Te-Ping Chen - Wall Street Journal

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Updated Nov. 10, 2013 7:24 p.m. ET
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A Filipino boy carried bottled water amongst the damaged houses where a ship was washed ashore in Tacloban city. AP

ORMOC CITY, Philippines—Supertyphoon Haiyan left a central region of the Philippines in tatters, as authorities struggled to verify the number of dead and looting began in one of the hardest-hit cities.
In the coastal city of Tacloban, people ransacked shops, while food and medical stations were swamped by those in need. Rescue workers dug through rubble and mud in search of survivors.
President Benigno Aquino III said the city would be placed under a state of emergency to allow the central government to speed up relief and reconstruction efforts.
[h=4]Typhoon Hits Philippines[/h]
Survivors walked under a fallen electric post on Sunday after Typhoon Haiyan hit Tacloban city, Philippines. The Philippine National Red Cross said Sunday that the death toll from supertyphoon Haiyan could run into the thousands. REUTERS


The typhoon, known locally as Yolanda, hit the Philippines on Friday, with fierce winds and heavy rains shredding homes, uprooting trees and flinging cars and boats.
The storm weakened as it made landfall in northeastern Vietnam early Monday, causing widespread power outages and triggering heavy rains that authorities feared may cause floods and landslides. Haiyan was expected to move inland toward the border with China.
Mr. Aquino said late Sunday the government was trying to verify the number of dead. The official toll stood at 229 but was expected to climb substantially.
The Philippine National Red Cross said the death toll could run into the thousands, adding that it was difficult to calculate the figure because the storm left bodies scattered over wide areas.
Richard Gordon, chairman of the Philippine Red Cross, described the disaster as monumental. "As of now, there's no time to count the bodies," he said.
Raw video, much of it posted on social media, shows the huge waves, dangerous winds and widespread destruction in the central Philippines caused by Supertyphoon Haiyan. Officials expect the death toll to be substantial. Photo: Instragram/Francis Rufo


Mr. Aquino sought to play down fears of a staggering death toll. "If I can appeal: Let us reduce the anxieties of those who have relatives in the affected areas by not exaggerating the figures," he said.
Typhoon Haiyan slammed the Philippines, ripping through the city of Tacloban. Over 150 deaths have been reported, and the toll is expected to rise. Officials said the typhoon sustained winds of 147 mph, with gusts of up to 170 mph. Photo: AP


Mr. Aquino deployed police and military personnel to typhoon-ravaged Leyte province, where looters in Tacloban, the province's capital, barged into shopping centers and carted away food, clothing and electronics, while others reportedly broke into ATMs. The area was largely without telecommunications and electricity.
Mr. Aquino said a special-forces battalion would be deployed and that there would be a "show of force" by armored personnel carriers in the streets "to discourage people who might be into this looting."
Meanwhile, families began the search for missing loved ones.
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A ferry from Cebu City—nearly 370 miles south of Manila—to Ormoc was loaded with dozens of families carrying biscuits, water and bags of rice to family members, some of whom they hadn't heard from since the typhoon hit.
"I'm scared, but you have to do what you can for your family," said Rosemary Mendez, 26 years old, who flew from Manila to board the ferry to Ormoc. From there, she hoped to journey by bus to find her mother and other family members.
Aljenido Maciar, 29, who works as a graphic artist in Cebu, carried eggs and canned goods home for his parents, who work as butchers in Ormoc.
"They don't have a home anymore," he said. His parents' house, made of wood and a metal roof, was destroyed. "No roof, no walls—gone."
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The city of Tacloban was littered with debris from the supertyphoon that left the central Philippines region in tatters Sunday. Associated Press

On Sunday night in Ormoc, the streets were quiet, with the only illumination from headlights on motorbikes or from flashlights as some people tried to maneuver around mud and debris. Hotels were filled with people whose homes had been destroyed.
By Monday morning, the sky was clear and blue in Ormoc as people tried to return to normalcy. People queued for water at street taps and for oil at a gas station. Windows were busted out all over town, many wood and metal homes completely collapsed, and a few cars overturned.
"We've been eating rice from relief agencies and cooking it over charcoal on the street," said Jewel Mae, 21, a coffee seller whose home was demolished. She rested on a couch in a hotel lobby in Ormoc, surrounded by friends who came to the hotel to charge their phones.
"I don't know what we're going to do," she said. "All we have left is a floor—no walls, no ceiling."
Ormoc is familiar with this kind of devastation: In 1991, flash floods here killed more than 5,000 people—the most on record caused by a storm in the Philippines.
Across Leyte province, Philippine Red Cross trucks were swarmed as relief workers distributed food and water to residents.
The government estimated 20,000 houses were damaged and 9.5 million people were affected by the storm. More than 477,000 people were displaced by Haiyan, with 400,000 of them taking refuge in evacuation centers, the National Disaster and Risk Reduction Management Council said.
Tacloban has a rich history in the Philippines. Nearly 70 years ago, U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur landed there to liberate the Philippines from the occupying Japanese army. It is also home to Congresswoman Imelda Marcos, widow of the former dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
The head of a United Nations disaster team that arrived in Tacloban on Saturday compared the devastation to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed an estimated 230,000 people in 14 countries.
"This is destruction on a massive scale. There are cars thrown like tumbleweeds, and the streets are strewn with debris," said Sebastian Rhodes Stampa, head of United Nations Disaster Assessment. Relief efforts will be challenging, he said, because roads between the airport and the central city were "completely blocked."
Cebu Gov. Junjun Davide said he still had no idea about the value of damage to his province.
Since taking office in June, Mr. Davide has faced a trio of calamities, including an earthquake near neighboring Bohol in October that killed 222, an August shipping collision that left an estimated 200 dead, and now the typhoon.
"We're still assessing it," he said. The tally of dead in Cebu, a popular tourist destination, stood at about a dozen Sunday.
Agriculture in the region has been dealt a particularly heavy blow. "The poultry business is wiped out," Mr. Davide said, referring to the large daily supply of eggs that Bantayan Island—one of Cebu's most devastated regions—provides to the province.
He said his province would recover. "We have very strong faith in God," he said, "and together we will overcome this challenge."
— Cris Larano in Manila,
and Nguyen Pham Muoi
and Vu Trong Khanh in Hanoi
contributed to this article.

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