Archive for February, 2010
Ondoy Typhoon Super Flood
thanks to the owner of this video….Ms. Lea Angelica Rioflorido
Duration : 0:3:29
APARRI CAGAYAN RESIDENTS FEAR THE WORST AGAIN IF TYPHOON RAMIL HITS
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4q0JKzpjh_o
Please watch these two parts videos and forward them to all your friends, relatives, associates and all living souls who will help us move to a better Philippines.
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Duration : 0:2:4
Typhoon Lupit after Pepeng (Satellite View) 16 oct 2009 to hit NL in the Philippines anew
Basic Information
Birth
2009-10-15 18:00:00 UTC
Death (Latest)
2009-10-16 03:00:00 UTC
Lifetime
9 (hours) / 0.4 (days)
Minimum Pressure
992 (hPa)
Maximum Wind
45 (knots)
Largest Radius of Storm Wind
0 (nm) / 0 (km)
Largest Diameter of Storm Wind
0 (nm) / 0 (km)
Largest Radius of Gale Wind
180 (nm) / 330 (km)
Largest Diameter of Gale Wind
340 (nm) / 630 (km)
Length of Movement
284 (km)
Average Speed
31.6 (km/h) | 758 (km/d)
Range of Movement
Latitude 1.0 : Longitude 2.4
Wind Flux
8.0000E+01
Accumulated Cyclone Energy
3.2500E+03
Power Dissipation Index
1.3400E+05
Data Start
2009-10-14 18:00:00 UTC
Data End
2009-10-16 03:00:00 UTC
Data Duration
33 (hours) / 1.4 (days)
Duration : 0:0:2
Typhoon Ondoy, Marikina River Raging By
This is Eastwood City this afternoon, just before the Marikina overflowed. Across are over 20+ homes completely submerged with some people still stuck on their roof-tops waiting for emergency personnel.
Duration : 0:0:7
Relief Typhoon Fengshen’s victim in Philippine
Supreme Master Ching Hai International Association relief news update from the Philippines.
Typhoon Fengshen.
Duration : 0:3:47
Typhoon Ondoy – Marikina River Aftermath
Quezon City -9/27, 7:00am: The riverwalk area of Eastwood City was site to the over-flow of the Marikina River last night. Flood waters have subsided and residents of Santolan-Cainta now start recovery efforts of their homes that were submerged under 10-feet of water last night.
Duration : 0:0:40
Typhoon Ketsana aftermath–Vietnam
Typhoon Ketsana directly affected 15 Central provinces of Vietnam on 29 September 2009.
Kon Tum, Quang Nam and Quang Ngai are the hardest hit provinces. Three days after the typhoon, the damages are still visible and recovery work is being carried out in Kon Tum Town.
Oxfam has sent an 11-strong team of aid experts to the storm-hit province of Kon Tum in central Vietnam. They will carry out an assessment of needs and start initial response work immediately.
Our planned £600,000 aid package is expected to reach 40,000 affected people over three-months with cash for food and household items, water supplies. We will also be running hygiene promotion programmes, and helping people recover their livelihoods.
“The full impacts of Typhoon Ketsana in Vietnam are only now becoming clear. Hundreds of thousands of people are affected. Thanks to the efforts of the Vietnamese authorities the death toll has been kept relatively low and relief efforts are moving ahead quickly.”
Steve Price-Thomas, Oxfam Vietnam Country Director
Duration : 0:0:45
Pepeng Typhoon Hits Philippines!
Pepeng Typhoon Hits Philippines. Floods, Storm in Philippines Provinces!
Duration : 0:2:16
Typhoon Pepeng update – Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, Pangasinan and La Union 10-05-09 8:28am
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4q0JKzpjh_o
Please watch these two parts videos and forward them to all your friends, relatives, associates and all living souls who will help us move to a better Philippines.
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Duration : 0:1:50
UNICEF: Exec. Director Ann M. Veneman in Philippines
MANILA, Philippines, 8 October 2009 UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman visited the Philippines yesterday to see the damage done by Tropical Storm Ondoy and subsequent massive flooding.
Residents of Santa Cruz village in low-lying Pasig City, metro Manila, experienced floodwaters three and a half feet deep. UNICEF has provided the Pasig City authorities with family kits containing necessities such as water cans, blankets, mosquito nets and sleeping mats for the evacuees. In addition, it has distributed kits with essential medicines for use by health workers in the affected communities, as well as water and hygiene kits to ensure that families have safe water for drinking and cooking.
Educational materials including a 100-book library to replace the materials that were lost in the flood will also help to provide a sense of normalcy for children.
To read the full story, visit http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/philippines_51369.html
Duration : 0:1:44