Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda): What could a typical netizen do to help?
International typhoon Haiyan (also known in the Philippines
as Yolanda) devastated the South East Asian nations such as Micronesia,
Southern China, Vietnam and the Philippines. The second deadliest typhoon that
killed an estimated number of 3,633 people and still counting, destroyed houses
and properties and collapsed transportation and communication lines in the
country. Arriving with strong 10-minute
sustained winds of 230km/hr, the terror of the days between November 3-11, 2013 broke the hearts of Filipinos as
evidenced by the bodies of casualties on the streets, lost children searching
for their parents and vice versa, extreme starvation and lack of clean water to
drink and destroyed shelters. This cyclone terrorized the Visayan Islands and
the most dreaded affected areas were Samar and Leyte.
Photo By: NOAA/AFP/Getty Images/ National Geographic News (No Copyright Infringement) |
9 |
Photo By: mirror.co.uk (No copyright infringement intended) |
- If you have a Twitter of Facebook account, you can RETWEET tweets from OFFICIAL ACCOUNTS of government agencies, organizations, and concerned individuals assigned and those information fed by media personalities and agencies like updates about missing people, conditions of the families there, electrical lines and so on.
- You can re-post videos of news clips from television stations and institutions but make sure they were from a credible official source.
- You can lead or form a group and team up to gather things that you could donate or volunteer by group by using the social media as a tool for reaching your friends and relatives.
In these times, social media can be used as a helpful tool to reach and help others, all we have to do is think of smart and spread the correct and helpful information for a good cause.
Here are some links of my favorite/trusted institutions in the Philippines case that you guys are searching.