Violence erupts amid Haiyan's destruction

Violence and looting is becoming commonplace on the streets of Tacloban amid the destruction wreaked by Typhoon Haiyan.

As anarchy spread across a Philippine city demolished by one of the world's strongest typhoons, a 13-year-old boy holding a toy car and walking alone at night was slashed across the neck and stabbed in the stomach.

Jonathan Salayco said he was on the debris-strewn streets of disaster-hit Tacloban when two men he did not know pounced late on Tuesday, attacking him with a knife before disappearing without a trace.

"He was still holding his toy car," said Mina Joset, a Red Cross nurse at Tacloban hospital where Salayco was brought in on Wednesday morning.

Residents of Leyte's ruined provincial capital - where bodies still line roads - are living in fear after looters ran wild in the wake of Super Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest storms ever recorded.

The category five storm killed hundreds or possibly thousands in Tacloban, flattening buildings and cutting off power, water, electricity and communications.

Authorities there are struggling to deliver much-needed food and medical supplies to an increasingly desperate population.

Fortunately for Salayco, officials were able to get him to a hospital on another island for further treatment, but others have not been so lucky.

Famished and destitute survivors desperately searched for food following the storm, some resorting to looting.

Others took advantage of the post-disaster chaos to steal not only food and water but also consumer items from televisions to toys.

To restore law and order, the government has sent almost 2000 police, soldiers and special forces to patrol and man checkpoints on Leyte island.

Local doctor Corazon Rubio said it was the aftermath of the storm that has left her terrified.

"What is frightening is the looting," Rubio told AFP.

"They would get TV sets from the houses. Of what use are they? We don't even have electricity."

Terrified shop owners have fled, fearing that their families would be targeted.

"The businesses of Tacloban are all leaving... because of safety issues," Alfred Li, head of the local chamber of commerce, said.

He told how organised gangs had broken into warehouses, taking the most expensive items, while individual looters help themselves to the rest.

Presidential spokesman Ramon Carandang has sought to play down security fears.

"There have been so many reports of looting and rape which have turned out not to be correct," he told ABS-CBN television.


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Source: AAP


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