These UNCHR tents are a common sighting in Tacloban, a much-needed shelter for the Yolanda survivors. But wouldn't it be better if our fellowmen be provided better housing conditions by our government?
Category: GIGS
After the storm: Typhoon Haiyan
Some images pubbed by the Financial Times.
Together with an Al Jazeera 101 East team, I flew to Leyte Island almost a week after Typhoon Haiyan first made landfall. The briefing before we were deployed for coverage was to expect the worst. As the helicopter slowly descended toward the stricken city of Tacloban, I saw the worst I had in mind was an understatement of the destruction that spread out below me.
I was on Leyte island for five days, but it felt like I had been there for a lifetime. Every sundown it was as if death blanketed the city. Every sunrise brought new hope, but that flicker of hope would always be tempered by the feeling of hopelessness in the face of such destruction.
The images, stories and the experience will haunt me forever. This catastrophe is something we could, and must, learn a lot from, but never forget.
The storm may be over, but the destruction Haiyan left in its wake is still creating waves.
(More images here.)
-Hx
Scarred for life (and for the better)
This is what you've learned: all the wounds, burns, and scars—the visible and invisible—do not make you imperfect. They are battle scars, trophies even. They are reminders that at one point, or several instances too many, you loved too much and got hurt but you lived through it. So you continue to venture out of your comfort zone and throw caution to the wind. If you get scars and burns while you're at it, let them tell your story of a life well lived.