【Comment】
GW算什麼,聯合王國本來派遣2009年服役的驅逐艦(HMS Daring)援助,宰相在印度臨時宣布改為在波斯灣的光輝號(HMS Illustrious)馳援菲律賓偏遠地區作為長期援助的一部分,預計24日抵達。
聯合王國政府已援助2000萬英鎊。
有點像2009年台灣的莫拉克颱風──馬想邀請中國登台,最後僅落得出錢的份。不是嗎?
這裡面還有我們不知道的故事。
British carrier HMS
Illustrious to aid typhoon victims◎BBC(2013.11.14)http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24940632
The
aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious will be sent to help people affected by the typhoon in the
Philippines, Prime Minister David Cameron has said.
Speaking on a visit to
India, Mr Cameron also said the UK government had now given more than £20m in aid.
Meanwhile, the Disasters
Emergency Committee (DEC) said its UK appeal
had raised £23m in its first 48 hours.
Typhoon Haiyan, which
hit on Friday, killed at least 2,300 people and displaced more than half a
million.
HMS
Illustrious is currently in the Gulf and is expected to arrive in the Philippines on 24 November.
The carrier will relieve
destroyer HMS Daring, which is already on
its way to the country and should arrive on Friday.
'Absolute tragedy'
Mr Cameron said
helicopters from HMS Illustrious would be used to take food and water to people
stranded in remote
parts of the Philippines, which is made up of more than 7,000 islands.
The carrier, which
currently has 900 crew and seven helicopters,
has equipment to provide water suitable for drinking, which Mr. Cameron said was badly needed.
David Cameron said it
was clear long
term help was needed in the Philippines
"What happened in
the Philippines is an absolute tragedy," he said.
"You can see the
devastation, the suffering, and it's quite clear that we are going to need
long-term help for those people."
The Royal Navy said
almost all of its ships carried supplies and equipment for use in such
emergencies and added its crews were trained for dealing with humanitarian
disasters.
HMS Daring
has more than 200 personnel on board including a doctor, a dentist, engineers and a chaplain. It is also carrying
members of the Royal Marines band who, as a secondary role, are trained first
aiders.
The ship holds 700
ration packs, can provide more than 20,000 litres of water, and has other
equipment including generators and thermal-imaging cameras.
The UK is also sending
aid to the Philippines by air. The first flight arrived
at 16:00 GMT on Tuesday.
A specialist cargo
aircraft loaded with equipment to speed up the offloading of relief supplies at
airfields and help with rubble clearance was also deployed.
A team of 12 medical
experts from the UK, requested by the Philippines Department of Health, has also
flown to the country.
Secretary of State for
International Development, Justine Greening, said Britain was "helping
thousands of people in desperate need".
Elsewhere, the Ministry
of Defence said it would be deploying a Royal Air Force C-17 military transport aircraft in the early hours of Friday
morning.
'Remarkable' support
A huge international aid
effort is under way, but widespread infrastructure damage is hampering efforts
to distribute it to some areas.
A US aircraft carrier
and other US vessels have already arrived in the Philippines, where the UN estimates 11 million people have been affected by
the typhoon.
The DEC, which brings
together 14 major UK charities, launched its appeal on Monday and said the
response from the public had been "remarkable".
DEC chief executive
Saleh Saeed said: "This has already become one of our most
generously-supported appeals but there is still a huge humanitarian need for
help."
Paul Jenkins, of the
British Red Cross, one of the DEC's members, said: "We are so amazed that
the generosity of the British public - in very difficult times for everybody -
is still there."
He said the priority was
to get "goods and supplies" to those most in need as quickly as possible.
Planes carrying British
Red Cross aid have started landing in the Philippines following early
difficulties due to the damage done by the storm, Mr Jenkins added.
Justin Forsyth, chief
executive of Save the Children, said: "These are extraordinary figures,
and this allows us to get aid right into the heart of this catastrophe.
"Aid is beginning
to get through even in the worst affected areas. Save the Children has landed a plane today in
Cebu and all the Disasters Emergency Committee agencies are there trying to do
their best, but we need to get more aid in and very quickly."
British couple Andrea
Agarwal and Trevor Holmes, who own a dive centre in the island of Malapascua,
have been helping with the aid effort.
They were not on the
island at the time the typhoon hit but said their bar and restaurant was
destroyed. They have been co-ordinating aid
efforts from the island of Cebu, 360 miles south of Manila.
"We have started a
fund for donation and we managed to raise around 30,000," said Ms Agarwal. "The island is relatively
small, with about 7,000 people. But the situation there is very devastating."
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