TACLOBAN
CITY, Nov. 7 (PNA) -- Three years after supertyphoon Yolanda struck, survivors
from a badly hit community, who witnessed how ships destroyed lives and houses,
are still dealing with unfulfilled promises.
Hyacinth
Abuda, 22, of Anibong district still lives in a makeshift house with her
husband and a child. Their family built a house near a shipwreck converted into
a landmark.
“We really
want to transfer to a safer place, but the problem is permanent houses are not
yet livable.
Another thing is that we did not get the emergency shelter
assistance since we are recipients of permanent housing projects,” said Abuda,
who lost a daughter and four relatives when storm surges washed out their
village.
Abuda’s
hand-to-mouth existence is supported by her husband’s meager earning from a
barber shop.
Her
neighbor, Vicenta Segunda, 47, a mother of four, shared the same sentiment. It
is still unclear to her when they will be moving to the resettlement site.
“It would
really be comfortable to us to have a permanent house, but as what I’ve heard,
there is no electricity and stable water supply in relocation sites. I am also
worried of what to do for a living,” said Segunda, an assistant to the village
secretary.
The two
mothers and their families did everything to survive when Yolanda unleashed its
wrath in this city on Nov. 8, 2013. They stepped on anything and clung unto
something for dear life.
Residents of
Anibong district are among the 14,000 families in the city who will be moved to
the northern relocation sites, away from danger zones.
The city
government admitted that lack of water and other needed facilities for new
townships derail the pace of transferring families.
Anibong
district is a coastal community near the city’s port. It is the village where 10
ships ran aground, killing several people and destroying houses in the process.
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