Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Overseas Philippine workers a typhoon lifeline
by Staff Writers
Tacloban, Philippines (AFP) Nov 26, 2013


The Philippines' giant band of overseas workers, already regarded as national heroes for toiling in foreign lands, are coming to the rescue again as they dig deep to send more cash back to their typhoon-hit homeland.

With relief workers overwhelmed by the magnitude of this month's disaster and unable to provide adequate support to the millions of survivors living in flattened towns, Filipinos abroad are proving a crucial, direct lifeline.

In the ruined city of Tacloban, farmer Teudolfo Barmisa queued up at a money transfer outlet on Tuesday and withdrew the equivalent of $600 sent by his daughter who works as a maid in Hong Kong.

"The money will go to buying food first, then other supplies to help us rebuild our home, like plywood and cement," Barmisa told AFP.

Barmisa was among hundreds of people withdrawing cash from financial outlets in Tacloban, many of which had just re-opened more than a fortnight after Super Typhoon killed at least 5,240 people and destroyed or damaged one million homes.

Barmisa's daughter and the other 10 million Filipinos working abroad are commonly referred to at home as "mga bagong bayani", or "new heroes", because of their sacrifices in leaving their families to work abroad.

The number overseas is roughly 10 percent of the population -- with many of them working as domestic helpers, labourers, sailors or in other low-paid professions -- and they often send much of their savings back home to relatives.

They are forced overseas because, despite impressive economic growth rates in recent years, the Philippines remains in large part a desperately poor country, and their remittances has long been an important plank for the nation's economy.

The overseas foreign workforce last year sent home $21.39 billion via bank transfers and other official channels, equivalent to nearly 10 percent of the Philippines' gross domestic product. Even more money arrives unofficially.

Overseas heroes give more

And when a major disaster strikes in the Philippines, the amount of cash coming home spikes.

Remittances jumped an average of 13-14 percent over the nine months that followed the country's previous 10 deadliest typhoons, Patrick Ella, a Manila-based economist at the Philippines' Security Bank, told AFP.

A 14-percent increase over three quarters would equate to about $2.3 billion, based on last year's remittances.

"But Typhoon Haiyan was definitely an outlier, so the gains will probably be more than usual because of the extent of the damage and the well-publicised problems in the distribution of relief supplies," he said.

Haiyan was one of the strongest typhoons ever recorded and generated freak storm surges that swallowed up entire towns.

The confirmed number of fatalities has made Haiyan one of the deadliest storms ever in the Philippines, and it could turn out to be the most destructive on record if, as expected, the death toll continues to rise.

Exacerbating the catastrophe is that the worst-hit areas, the eastern islands of Leyte and Samar, are among the poorest in the Philippines, with most of the four million people there enduring near subsistence farming or fishing lifestyles.

Barmisa, the farmer, said his family had managed to buy a vehicle, a small home and little shop on the outskirts of Tacloban using the money sent home by his daughter over the six years she had worked in Hong Kong.

All of that was destroyed in the storm surges.

"Hopefully, when she returns home we will have a house again," he said, as he left the money transfer outlet with his daughter's money.

Overseas workers return home

Some overseas foreign workers have also left their jobs overseas to return home directly with money and emotional support.

Among them is Lourdes Distrajo, a 27-year-old single mother of two, who lost a son and 12 members of her extended family in the disaster.

She had only recently started working in Kuwait as a maid, and had hoped her $700-a-month salary would pay for her children's schooling, renovations to her wooden home and sister's medical bills.

Instead she had to quickly return to help with the family tragedy.

"My employer was kind enough to allow me to leave, packing supplies and giving me extra cash and a return ticket," she said.

Distrajo said all the money she had brought home would be left with the family, barely enough to be able to buy some wood to help rebuild their home and stock up on some supplies.

Distrajo has yet to start dealing properly with the grief of losing her four-year-old son.

"I didn't even see his body. He was buried in a mass grave along with many others... I keep asking myself, was it worth it to work abroad? Maybe I could have saved my son," she said.

But she has no choice to soon return to Kuwait, so that she can once again start sending money back home.

.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Mental trauma haunts Philippines typhoon survivors
Tacloban, Philippines (AFP) Nov 25, 2013
Rodico Basilides visits a forlorn cross that stands as a memorial to his family who died in the catastrophic Philippine typhoon, one of countless survivors who are being forced to grieve without professional counselling. "This is for my wife, Gladys, and four children. They were swept away by the waves," Basilides, 42, said as he stood alongside the cross made of two sticks tied together wit ... read more


DISASTER MANAGEMENT
What might recyclable satellites look like?

Overcoming Brittleness: New Insights into Bulk Metallic Glass

SlipChip Counts Molecules with Chemistry and a Cell Phone

NASA Instrument Determines Hazards of Deep-Space Radiation

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Intelsat General To Provide Satellite Services To US Marines

Manpack Radios in Arctic Connect with MUOS Satellites Orbiting Equator

Self-correcting crystal may unleash the next generation of advanced communications

Northrop Grumman Receives Contract to Sustain Joint STARS Fleet

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Stepping up Vega launcher production

Czech and XCOR Sign Payload Integrator Agreement for Suborbital Flights

Spaceflight Deploys Planet Labs' Dove 3 Spacecraft from the Dnepr

Arianespace orders ten new Vega launchers from ELV

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
CIA, Pentagon trying to hinder construction of GLONASS stations in US

GPS 3 Prototype Communicates With GPS Constellation

Russia to enforce GLONASS Over GPS

How pigeons may smell their way home

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
The secrets of owls' near noiseless wings

Japanese airlines say will obey China's air zone rules

Peru boosts defense with tactical aircraft, helos

Algorithms + FA-18 Jet = Vital Testing for SLS Flight Control System

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Chaotic physics in ferroelectrics hints at brain-like computing

Nature: Single-atom Bit Forms Smallest Memory in the World

Virtual Toothpick Helps Technologist 'Bake' the Perfect Thin-Film Confection

New way to dissolve semiconductors holds promise for electronics industry

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
LETI Magnetometers Will Expand Understanding of Magnetic Field

Satellites to probe Earth's strange shield

Free access to Copernicus Sentinel satellite data

China launches remote-sensing satellite

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Madrid street-sweepers call off strike: union

Everyday chemical exposure linked to preterm births

Albania refuses to host Syria arsenal destruction

Protests grow in Albania against Syria weapons destruction




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement