Typhoon Haiyan: gun culture of the Philippines hinders relief efforts
A combination of unlucky geography, poverty, poor government and widespread gun use have exacerbated the effects of Typhoon Haiyan
There are other countries in the world prone to natural disaster, but what distinguishes the Philippines, and has made the delivery of aid even more problematic after Typhoon Haiyan, is the prevalence of guns.
The archipelago of 7,000 islands has the geographical misfortune to be affected by 20 or so tropical cyclones a year.
The Philippines is also bedevilled by harsh poverty and weak central government - despite the best efforts of the current president Benigno Aquino.
But there are few disaster zones in the world where nightfall is punctuated by the sound of gunfire and aid agency convoys need to wait for the army to restore a semblance of order before leaving their warehouses.
There are 3.9 million guns - legal and illegal - held by civilians in the Philippines, or about 4.7 per 100 people, which isn't that high in global terms. But people are prepared to use them. The murder rate is among the highest in Asia and three times that of the United States, at 8.9 homicides per 100,000.
Illegal guns are not just carried by criminal gangs and insurgents. They also belong to civilians and politicians who keep private armies. Earlier this year the president boosted his credibility by winning top prize in a shooting competition, even as television reported a major shootout between police and thieves on a motorway.
Guns are so common that shops, restaurants and malls in cities commonly display signs asking customers not to bring their weapons inside. All private security guards carry either handguns or shotguns, or both.
Analysts tend to blame the colonial history of the Philippines for becoming a gun-happy independent nation. It is said that three centuries of Spanish machismo were followed by 50 years of American preaching on the right to bear arms, making for a volatile mixture.
Whatever the causes of the pervasive gun culture and high murder rate, the reports of armed looting that emerged two or three days after Haiyan struck surprised no one. Even if some reports were exaggerated, the Philippines' reputation for poor law and order preceded it.
The army and police have sent reinforcements to control Tacloban, the worst affected city, leading Mr Roxas to declare today that looting had been stopped.
But Jericho Petilla, the energy secretary, said of Ormoc, another city in Leyte province: "On Saturday, Ormoc city was still under control. Now there is no control."
Ferry passengers were reportedly being held up by armed men on arrival at the port, he admitted.
On Monday, the head of the United Nations' disaster assessment team in Tacloban said he would not deploy an aid convoy without a military escort. On Tuesday that process was still in its early stages.
The difficulties in distributing aid showed how, nearly 70 years after independence, central government has yet to impose itself fully throughout the archipelago of 80 provinces and dozens of languages and consequently struggles to cope and coordinate with the disaster of the scale wrought by Typhoon Haiyan.
A communist insurgency that lasted for decades only petered out a few years ago. Rebellion blighted the semi-autonomous Muslim south until a fragile peace agreement was signed with insurgents last year. Weapons are still strewen around those areas.
Even in the best of times, the authority of the army and police is not fully recognised in Leyte province and elsewhere. Manuel Roxas, the secretary of the interior, admitted earlier this year that the Philippines National Police was still being challenged by criminals on a routine basis.
Infrastructure – potentially a great pacifier and route to development - is notoriously feeble and has been cited as one of the primary obstacles to the country's development. Only 20 percent of the country's roads are paved, while ferries which connect the islands are unreliable and prone to over-crowding and capsizing.
The central swathe of islands struck by Haiyan is among the poorest parts of a country where 40 per cent of the population lives on less than $2 a day.
Despite marked economic growth in the past few years and numerous economic reforms by President Benigno Aquino III, the Philippines ranks only 163rd in the global GDP per capita league table.
In the long term, thanks to abundant natural resources, an established if flawed democracy, and the remarkably sanguine spirit of its people, the Philippines should prevail.
But thanks to the scale of this fresh disaster, growth is sadly now expected to contract, and the cycle of disaster and poverty to continue.
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