BusinessMirror November 11, 2023

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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

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A broader look at today’s business

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Saturday, November 11, 2023 Vol. 19 No. 31

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10 YEARS AFTER SUPER TYPHOON YOLANDA:

Are we prepared for more Yolandas?

NOVEMBER 16, 2013, file photo shows the widespread devastation caused by Supertyphoon Yolanda in San Jose, Tacloban City. BERNARD TESTA

T

By Reine Juvierre S. Alberto

sign na yon na okay na siya pero hindi talaga namin nakita yung katawan niya [Maybe it’s a sign that he’s okay, but we haven’t seen his body],” she said. Supposedly, her father will celebrate his birthday today (November 9), the day after he died (November 8). Bravely recounting how the typhoon devastated their lives, Ortiz told the BusinessMirror they were inside their house and the weather was fair. “Parang hindi babagyo [Like a typhoon won’t land],” she said. She said they were watching the news and it said “the strongest typhoon in the world” would hit their city. Urging her father to evacuate immediately, he said to her: “Wag kang maniwala. Magtiwala ka lang sa Diyos [Don’t believe that. Just trust in the Lord].” At midnight, the storm’s eye engulfed Tacloban City. She described how the robust winds obliterated the walls of their home, and suddenly, colossal waves, towering like a three-story house, surged in, tearing their family apart.

ACLOBAN, Leyte—It’s been eight days since All Saints’ Day has passed, but for those in Tacloban City, it’s been extended until November 8.

THE mass grave at the Holy Cross Cemetery in Tacloban City. REINE ALBERTO

The rain just stopped when we arrived in the city, and the car window was moist due to the cold, providing a foggy view of the outside. As we pass through the street, specks of light that resemble Christmas lights flicker. The days of the saints and souls are over, and the Christmas spirit is finally here. But the Christmas lights are too low if it were to be displayed like that, I thought to myself. And so, I was wrong. As I looked intently, I realized those weren’t Christmas lights. Those are candles lit up outside of houses and in the streets to remember the people who lost their lives and went missing after the tragedy brought on by Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan). “Paraan yon ng pag-alala namin sa mga namatay dahil sa Yolanda [It’s our way of remembering those who died because of Super Ty-

THE memorial marker for those laid to rest in the mass grave. REINE ALBERTO

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phoon Yolanda],” said 38-year-old Roxanne Ortiz. Since 2014, when marking Yolanda’s first anniversary, it’s been a tradition for Taclobanons to light candles and line them on the streets—the same place where the piles of uncollected dead bodies were lined up 10 years ago. The typhoon left a trail of destruction in the country claiming the lives of more than 5,000 people and leaving 1,613 people missing.

Yolanda is still fresh

TEN years after the typhoon struck the city, Ortiz said: “Fresh pa rin yung nangyari kasi hindi mo naman talaga siya makakalimutan [What happened was still fresh because you cannot forget an event like that].” “Lalo na may namatay sa pamilya namin—yung papa ko,” she revealed and stared at the tombstone of her father in the mass grave at

THE names of those who lost their lives due to Super Typhoon Yolanda. REINE ALBERTO

the Holy Cross Cemetery. However, he wasn’t buried there because they hadn’t found or retrieved his body since the tragedy happened. They just pre-

sumed that he was dead because he hadn’t returned for years. Their family had a dream many times about their father just happy and smiling, “baka

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 55.9190 n JAPAN 0.3695 n UK 68.3610 n HK 7.1620 n CHINA 7.6770 n SINGAPORE 41.1078 n AUSTRALIA 35.5924 n EU 59.6656 n KOREA 0.0424 n SAUDI ARABIA 14.9086 Source: BSP (November 10, 2023)


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