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The
Mobile Anarchist School volunteers and its immediate network have no
time to rest; right after our first mission, we came back to Manila
to complete the requirements for “Climate Crises and Direct Action
Forum”. In this forum we shared the details of our initiative in
Leyte.
We able to gather resources enough to support six
volunteers for 15 days action. We discussed the details of our second
mission and carefully outlined our plan based on our
experience.
BACKGROUNDER
More than a month after super
typhoon "Yolanda" pummeled Visayas, the National Disaster
Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported on Thursday
morning that the death toll has slightly increased to 5,982 from
5,959 reported Wednesday. The number of people injured and missing
remained at 27,022 and 1,779, respectively.
Affected cities: 57;
affected provinces: 44. Number of people/families affected: 12.191
million people/ 2.582 million families number of people displaced:
3.98 million people/ 869,742 families
in evacuation centers: 21,669
families/ 93,814 people.
The number of damaged houses decreased
to 1.192 million, nearly half of which were totally destroyed. To
date, power outage is still being experienced in some provinces and
municipalities of Mimaropa, Bicol, Western Visayas, Central Visayas,
and Eastern Visayas.
Based on the latest inspection of the
National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), a total of 1,959
transmission facilities have been damaged. Electricity has already
been restored in Ormoc City, Leyte and in the municipalities of
Anilao, Banate, Barotac Viejo, and Ajuy, all of which are in
Iloilo.
SOLAR GUERILLA AUTONOMOUS RESPONSE TEAM – Mobile
Anarchist School
As mentioned earlier, we focused our initiative
in Barangay Libtong, municipality of San Miguel. There was no
casualty or injury reported but the damage based on estimate of
barangay captain is so extensive; in fact rice fields, coconut trees,
infrastructures such as rice mills, market, tele-communications and
among others are destroyed.
When we arrived there for our second
mission, we see signs of very slow recovery process. The relief is
scarce; families have no means to access government support to
rebuild their homes. Communication is difficult, prices of basic
commodities and services are still double and power restoration is
far from completion.
On our first day we upgraded the capacity
of our solar set-up. We installed 300 watts solar panels with 30
amperes solar control charger and two units of 12 volts batteries
(3SM deep cycle 70 amperes and 2SM 50 amperes). We set-up the team to
effectively carry-out charging operations, medicine and relief
distribution, food not bombs and stress de-briefing activities.
Two
volunteers handled the charging operations, and another was assigned
in medicine distribution. The other three volunteers distributed
tasks in handling food preparations.
Charging and medicine
distribution operated on the daily basis (from second to eleventh
day).
Barangay Central activities: we conducted art workshop,
series of games, food not bombs and gifts sharing for kids and youth.
Around 60 children participated the event that last for three
hours.
Activities in “Iskwater”: we organized the same
pattern of activities with different variations; we did not expect
more than a hundred of children swarmed our event. Due to the time
constraint and limitation of supplies and materials, we felt so sad
to see many of them did not able to participate and did not able to
get food.
We repacked our limited relief to double the number of
families who will receive the goods. We focus our effort in charging
and medicine distribution while the two volunteers spontaneously
organized games for kids who were always around the area of our
campsite. Actually, the tandem always does this activity every
afternoon during our stay except during bad weather.
We
organized workshops, food not bombs, games and gift sharing to
children in Pikas. Kids there are relatively small in number compare
to Barangay Central and in Squatter; but they are very warm just like
the places we had previously visited.
Limited supply obliged us
to prioritize families without houses. We distributed relief in
Iskwater, Barangay Central and Olputan areas.
These activities
were carried-out in our 14-day mission including two ways travel
time.
REFLECTIONS
In our ten years of operating food not
bombs, free market and similar activities we are used to positive
impressions from the people and communities.
School teacher is
highly respectable career in many municipalities in the archipelago.
A school teacher with her two daughters showed-up in one of our
events all of them were wearing black shirts. Afterwards, the teacher
told the reason why they are wearing black, because they respect the
people who preferred to wear black color.
The community treats
us good and with respect, perhaps it is natural for the people to
treat us this way as long as we provide service or share supplies. On
the other hand they also asked why institutions are not working
efficiently and creatively to provide support. We are not supposed to
be here if the government is doing its job.
In general, it’s not
normal to see strange looking people providing or sharing things
services essential to our daily lives without asking anything in
return. Strange looking would mean heavily tattooed, body pierced,
weird hairstyles and preferring black over the other colors.
Likewise, it is really odd to see these strange looking people who
has no boss and privilege less but active in the front line of
disaster to extend solidarity to the victims.
Our appearance
raised curiosity which made people come, mingle and inter-act with
us. They are expecting “formal” and “decent” people to come
to help in exchange of political allegiance or spiritual favor. They
are really surprise to know that strange looking people like us are
here to share base on our capacity without asking anything in
return.
For us this is not a heroic act, we believe that helping
is a normal and common relationship in many organisms. Currently,
human being is essentially guided by the idea of competition
reinforce by capitalism and statism. The idea of supremacy,
hierarchy, uniformity and centralized pattern distorted our values.
Our relationship with nature, to our self and with others is now
characterized by domination and control that eventually resulted to
inequality, poverty, ignorance, patriarchy and ecological
destructions.
Mutual Aid can be effective if delivered directly.
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