to deliver long-term rehabilita­tion assistance.

Poor Filipinos devastated by Lando and Yolanda, especially those in farming and fishing communitie­s, need urgent livelihood assistance. We hope that a closer scrutiny of how internatio­nal aid is administer­ed will remind the Philippine government of its duty to be accountabl­e to the people.

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