MANILA: Philippine President Benigno Aquino approved yesterday a P160bn plan to rebuild areas ravaged by Super Typhoon Haiyan one year after the disaster, his spokesman said.
The plan includes reconstruction timetables demanded by Aquino who last week criticised the pace of rebuilding, Presidential Spokesman Edwin Lacierda said.
Haiyan, the strongest storm ever to make landfall, packed winds of 315 kilometres per hour when it slammed the central Philippines in November last year, bringing tsunami-like storm surges that wiped out entire villages and left more than 7,350 people dead or missing.
“The work programmes, all the details have been inputted into the detailed rehabilitation plan,” Lacierda told reporters.
An initial P52bn of the total rehabilitation budget had been released by the budget department, he added.
Aquino earlier this month said he wanted the rehabilitation programme “substantially completed” by the time his term ends in mid-2016, as tens of thousands of typhoon survivors remain without homes and vital infrastructure.
One year after the deluge, the mayor of one of the worst-hit cities said housing remained a problem with only 50 families in his area moved to permanent dwellings.
“Our priority is really shelter,” Tacloban City Mayor Alfred Romualdez told reporters this week.
The government needs to build “transitional” homes for storm survivors while permanent ones, which should be able to withstand typhoon winds, are being built, he said. AFP