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Sunday, September 27, 2020
Vol. 15
No. 353
P25.00 nationwide | 3 sections 20 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
IN this November 12, 2013, file photo, a woman carries her baby across an area damaged by Supertyphoon Yolanda (international code name Haiyan) in Tacloban City, Leyte. AP/AARON FAVILA
Swiss center reports 4-M Pinoys were forced to flee homes as a consequence of disasters, armed conflicts
T
By Cai U. Ordinario
HE Switzerland-based International Displacement Monitoring Center (IDMC) has reported that more than 4 million Filipinos were displaced from their homes as an aftermath of armed conflicts and natural disasters in 2019, making the Philippines the country with the second-highest internal displacement count in the world and highest in the East Asia and the Pacific region in that year.
“Together with China and India, the Philippines is among the countries to record most disaster displacement worldwide each year,” the IDMC said. The IDMC added, “Between six and nine major typhoons make landfall annually, and the country [the Philippines] also sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire, making it prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Storms and earthquakes triggered 4.1 million new displacements in 2019.” The center issued the report just before the Philippines marked the September 26 anniversary of Typhoon Ondoy, which dumped record rainfall in just a few hours and turned huge parts of Luzon mainland into virtual seas in 2009. Based on IDMC data, around 4.277 million were forced to flee from their houses due to disasters and armed conflict. These include 4.094 million displacements due to disasters and 183,000 displacements caused by armed conflict. There were 364,000 total internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the country due to disasters and 182,000 IDPs due to conflict and violence as of December 2019, the
IDMC said.
Natural disasters
DATA showed tropical depression Usman caused 550,000 displacements across nine provinces in early January of that year; Typhoon Hanna, 38,000 displacements in August; and Typhoon Tisoy, 1.4 million displacements across the central regions of the Philippines in December. Further, earthquakes that struck the southern provinces of Cotabato and Davao del Sur in October and December caused 413,000 additional displacements. Many of those who were displaced had to stay longer in government shelters because their homes were destroyed by the earthquake. “The government’s commendable data collection, combined with the use of anonymized Facebook user data, made it possible to understand where people moved from and to and for how long they were displaced,” the IDMC said. “Robust data of this kind is vital to guide responses in the Philippines, which has to deal with the impacts of disasters, including mass displacement, across an ar-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.5450
IN this October 17, 2017, file photo, hundreds of evacuees are housed in a multipurpose hall at Balo-i, Lanao del Norte, after fleeing the besieged city of Marawi in southern Philippines. AP/BULLIT MARQUEZ
chipelago of more than 7,500 islands,” it added. However, in June, the National Housing Authority (NHA) said the pandemic caused delays in various infrastructure projects, including permanent housing projects for residents affected by Supertyphoon Yolanda in 2013. These delays caused by the unavailability of construction materials and restricted mobility of workers has prompted the NHA to cut its mass housing production targets by 32 percent this year.
NHA Group Manager-Management Services Group Marissa B. Maniquis said the NHA now targets to complete 68,095 from the initial target of 99,510 houses. Data showed 318 projects which accounted for 75 percent of total completion projects covering 47,055 units were delayed.
Conflict and violence
IN terms of armed conflict, IDMC said Mindanao, the southernmost island of the Philippines, has been the scene of conflicts between gov-
ernment forces and radical Muslim groups for four decades. More than 120,000 people have been killed over the years of fighting between security forces and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the New People’s Army, smaller “radicalized” groups such as the Abu Sayyaf, which has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS), among others. IDMC said tens of thousands of people are displaced each year and around 182,000 people were still living in displacement as of
the end of 2019. IDMC said 95 percent of the new conflict displacements recorded in the Philippines in 2019 were in Mindanao. IDMC, meanwhile, said the government’s ratification of a law to establish the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) should help resolve, if not drastically reduce, one of the issues at the heart of the conflict by giving more independence and autonomy to more than 3.5 million Muslim Mindanaoans. Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4606 n UK 61.9337 n HK 6.2640 n CHINA 7.1102 n SINGAPORE 35.2849 n AUSTRALIA 34.1902 n EU 56.6569 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9439
Source: BSP (September 25, 2020)