The ground shook. Then it broke. At least 35 people are dead, that’s the confirmed toll so far, after a powerful earthquake struck the southern Philippines this morning. The epicentre? Near the city of Davao. Rescue workers are digging through rubble. The numbers will rise.
The tectonic plates shifted. So too did the gears of government in Whitehall. Whitehall sources confirm that UK aid flights are on standby. ‘We are monitoring the situation closely,’ said a spokesman. Translation: The RAF is readying C-17s at Brize Norton. Medical teams and shelter kits are being prepped.
This is a political moment as much as a humanitarian one. The Foreign Office is wary of being seen as slow. Remember the Mozambique cyclone? The backlash was brutal. This time, the machinery is moving faster. ‘Lessons have been learned,’ says a senior aid official. Meaning: The minister wants this to be a clear, swift response.
But there’s a domestic layer too. The government is fighting for moral authority. Cost-of-living crisis. Strikes. NHS waiting lists. A quick, generous aid response is a way to show Britain still has a soft power pulse. It plays well with the international community. It plays well with the backbenches.
The Philippine government has formally requested assistance. That’s the green light. Now it’s about logistics. The first flight could leave within 24 hours. That’s the word from the MoD.
I’ve made some calls. The mood in the department is urgent but controlled. No panic. Just a quiet determination. One official told me: ‘We know what needs to be done. We’ve done it before.’
The death toll is expected to climb. Aftershocks are still coming. For now, the focus is on search and rescue. For the politicians, it’s about being seen to lead. The optics matter. The aid matters more. But in the Westminster game, optics are part of the substance.
Watch for a statement from the Foreign Secretary later today. Probably a solemn tone. Some specifics on funding. A pledge to stand with the Philippines. All standard stuff. But behind the scenes, the true test is coordination. Can the UK deliver fast enough?
The aid flights are on standby. The diplomatic cables are humming. The jostling for position has begun. That’s politics. That’s the story.








