Three Canadian military helicopters and their crew are being deployed to the Philippines to help with relief efforts in the typhoon-ravaged country.
Defence Minister Rob Nicholson says two of the three CH-146 Griffon choppers will leave today from CFB Trenton in eastern Ontario aboard a military transport plane. No information was released about when the third aircraft will depart.
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He says the choppers will give Canada's Disaster Assistance Response Team — which is already in the Philippines — additional means to get to those most in need of assistance. It's not known when the third aircraft will leave.
Canadian soldiers on the ground in the Philippines are making clean drinking water a priority in their relief efforts.
Col. Stephen Kelsey of Canadian Joint Operations Command says a transport plane carrying a water-purification system is en route to the storm-ravaged country and will be in place by early next week.
It will produce 50,000 litres of safe drinking water a day.
The typhoon death toll is now at 3,974, with 1,186 others, including 51 Canadians, listed as missing.
Philippines leader arrives in devastated city
Philippine President Benigno Aquino arrived in hard-hit Tacloban City on Sunday he sought to deflect criticism of the government response to Typhoon Haiyan.
The president arrived by helicopter and visited a medical centre. He has been criticized for the slow pace of aid distribution and unclear estimates of casualties, especially in Tacloban, capital of hardest-hit Leyte province.
The Philippines is facing up to an enormous rebuilding task from Typhoon Haiyan, with many isolated communities yet to receive significant aid despite a massive international relief effort.
The number of people displaced by the catastrophe is now estimated at 4 million and close to two million are reported to be both homeless and in dire need of aid.
An aid group on Sunday released amateur video showing waves washing away a house and submerging others in Hernani in Eastern Samar province after Typhoon Haiyan made landfall nine days ago.
U.K.-based Plan International says the video was shot by Plan Philippine's community development worker Nickson Gensis, who was sheltering on the second floor of a house less than a few hundred metres from the sea.
The aid worker says the water was like a huge tsunami.
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