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NFI distribution

MSF helps villagers rebuild their homes after typhoon Haiyan

Remote areas

In some remote areas of the Philippines affected by typhoon Haiyan, people have yet to receive the aid they need. Teams from the international medical organisation Médecins Sans Frontières are visiting villages well off the beaten track to run mobile clinics and distribute relief items. One of these villages is San Miguelay.
When the typhoon hit San Miguelay, a cluster of 100 houses near Santa Fe, in the east of Leyte island, 42-year-old Venia Gesola hurried with her children to the local school. Most people in the small community had gathered in the building, situated in the centre of the village, to seek shelter from the storm.

Devastation caused by flooding

“We were very scared,” says Venia. “Trees were swirling through the air – some of them fell on the roof of the building. But when the wind finally stopped, it still wasn't over, because that was when the water came.” The flooding that followed destroyed many of the buildings that were still standing. When the waters retreated, four out of five buildings in San Miguelay were in ruins. The death toll in the village, however, stood at zero. “Luckily, everybody survived,” says Gesola.

Like many other families in San Miguelay, Venia – a widowed mother of four – was left with nothing but the rubble of what had once been her home. She has found refuge with her parents, who live in a small hut that somehow survived the devastation.

NFI distribution
MSF logistician Sara Badiei chats to a villager in San Miguelay, Philippines at a distribution of 'non-food items' - such as hammers and nails for house-building - following typhoon Haiyan. The remote village lost four out of every five houses to the typhoon.
Florian Lems/MSF

Reconstruction kits

MSF’s delivery to the villagers of San Miguelay is part of a larger distribution of essential supplies to some 6,000 households in the area. These include reconstruction kits – containing hammers, nails and other items – to help families rebuild their homes. MSF’s teams are focusing on reaching remote, rural communities that are off the beaten track and have so far received little aid – places like San Miguelay, where the villagers received some food a week previously, but have received nothing since.

The MSF team has finished handing out relief items and is preparing to move on to the next village. Venia, like many others, thanks the team for assisting their village. Asked about her plans, Venia hesitates. “I don't know what the future will bring,” she says. “I hope I’ll be able to rebuild my house and my life, but at the moment I don’t know where to begin.”

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Philippines
Project Update 10 December 2013