IT HAS been a year since the people of Tacloban experienced pain—pain of losing valuable things, pain of experiencing near-death calamities, and pain of losing loved ones.
Typhoon Yolanda left Tacloban City, and the Philippines at large, with unroofed houses. Most of the houses in Tacloban, with a population of about 220,000 people, were completely destroyed, and almost all the trees and electric posts were torn down.
Typhoon Yolanda left Tacloban City, and the Philippines at large, with unroofed houses. Most of the houses in Tacloban, with a population of about 220,000 people, were completely destroyed, and almost all the trees and electric posts were torn down.