NZ Air Force Evacuates Haiyan Survivors
17 November 2013
Media Release
NZ
Air Force Evacuates Haiyan Survivors
A
Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) cargo aircraft evacuated
around 240 survivors and distributed aid to the
typhoon-devastated eastern Philippines on the first day of
New Zealand’s humanitarian mission to the Southeast Asian
country.
“We are supporting the international
effort to get aid into the worst-hit areas, where there is a
huge humanitarian need for food, water and shelter,” said
Squadron Leader Steve Thornley, commander of the 24-member
40 Squadron detachment that has been deployed by the New
Zealand Defence Force.
“We also tried to get as
many people as we can to better conditions in Cebu,” he
said, referring to one of few cities in the region that
escaped the wrath of the super storm.
On Saturday,
the RNZAF’s C-130 Hercules delivered around 30 tonnes of
rice, tin food, water, emergency shelter, field hospital
equipment and toilets to the battered cities of Tacloban and
Ormoc and the town of Guiuan as part of an international
humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operation in the
Philippines.
“We will try to reach other hard-hit
areas in coming days,” according to Squadron Leader
Thornley.
The RNZAF C-130, which arrived in the
central Philippines city of Cebu on Friday with around six
tonnes of aid and emergency supplies, has joined a
multinational fleet of military aircraft that are helping
distribute food, water and emergency shelter to survivors
stranded in remote locations in this archipelagic Southeast
Asian country.
Squadron Leader James Anderson said
they will fly to Darwin today to pick up another four tonnes
of disaster relief goods donated donated by the New Zealand
government, private sector and non-government
organisations.
“We are doing as much as we can in
coordination with the Philippine military. It’s great to
be part of this multinational effort to help the Philippines
and have the opportunity to make a difference. It’s very
rewarding to be able to wave the Kiwi flag,” he
said.
Thousands of survivors, many with only the
clothes on their backs and are desperate to flee the trail
of devastation left by Haiyan, were queuing at the damaged
airports of Tacloban, Ormoc and Guiuan when the RNZAF
aircraft arrived on Saturday. At Ormoc, where thousands of
people are feared to have been killed by the super storm,
survivors ran to the RNZAF aircraft as soon as they were
told that they could board.
“Someone told me this is a New Zealand aircraft. Thank you New Zealand for getting me and my family to safety, thank you for helping us,” said Cristino Campo, a 50-year-old carpenter from Tacloban who was evacuated with his wife and three children.
ENDS
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