Police
Senior Superintendent Roel Acidre, Chief of PRO8
Police-Community Relations Division, supervising the loading of
relief goods for typhoon “Pablo” victims at PRO8 Caboboy
Multi-Purpose Gym. |
PRO8 provides
support to “Pablo” victims
By RPCRD, Police Regional
Office 8
January 3, 2013
CAMP RUPERTO K. KANGLEON,
Palo, Leyte – Policemen and Non-Uniformed Personnel of
Police Regional Office 8 (PRO8) poured in their resources to donate
relief goods to disaster stricken towns of Baganga, Cateel and Boston
in Davao Oriental.
The PRO8 coordinated with
the Office of the Civil Defense 8 (OCD8) and came up with relief goods
- 138 sacks of used clothing, 910 pieces of assorted canned goods, 36
bars of laundry soap, bath soaps, 2 sacks of rice, sanitary napkins,
assorted medicines and cash amounting to P108,000.00.
“As we observed in the news,
it’s a heartrending sight. We have to hasten the distribution of basic
supplies to towns flattened by the typhoon,” Police Chief
Superintendent Elmer Ragadio Soria, PRO 8 Regional Director said.
A disaster response team led
by Director Rey Gozon of the Office of Civil Defense left early
morning yesterday on board a DPWH service vehicle loaded with the
relief goods to assist in the Relief Operations and Information
Management from January 2 to 8.
Typhoon “Pablo” survivors
bypassed the Yuletide season as they hole up in evacuation centers and
continue to bury their dead, at least 1,067 have been confirmed, and
more than 800 still missing, about half of the number fishermen who
ventured out to sea before the 16th cyclone of the season struck and
now feared dead, reports from the National Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Council (NDRRMC) said.
The council said the typhoon
affected 710,224 families composed of 6,203,826 people and rendered
300,000 people homeless.
Pablo (international name: “Bopha”)
slammed into eastern Mindanao on December 4 and wreak havoc with
monster winds gusting up to 200 kilometers per hour, causing flash
floods and landslides, flattening communities and banana plantations,
and prompting President Benigno Aquino to declare a state of national
calamity.
“We’re still lucky that even
tough Eastern Visayas was also hit by “Pablo”, the damage was only
minimal compared to the widespread devastation suffered by our
brothers in Compostela Valley and Davao Oriental,” Soria added.
The region was also hit by
typhoon “Quinta” last week while the Philippine Atmospheric,
Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) reported
that at 2:00 AM today, the Low Pressure Area (LPA) was estimated just
down under the region in the vicinity of Sta. Josefa, Agusan Del Sur
in CARAGA region.
“Our policemen, especially
members of Search and Rescue (SAR) teams would be available for
disaster response operations,” the police regional director assured.