- Thursday, November 14, 2013
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foreign journalists led by CNN’s Anderson Cooper who flew to Tacloban
City to report on the devastation wrought by typhoon Yolanda criticized
the government for moving too slowly to bring aid to victims.
In his Twitter account, Cooper said: “”It looks like the end of the
world, for many here it was…The people in Tacloban have great dignity
and deserve better than what they have gotten”.
“The search and rescue never materialized.. There is no real evidence of organized recovery or relief,” Cooper said in another tweet.

Cooper also tweeted saying it’s not clear who is in charge and that he has not seen a large Philippine military presence nor food and heavy machineries to turn things around.
He said: “”They are saying ‘I need food and water, why are there still bodies?’”
In his on-air comments, Cooper described the situation in the battered city as “miserable,” observing that the government had not even set up a feeding center five days after the storm struck.
The veteran CNN journalist also noted in one of his tweets that “Haiyan’s youngest victims are also some of the most vulnerable.”
Cooper contrasted the slow action in Tacloban to the swift response of the Japanese government during the tsunami in 2011.
“When I was in Japan, right after the tsunami there two years ago, within a day or two, you had Japanese defense forces going out, carving up cities into grids and going out on foot looking for people, walking through the wreckage. We have not seen that here in any kind of large-scale operation,” Cooper said.
Cooper’s tell-it-as-it-is reporting came a day after President Benigno Aquino did an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour where he said the death toll should be around 2,500 and not 10,000 as earlier quoted. As of Wednesday evening, latest data released by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) showed the validated number of fatalities from the monster storm has reached 2,344 already with 3,804 injured and 79 missing. Observers believe the number of deaths will soon exceed the conservative estimate Aquino gave to Amanpour.
CNN’s critical assessment of the government relief efforts dovetailed with observations by local journalists at the scene.
ABS-CBN’s Ted Failon, in his nightly news program TV Patrol, pointed out that most roads in Tacloban City were still littered with bodies and debris, two nights after President Aquino went on the air to report that major roads have had been cleared.
The French news agency AFP reported that thousands of Tacloban residents remained outside the destroyed airport hoping to fly out of the city.
ABS-CBN’s radio and TV news anchor, Korina Sanchez, meanwhile made a remark in her program that Cooper doesn’t know what he is talking about.This triggered an avalanche of angry comments directed to Sanchez, with many questioning her credibility for being the wife of Interior Sec. Mar Roxas who was among the officials supposedly on top of the situation in the typhoon-ravaged provinces. Those who commented also pointed to the fact that Sanchez was reporting inside the comforts of the TV network, while Cooper has flown all the way to Tacloban to be on the ground and see with his own eyes the extent of the horror left by Yolanda.

As for Cooper, one of his well thought-out tweets hit the nail in the head: “This story gets sadder by the hour…”, an observation confirmed by a later tweet: There are mothers searching for their children, it is a sickening sight five days later”.
Anderson Cooper reports on government’s failure in Tacloban
by Alma Buelva
November 14, 2013 (updated)
November 14, 2013 (updated)

CNN’s popular journalist Anderson Cooper is in Tacloban to personally
see and report on the destruction wrought by super typhoon Yolanda and
the government’s shortcomings in providing relief and rescue.
“The search and rescue never materialized.. There is no real evidence of organized recovery or relief,” Cooper said in another tweet.

Cooper also tweeted saying it’s not clear who is in charge and that he has not seen a large Philippine military presence nor food and heavy machineries to turn things around.
He said: “”They are saying ‘I need food and water, why are there still bodies?’”
In his on-air comments, Cooper described the situation in the battered city as “miserable,” observing that the government had not even set up a feeding center five days after the storm struck.
The veteran CNN journalist also noted in one of his tweets that “Haiyan’s youngest victims are also some of the most vulnerable.”
Cooper contrasted the slow action in Tacloban to the swift response of the Japanese government during the tsunami in 2011.
“When I was in Japan, right after the tsunami there two years ago, within a day or two, you had Japanese defense forces going out, carving up cities into grids and going out on foot looking for people, walking through the wreckage. We have not seen that here in any kind of large-scale operation,” Cooper said.
Cooper’s tell-it-as-it-is reporting came a day after President Benigno Aquino did an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour where he said the death toll should be around 2,500 and not 10,000 as earlier quoted. As of Wednesday evening, latest data released by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) showed the validated number of fatalities from the monster storm has reached 2,344 already with 3,804 injured and 79 missing. Observers believe the number of deaths will soon exceed the conservative estimate Aquino gave to Amanpour.
CNN’s critical assessment of the government relief efforts dovetailed with observations by local journalists at the scene.
ABS-CBN’s Ted Failon, in his nightly news program TV Patrol, pointed out that most roads in Tacloban City were still littered with bodies and debris, two nights after President Aquino went on the air to report that major roads have had been cleared.
The French news agency AFP reported that thousands of Tacloban residents remained outside the destroyed airport hoping to fly out of the city.
ABS-CBN’s radio and TV news anchor, Korina Sanchez, meanwhile made a remark in her program that Cooper doesn’t know what he is talking about.This triggered an avalanche of angry comments directed to Sanchez, with many questioning her credibility for being the wife of Interior Sec. Mar Roxas who was among the officials supposedly on top of the situation in the typhoon-ravaged provinces. Those who commented also pointed to the fact that Sanchez was reporting inside the comforts of the TV network, while Cooper has flown all the way to Tacloban to be on the ground and see with his own eyes the extent of the horror left by Yolanda.

As for Cooper, one of his well thought-out tweets hit the nail in the head: “This story gets sadder by the hour…”, an observation confirmed by a later tweet: There are mothers searching for their children, it is a sickening sight five days later”.
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TravellerESQThis is what happens when we allow incompetent people to lead.
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ray cariagaVery incompetent remarks by Sanchez like her husband. Where are the government officials, local or national? Nobody is helping the people. Year in, year out the Philippines suffers from typhoons yet the government doesn’t care about the people. No major mobilization of everything to help the survivors, yet during elections these corrupt officials tried to project themselves as the one whome they could depend on.
Fuck you Sanchez, fuuck your husband, fuck the Philippine government.
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james diinOuch !!!!
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james diinOk. Since we’re now on the blame game mode, Anderson should also mention
that the US and some of the other industrialized nations are substantially to
blame for global warming which bring these Frankenstein typhoons like
Yolanda. It’s their carbon emissions that messes up the ozone layers.
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bengEveryone who critisize the administration are stupid and I believe its political. First of all the Storm Surge they call is not an ordinary typhoon or hurricane that happen in New Orleans. Its only now that we know what Storm Surge is ,they said its more than 4 times the hurricane that strike New Orleans. We are not much prepared because the PEOPLES MONEY WAS STOLEN BY SO MANY POLITICIANS. We could have use those Money to buy more Helicopters to transport aids to the victims and heavy equipments to clean the roads. Dont blame the president blame those politicians that stole the MONIES and put them in JAIL as soon as posible so they cant steal NO MORE.
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barokKorina you are not credible, wake up to the real world stop dreaming. Start doing what is right.
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l gIf you criticize the truth, you deny what actually is happening, you yourself is against what your job is….shame on you…biggest idiot of the day…no longer want to watch
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barokFilipinos are thieves to their own country.
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peen alfonsoKorina do not cover up for these people who stench more than the dead bodies in Tacloban. The people is depending on you to deliver a credible news to pressure these government officials (and that includes your husband, Mar Roxas and the rest) to deliver the aid that is due not only to Tacloban but to all Filipino people who were robbed of welfare for so many years. This damage is “telling” much already. So even if you cover up, the stink of corruption smells so bad that you can’t anymore deodorize it. It’s time for them to realize their mistakes and make up for it. Now is their chance!
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jonIt is so sickening that the Philippine Media are siding the government instead of telling the whole world what is going on. I agree, Anderson Cooper is a known journalist who travelled to Iraq and to Afghanistan to deliver the true situation on the ground, not from an air conditioned office. This is how politicized the whole country is at the expense of the poor. If nobody will challenge the Philippine government then nothing will happen.
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