Filipinas comienza a enterrar en fosas comunes a las víctimas del tifón
En la quinta jornada desde el paso del tifón Haiyan (o Yolanda, como también ha sido llamado), Filipinas ha comenzado a enterrar a los muertos en fosas comunes para evitar enfermedades. Los supervivientes desesperan para encontrar agua y comida.
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Una madre herida junto a su hijo en la iglesia usada como improvisado refugio. La cifra de heridos asciende a 2.623.
13.11.2013An injured mother carries her son in a Catholic church which is used as a temporary evacuation centre five days after Typhoon Haiyan hit Tacloban city, central Philippines November 13, 2013. Desperation gripped Philippine islands devastated by Typhoon Haiyan as looting turned deadly on Wednesday and survivors panicked over delays in supplies of food, water and medicine, some digging up underground water pipes and smashing them open. Five days after one of the strongest storms ever recorded roared over cities and towns in the central Philippines, survivors in remote regions complained they had yet to receive any aid. REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco (PHILIPPINES - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT RELIGION)REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco -
La ciudad de Tacloban está destrozada y se teme que aparezcan epidemias
13.11.2013People covering their faces pass a car in debris after super typhoon Haiyan battered Tacloban City, in central Philippines November 13, 2013. Philippine officials have been overwhelmed by Haiyan, one of the strongest typhoons on record, which tore through the central Philippines on Friday and flattened Tacloban, coastal capital of Leyte province where officials had feared 10,000 people died, many drowning in a tsunami-like wall of seawater. REUTERS/Edgar Su (PHILIPPINES - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT)REUTERS/Edgar Su -
Cajas de ayuda enviada por EE.UU. en el aeropuerto de Tacloban. 24 países han enviado ayuda humanitaria, entre ellos España
13.11.2013Boxes of US aid are piled next to a KC-130 military cargo plane before it flies to the coastal city of Tacloban, which bore the brunt of Super Typhoon Haiyan when it swept through the central Philippines on November 8. Five days after Haiyan -- one of the strongest storms ever, ripped apart entire coastal communities, the situation in Tacloban was becoming ever more dire with essential supplies low and increasingly desperate survivors clamouring to leave. AFP PHOTO / Jay DIRECTOAFP PHOTO / Jay DIRECTO
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