HMS Daring deployment to boost UK response to Philippines typhoon
Britain will deploy a Royal Navy warship and RAF military transport aircraft to help people devastated by Typhoon Haiyan.
Britain will deploy a Royal Navy warship and RAF military transport aircraft to help people devastated by Typhoon Haiyan, Prime Minister David Cameron announced tonight.
HMS Daring and her crew will provide humanitarian assistance, helicopter-lift capability from one onboard Lynx, and engineering and first aid expertise. The Type 45 destroyer also carries equipment to make drinking water from seawater.
At least one Boeing C-17 will be allocated to move vital humanitarian aid and large equipment to where it is needed.
This latest support comes as the UK scales up its humanitarian response with an additional £4 million of assistance, bringing the UK’s total contribution since the disaster struck to £10 million. The additional support announced tonight will provide:
- aid flights from the UK to Cebu in the eastern Philippines to deliver forklift trucks, cutting equipment, 4x4s and other kit to help clear and reopen runways and roads
- the delivery of life-saving supplies through Rapid Response Facility partner agencies such as temporary shelters, blankets and water purification tablets to 300,000 people
- household goods to allow the safe treatment and storage of water and to help prevent the spread of disease – these include buckets, water purification tablets, soap and sanitary items
During his speech at the Lord Mayor’s Banquet in the City of London, the Prime Minister said:
We continue to help around the world, as we are today in the Philippines where Typhoon Haiyan has wrought such appalling devastation.
Britain is contributing £10 million and HMS Daring, currently deployed near Singapore, will shortly be heading at full speed towards the disaster zone with further support from an RAF C-17 which will be a powerful help to the relief operation.
International Development Secretary Justine Greening said:
The scenes of utter devastation in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan are shocking in their scale and we know that the survivors, especially vulnerable children and women, now face a grim and uncertain future.
Britain is determined to stand by the Philippines and we have now pledged a total of £10 million to get 800,000 people the food, water and shelter they urgently need.
On top of this, we are deploying the destroyer HMS Daring and at least one RAF C-17 to the disaster zone to give powerful help to the relief operation and get aid to the areas that are hardest to reach and where the need is greatest.
The cost of the military assistance will be covered by the UK’s disaster relief fund.
The additional support announced today shows the UK’s unwavering commitment to supporting the people of the Philippines in the wake of a typhoon that has affected 4.3 million people.
Within hours of the typhoon, the Department for International Development (DFID) had activated the UK’s Rapid Response Facility, which provides emergency support via pre-approved organisations in the event of a humanitarian disaster overseas, and pledged an initial £6 million to get food, shelter and clean water to people in need.
Meanwhile, DFID humanitarian experts have been deployed to the Philippines to help co-ordinate the international response and ensure we are prioritising the protection of vulnerable women and children.
Notes to editors
- Following the devastation of Typhoon Haiyan, the Department for International Development requested Ministry of Defence support for its humanitarian response. This support will be provided by HMS Daring and supported by at least one C-17 aircraft.
- HMS Daring is currently in Singapore and is expected to reach the area of maximum damage in five days. We expect the first C-17 task in the next few days. The C-17 will come from the RAF fleet. Around 200 UK Armed Forces personnel will be involved in the operation.
- The UK’s total contribution in response to Typhoon Haiyan is £10 million. This will help get food, shelter and clean water to 800,000 people. *This includes £6 million announced on Saturday 9 November to provide emergency supplies from the UK warehouses in Dubai and the additional £4 million announced today.
- On Saturday 9 November DFID activated the UK’s Rapid Response Facility, which provides emergency support via pre-approved organisations in the event of a humanitarian disaster overseas.
- DFID has sent humanitarian experts to the Philippines to help coordinate the international response and ensure we are prioritising the protection of vulnerable women and children.
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Published 11 November 2013Last updated 12 November 2013 + show all updates
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