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Beijing's meagre typhoon aid is diplomatic misstep: experts
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 16, 2013


Japan medics bring high-tech fixes to Philippines typhoon
Tacloban, Philippines (AFP) Nov 16, 2013 - Japanese medics working to help victims of the Philippines typhoon have deployed wireless mobile X-ray kits using tablet computers, a world first in a disaster zone, a team spokesman said Saturday.

The technology, which was developed after the huge tsunami that hit Japan in 2011, allows doctors to take a look inside patients instantly, and even lets them enlarge the image with familiar iPad gestures.

Joji Tomioka, coordinator of the Japan Medical Team for Disaster Relief, said the system had been created in response to what doctors needed in the aftermath of the Japanese disaster.

"This is the first time that we are deploying it in a disaster situation," Tomioka told AFP at a modern tent medical clinic put up by the Japanese government to help victims of typhoon Haiyan, which crashed through the central Philippines more than a week ago.

At the partly air-conditioned clinic in the ruined city of Tacloban, a radiologist placed a camera on the chest of 72-year-old Carlos Llosa as he sat in his wheelchair.

The X-ray image was instantaneously transmitted through a wireless router to an iPad and to a nearby laptop.

With a thumb and a finger, the doctor was able to zoom in for a more detailed view of the problem area.

"It looks like he has tuberculosis," Tomioka said after looking at the image as the patient was wheeled out. Japan's 26-strong medical team includes doctors, nurses, pharmacists, cardiologists and medical technicians. The outfit is able to provide medicine and carry out minor surgery.

Tomioka said Japanese medical experts are seeing about 200 patients a day as part of a large international aid effort to reach the estimated 13 million people affected by one of the most powerful storms ever recorded.

The United Nations says 4,460 people are now known to have died when the ferocious storm hit. It said Saturday that 2.5 million people still "urgently" need food.

"The Philippines helped us during our hour of need in the tsunami," Tomioka said, referring to the global outpouring of sympathy in the aftermath of a catastrophe that cost 18,000 lives.

"Now it's our turn to give back."

Cameron pledges further $48 million aid to Philippines
Colombo (AFP) Nov 16, 2013 - Prime Minister David Cameron announced Saturday that Britain was providing a further $48 million to help the relief effort after the devastating typhoon in the Philippines.

"Today I can announce that we are providing a further 30 million pounds ($48 million) to support the United Nations and Red Cross emergency appeal" to help survivors of Typhoon Haiyan, he told reporters.

"We are also deploying an RAF C-130 aircraft to help ensure that aid workers move between worst affected areas and get the aid to those who need it most," Cameron added while attending a Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka.

Cameron said Britain had already pledged 23 million pounds to help the relief effort but said it was clear more aid was needed after "watching appalling scenes of mass destruction".

"The huge scale of the disaster is now becoming clearer every day," he said.

"They are going to need sustained help from the international community."

Britain has also sent the helicopter carrier HMS Illustrious to help the relief effort after the November 8 typhoon.

Authorities in the Philippines have put the official death toll at 3,633, with 1,179 people missing and nearly 12,500 injured.

The UN has put the number of dead at 4,460 and said Saturday that 2.5 million people still "urgently" required food assistance.

China's clumsy response to the typhoon in the neighbouring Philippines shows that the Asian giant is still struggling to find its role on the world stage, analysts say, burdened by history and its own self-image.

Initially the Chinese government offered only $100,000, and while later donations have swelled Beijing's aid to $1.8 million that falls far short of Japan's $30 million, $20 million from the US, and even Swedish furniture group Ikea, which gave $2.7 million through its charitable foundation to the UN children's agency Unicef for relief efforts in the storm-hit area.

Beijing is embroiled in a diplomatic row with Manila over disputed islands in the South China Sea, and the weight of history bears heavy on the region.

A tiny piece of the havoc wreaked by the typhoon was a fallen statue at the Leyte Landing Memorial close to Tacloban, where American general Douglas MacArthur strode ashore in 1944 on his mission to liberate the Philippines from Japanese occupation.

The island was one of the biggest battlegrounds of World War II and the naval battle of Leyte Gulf one of the largest sea engagements in history, with dozens of ships lost and Japan using kamikaze suicide pilots for the first time.

US forces suffered 15,584 killed and wounded, with Japanese casualties estimated at 49,000.

A plaque at the tribute site displays MacArthur's proclamation urging Filipinos to "rise and strike" against the Japanese.

But almost seven decades later, Tokyo is preparing to send as many as 1,000 members of its Self-Defense Forces, Japan's de facto military, to the disaster zone, their first active return to Leyte, where they will work hand-in-hand with the US military presence.

In contrast, China refers constantly to its past as a victim of Japanese aggression in its row with Tokyo over another set of disputed islands.

At the same time the 19th-century colonisation of parts of China by foreign powers looms large in its history, despite its rise to become the world's second-largest economy.

Jim Schoff, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and an expert on disaster relief in Asia, explained there was sometimes still a mindset in China that "'We're a developing country, too, and we have natural disasters, too.'"

"There's a little bit of tight-fistedness that remains from that," he said. "It's the nexus of humanitarian relief and self-interest, and I think it's taking China a while to figure out where that point is."

Nonetheless, he pointed out: "The Chinese like to complain about US Cold War thinking when we reach out to allies to build these alliances.

"If they want to talk about a new great power relationship or a new great nation relationship, it assumes they're a great nation and they have this relationship with the US as a peer," he said.

"They are definitely not demonstrating that, to be a pillar of support in the region. So, that's a failure on their part."

Beijing's foreign ministry has said that its offer could change, and will depend on "the development of the situation".

But the missed opportunity could have broader diplomatic repercussions, experts say.

"I think this is a real test of their humanitarian principles, and also of the foreign-policy-making establishment in China," said Mark Beeson, professor of international politics at Murdoch University in Perth, Australia.

Beijing's original response "can be viewed as quite stingy as compared to everybody else", he said, adding there was "no doubt" some in China were "not terribly disposed to the Philippines because of these territorial disputes".

China has denied any link between its contribution and the long-simmering row over the South China Sea.

But comments by users of China's popular online social networks underscored the lingering raw feelings between them.

"The Philippines is a country that's hostile to China; we shouldn't give them even a cent of aid," one Sino Weibo user wrote. "We shouldn't give our benevolence for dogs to eat."

Others have been more measured. "The (Philippine) president is a little bit stupid, but we should help the Philippine people," another user opined.

Using financial pressure for diplomatic purposes could be useful in some cases, but risked backfiring with humanitarian responses to disaster, Beeson noted.

"In these kinds of catastrophes, one would expect that there would be a different type of calculus -- or no calculus at all -- with trying to relieve an acute humanitarian problem," he said.

"I think that's why quite a few people have been taken aback by this," he added.

Bo Zhiyue, a senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore's East Asian Institute, said Beijing had missed a chance to wield soft power and potentially improve relations with Manila.

"This is actually a great opportunity to play so-called dollar diplomacy: you provide a little more, and you have a much easier time later on," Bo said.

"We're all humanity in these disasters," he added. "The US even shut down their government for a few days because of money issues, but apparently they're very generous -- and they came very quickly."

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