Call for donations: Help the victims of Typhoon Mangkhut in the Philippines

Fundraising campaign by Project Sos
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We appeal to every good heart in the planet. Get involved and share a care for humanity. Every single good deed always counts.

Shattered homes, schools, and buildings; devastated agricultural lands; hundreds and thousands of weeping evacuees; dead and missing people; children who lost their schools; homelessness, hunger, and economic dislocation. These are the scenes of the aftermath of super typhoon Mangkhut in the Philippines - heartbreaking scenes.

Project SOS asks for your kindness, compassion, and generosity to make this project possible. Our team is raising funds to provide food and water supplies, medicine, slippers, toiletries, blankets, clothes and other materials needed for the relief operations we organize in behalf of the victims of typhoon Ompong (Mangkhut).

Please donate and help us spread the link -

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Almost 5 million of the population were heavily affected in the regions of Cordillera, Northern Luzon, Central Luzon, MIMAROPA, CALABARZON, Metro Manila and some parts of Southern Luzon. The super typhoon Ompong was the strongest to hit the country this year after the last super typhoon Haiyan made its landfall in the Visayas region in November 2013. Landslides and heavy floods caused by swollen rivers and torrential rains brought damages on city establishments, villages, and communities of urban poor settlers, peasant and fisherfolk areas. Rice fields, corn fields as well as vegetable gardens were left ruined. Threats of death escalation remain and authorities continue to launch retrieval operations. As of September 18, 2018, in Itogon, Benguet in the Cordillera region, 30 miners, trapped inside tunnels were found dead. 31 others are still missing. As of September 20, 2018 report from the National Disaster Risk and Reduction Council (NDRRMC), the death toll stands at 81, 70 wounded, and 71 missing. Hundreds of affected families remain sheltered in evacuation centers. They are in need of basic services primarily from the national government and support from private organizations and individuals who are willing to extend their help.


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