New and Used Car Talk Reviews Hot Cars Comparison Automotive Community

The Largest Car Forum in the Philippines

Page 13 of 37 FirstFirst ... 39101112131415161723 ... LastLast
Results 241 to 260 of 722
  1. Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Posts
    3,650
    #241
    Quote Originally Posted by greenlyt View Post
    Korina punta ka na Tacloban hinahamon ka ni Cooper

    Anderson Cooper to Korina Sanchez: Go to Tacloban | Inquirer News
    Tarantado talaga tong si Cooper. Tulong gulo lang eh, buti pa si Korina nag ikot at namigay ng relief.

  2. Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    6,502
    #242
    Quote Originally Posted by lowslowbenz View Post
    We should unite as one!

    Attachment 19542
    oo nga sa FB nga masyadong maraming "expert" kesyo dapta daw ganito, dapat ganoon, mabuti pa si ganito, ganito for president and so on and so fort

  3. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    17,338
    #243
    Quote Originally Posted by ClaNker View Post
    Kudos to the Pilot, yun lang hihirit pa rin ang media ng... "Eh pano naman bukas?"
    Just this morning on the way to work, my wife commented that if we had a helicopter, we would have indeed dropped off relief goods/medication at isolated towns if we could. It got me thinking on how would you logistically support air drops at that area. If you assess it, these are my thoughts on why there were limitations to doing airdrops immediately after the typhoon (as a lot of people are saying should have been done):
    - the payload of the helicopters are miniscule to the requirements of each and every town (look at the number of goods they could carry versus the people waiting). that's why the efforts were put to establishing the routes to streamline relief efforts. You could also see that the gunner probably had to stay at his post just to make sure people keep the order as they unload goods.
    - AVgas is probably limited in the immediate disaster areas so air time is limited as well (planes would have to gas up in Manila or Cebu; too far for the helos to travel to and from constantly).
    - we only have so many helicopters and they are likewise used to support other areas of the archipelago (on a side note, to me the HUEY will always be the one of the legendary badass helos of all time given they were workhorses from the Vietnam war era to this very day).

    My observations could be right or wrong but at the end of the day, these are the hard lessons we all are learning and have to prepare for in the future.

    On another note, buti naman at wala pa rin akong naririnig na pagputak ng mga militante laban sa US efforts.
    Last edited by vinj; November 15th, 2013 at 12:19 PM.

  4. Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Posts
    3,650
    #244
    Quote Originally Posted by ZENMasterTYL View Post
    wala talaga kupas itong si noggie. di ba kasama sa makakasuhan re pdaf si binay?
    Kahit patayin pa ni Roxas sarili nya sa relief operation eh si Binay parin mananalo sa 2016 with the way media is handling this.

  5. Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    8,555
    #245
    ^

    Yeah Puro expert nga, dal dal ng dal dal. I think they should do something to help.

    Here's my share!

    image.jpg

    I plan to give more!

  6. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    2,719
    #246
    interview ni mr. palengke kanina sa tv ... good performance naman ... in full force na raw relief operations

    umepekto siguro mga batikos

  7. Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Posts
    3,650
    #247
    Quote Originally Posted by vinj View Post
    Just this morning on the way to work, my wife commented that if we had a helicopter, we would have indeed dropped off relief goods/medication at isolated towns if we could. It got me thinking on how would you logistically support air drops at that area. If you assess it, these are my thoughts on why there were limitations to doing airdrops immediately after the typhoon (as a lot of people are saying should have been done):
    - the payload of the helicopters are miniscule to the requirements of each and every town (look at the number of goods they could carry versus the people waiting). that's why the efforts were put to establishing the routes to streamline relief efforts. You could also see that the gunner probably had to stay at his post just to make sure people keep the order as they unload goods.
    - AVgas is probably limited in the immediate disaster areas so air time is limited as well (planes would have to gas up in Manila or Cebu; too far for the helos to travel to and from constantly).
    - we only have so many helicopters and they are likewise used to support other areas of the archipelago (on a side note, to me the HUEY will always be the one of the legendary badass helos of all time given they were workhorses from the Vietnam war era to this very day).

    My observations could be right or wrong but at the end of the day, these are the hard lessons we all are learning and have to prepare for in the future.
    Kunti lang pwede karga ng helicopter plus kung drop mo lang yan eh di madidistribute ng maayos yan, dahil kukunin ng mga tarantado yan at ibebenta sa kapwa nila biktima, or pwede ring magka gulo lang dahil mag aagawan.

    My inanaak is a HUEY Helicopter pilot na nasa relief operation ngayon, di daw ganon ka simple sa laki at sa dami ng napinsala ng bagyo. Hirap daw dahil kagagaling lang nila ng Zamboanga eh eto nanaman.

  8. Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Posts
    3,650
    #248
    Quote Originally Posted by lowslowbenz View Post
    ^

    Yeah Puro expert nga, dal dal ng dal dal. I think they should do something to help.

    Here's my share!

    image.jpg

    I plan to give more!
    Kudos paps.

    Pwede ng tumakbo for President!

  9. Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    2,782
    #249
    Quote Originally Posted by ClaNker View Post
    Kahit patayin pa ni Roxas sarili nya sa relief operation eh si Binay parin mananalo sa 2016 with the way media is handling this.
    naku po, 6 years na man-made disaster/calamity/deluge/catastrophe ang pilipinas pag nagkataon

  10. Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Posts
    3,650
    #250
    Quote Originally Posted by kinyo View Post
    interview ni mr. palengke kanina sa tv ... good performance naman ... in full force na raw relief operations

    umepekto siguro mga batikos
    Matagal ng nag mobilize ang National Government, paralyzed lang talaga ang LGU kaya hirap. Eto naman mga tarantadong nasa media eh humihingi ata ng himala.

  11. Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    10,310
    #251
    Quote Originally Posted by greenlyt View Post
    Korina punta ka na Tacloban hinahamon ka ni Cooper

    Anderson Cooper to Korina Sanchez: Go to Tacloban | Inquirer News
    Ayos din naman tong si ate Koring kung makapag comment kala mo nagpunta sa Tacloban. Eh habang nagsasalita eh andun sya sa aircon na studio nya sa DZMM, at itong si Cooper eh andun mismo sa field.

    Sent from my GT-N7100 using Tapatalk 4

  12. Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    6,502
    #252
    nag post friend ko sa FB big hit yun tshirt for the victims of Yolanda first hour pa lang ubos na limited pa mabibili 3 pcs. per customer

  13. Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Posts
    630
    #253
    Where there is no functioning local government, the next best thing is martial law. Civil war na mangyayari jan

    Tulfo: I saw people walking aimlessly like zombies | Inquirer News
    Tulfo: I saw people walking aimlessly like zombies

    I was not prepared for the scenes of suffering that would haunt me for the rest of my life as we landed at the Tacloban City airport.

    I had formed a medical and mercy mission of 12 doctors from St. Luke’s Hospital and six nonmedical people, including myself, that landed in the city three days after Supertyphoon “Yolanda” struck. One doctor had backed out so we became a 17-member mission.

    From the air, the once-bustling city of more than 200,000 people looked desolate. Everything was a total mess. It was as if an atomic bomb had been dropped.

    As the Philippine Airlines (PAL) plane prepared to land, I saw people walking aimlessly like zombies.

    Navy Capt. Roy Vincent Trinidad, officer in charge of the airport, asked our group—the first nongovernment medical mission to set foot in Eastern Visayas after Yolanda struck—if we wanted to go to Guiuan in Eastern Samar. The place was supposedly more devastated than Tacloban.

    He offered to take us to Guiuan—three hours by car on a normal day from Tacloban—on a helicopter.

    Dr. Sammy Tanzo, head of the medical side of the mission, said our group should just stay in the premises of the airport—then crawling with soldiers and police—for security reasons.

    Patients pour in


    We set up a makeshift hospital inside the shell of a one-story building near the airport control tower, joining forces with three military doctors and five medical aides who had come ahead of us.

    Outside the building, we occupied a tent marked “Department of Health (DOH)” on top and turned it into a clinic.

    Patients started pouring in. They came from a line of a jostling crowd 3 meters thick and half a kilometer long.

    The crowd of people, separated from us by a fence guarded by soldiers, were waiting for their numbers to be called so they could board Philippine Air Force (PAF) C-130 cargo planes.

    It seemed everybody wanted to fly out of Tacloban.

    Reports of rape

    One of our first patients was an 18-year-old girl with wounds. She writhed and shouted in pain as her wounds were sutured.

    She had lost both parents as the sea rampaged on land, destroying everything in its path. She survived by clinging to a tree trunk.

    After nearly drowning, she escaped from a group of men who she said tried to rape her.

    Gangs of prisoners had reportedly escaped from the Leyte provincial jail and formed themselves into roving bands, looting stores, barging into homes and raping women.

    According to some patients I talked to in the clinic, the house of a prominent doctor was invaded by an armed group—possibly escaped prisoners—who helped themselves to everything in the house, raped the daughter and killed her afterward.

    Another patient said 15 of her female sales clerks, who were staying at a department store in the city, were raped by looters.

    Parents lost

    A 4-year-old boy, his head bleeding from a fall, cried as one doctor in my group treated his wound.

    When I asked whose child he was, the woman who had taken her to the hospital said he had lost his parents and she was now taking him to Cebu province with her family.

    I saw two children, aged between 5 and 9, separated from their parents as they were taken away to ride on a PAF C-130 plane. The parents had been barred from boarding by soldiers, as the plane was already full.

    The children’s parents shouted to a neighbor lucky enough to be one of 30 civilians taken into the plane to take care of the kids while they jostled with others for the next flight.

    Healthy passengers were loaded on the plane at random.

    Those very sick and needed to be hospitalized were given priority.

    Affected by mayhem

    I helped a man with a fractured knee get into a C-130 of the US Air Force with his crying wife on Tuesday. By then, the plane had apparently received orders to take on civilian passengers.

    The American crew said they wouldn’t take him aboard if he was not accompanied by a doctor. I asked an elderly doctor in my group to accompany the man and his wife on the plane.

    The doctor was just sitting in a corner, staring into space, probably affected by the mayhem.

    The saying that in a crisis, a person’s real character comes out seemed to have come true in my medical mission.

    No food for days

    Another member of my mission became reclusive and didn’t want to give away the food we were distributing to the victims.

    I had brought a ton of foodstuff, tents, blankets and bottled water to Tacloban.

    An English-speaking couple, whom I judged to be from the upper middle class, came to our tent asking for food and water.

    “Mr. Tulfo, we haven’t eaten for days and we’re very thirsty,” the wife, a mestiza, said.

    As I handed them hot noodles in a bowl, the doctor put down his plate, saying he had lost his appetite, and walked away. He said we should give priority to ourselves, as food and water were in short supply.

    Rich and poor alike

    There was no distinction between rich and poor in that disaster; everyone was equal.

    Rich and poor alike came begging for food and water. Sometimes, we hid our few bottles of mineral water from them, as we also had to keep some for ourselves.

    But we couldn’t eat while people in the crowd looked at us with envy. We had to ration the food we were giving away, as we couldn’t feed the entire multitude.

    We shared our food with soldiers and police around us. They, too, hadn’t eaten for days.

    In a few hours, the medicines we had were gone after we started accepting patients.

    There were just too many of them.

    Medicines ‘hijacked’

    As Dr. Tanzo and I prayed that somebody would come to replenish our medicines, a man from Cebu who had landed on a C-130 asked for the whereabouts of people from the DOH and the social welfare department so he could dispose of his load.

    Dr. Tanzo and I “hijacked” the medicines and shared them with the military doctors.

    On Tuesday, a PAL plane from Manila unloaded doctors with the letters “DOH” emblazoned on their bush jackets.

    I begged them for medicines, as we had already exhausted our supply, including the medicines we had hijacked.

    They said they had none.

    When I asked them what they came to Tacloban for, one said they were “assessing the situation.”

    Another death

    B—s—t! They had left their Manila offices for a change from their humdrum existence; in short, a junket.

    One of our patients died on Tuesday night and was taken out of the hospital on Wednesday because there was no body bag.

    As a body bag was being carried by five men to a truck, the crowd seemed indifferent to the death. In normal times, people would have looked at the relatives with compassion.

    The crowd had witnessed too many of their friends and relatives killed by Yolanda to care for one dead person.

    I held back my tears as I saw the suffering around me—me, a jaded journalist who had covered the police beat for many years.

    I was overwhelmed.

    Private tears

    Back in Manila, I sobbed in the privacy of my home.

    On Thursday, I called my comadre, Deedee Siytangco, my colleague at the Manila Bulletin and a close family friend of P-Noy, to pour out my venom.

    I said I was beginning to admire the President because of his handling of the Zamboanga City siege and the Bohol earthquake tragedy.

    I told her P-Noy had failed miserably because of the slow response of the government to the call for aid from Yolanda victims.

    “Mon, take it easy, you are just traumatized,” she said.

    I told her I was.

    I still am.

  14. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    40,599
    #254
    Roommate went to Red Cross yesterday to hand the checque and confirm na mga NPA nag loot and hunaharang sa mga trucks carrying relief goods. That's an A1 info coming directly from the a chairperson of Red Cross.

    Sa mga mag donate do not forget yun certification of donation from accredited NGO. 100% tax deductible ang donation. Sa RC they will just send the COD to your address. Siguro sa mga maliliit na NGO pwede na nila ibigay agad.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tsikot Car Forums

  15. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    25,189
    #255
    The IDF is here!


  16. Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26,781
    #256
    UN aid chief: Better coordination in relief efforts needed
    ANC – 17 hours ago

    The United Nations (UN) aid chief is calling on Philippine government to have better coordination in its relief efforts.

    UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amos— who visited typhoon-ravaged Tacloban City—said the response to the disaster has been slow as even the primary responders, those from the local government, were victims themselves.

    "I'm extremely dismayed for the people of Tacloban. The city is totally devastated. It was terrible to see thousands of people at the airport hoping to leave. A lot of people in the city itself are concerned that they have not yet had food or water," Amos said.

    Source: UN aid chief: Better coordination in relief efforts needed
    UN aid chief: Better coordination in relief efforts needed

  17. Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26,781
    #257
    Btw, may tsikoter kaya na apektuhan ng bagyong yolanda?

  18. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    17,338
    #258
    Quote Originally Posted by Monseratto View Post
    The IDF is here!

    So i guess with all these big guns on Philippine soil nowadays, China will remain quiet for time being. Sana ipa-buwenas na nila sa atin ang pag-ubos ng mga NPA, ASG, etc...
    Last edited by vinj; November 15th, 2013 at 02:59 PM.

  19. Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    10,310
    #259
    uploadfromtaptalk1384495521772.jpg
    At may photo ops pa, hala sige tagalan nyo pa dyan, at pangiti-ngiti pa. Habang yung nangangailangan nyan nagnanakaw na sa gutom.

    Sent from my GT-N7100 using Tapatalk 4

  20. Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    4,819
    #260
    Quote Originally Posted by Retz View Post


    kaya pala natagalan relief goods.... ginagawa pa at dinidikit pa isa2x mga stickers.
    when i first saw this, i thought it was a recycled photo. Until i saw this


    #epalwatch *VPJojoBinay during his visit*in Passi,...




    tumblr_mw9f57hd1w1rzzxfdo2_500.jpg

    tumblr_mw9f57hd1w1rzzxfdo1_500.jpg

Tags for this Thread

Typhoon YOLANDA (Haiyan)