The ground in the Philippines has not stopped shaking. A series of aftershocks, following a devastating initial quake, have torn through communities already reduced to rubble. The death toll, as ever, is a figure that will only grow as rescue teams dig through the debris. And here comes Britain. The Foreign Office has announced an aid package, a deployment of medical teams, and a solemn promise of solidarity. One cannot help but feel a certain historical vertigo at such moments. Are we witnessing the final, desperate spasms of a colonial conscience? Or is this simply the pragmatic calculus of a medium-sized power trying to influence a region where China’s shadow grows ever longer?
The Philippines, that archipelago of 7,000 islands, has always been a theatre of misery and resilience. From Spanish galleons to American bombers, from Japanese occupation to the Marcos kleptocracy, it has been a crucible of suffering. And now, nature adds its own cruel punctuation. The aftershocks are a reminder that the earth itself is indifferent to human borders and narratives. Yet the British response is anything but indifferent. We send money, we send people, we send words. But what do we really send? A sense of order? A memory of Empire?
Let us not be too cynical. The aid is real. It will save lives. British doctors will treat the injured. British engineers will assess the structural damage. But the question lingers: why do we care so much about this particular tragedy when the daily toll of poverty, civil war, and famine in other parts of the world is met with a shrug? The answer lies in the media. The quake makes for dramatic footage. The aftershocks provide a narrative arc. And the British public, with its post-imperial guilt, responds to the call of duty. It is almost Pavlovian.
But there is a deeper, more uncomfortable truth. The Philippines, like so many other nations, is a victim not just of tectonic plates but of global inequality. The buildings that collapsed were not built to withstand such shocks. The poor live in shantytowns that are death traps. The government, corrupt and inept, cannot organise a proper evacuation. And so when the earth moves, it is always the poorest who are buried. Britain’s aid is a bandage on a haemorrhage. It is necessary, yes, but it is not a cure.
One is reminded of the Victorian era, when British missionaries and adventurers would rush to calamities in far-flung corners of the Empire, bringing Bibles and blankets. They believed they were saving souls. We believe we are saving lives. The vocabulary has changed, but the moral certainty remains. We are the helpers, they are the helped. The asymmetry is absolute.
And yet, what is the alternative? To do nothing? To allow the earth to claim its victims without a gesture of solidarity? That would be inhuman. So we send the aid. We make the promises. We hold the press conferences. And the aftershocks continue. The death toll rises. And the world, for a moment, looks at the Philippines. Then it looks away.
The true tragedy of these events is not the initial quake, horrific as it is. It is the aftershocks that follow in the body politic: the aftershocks of forgetfulness, of political opportunism, of media fatigue. British aid will be delivered, but the Philippines will remain a fragile state on a fault line, both geologically and historically. We cannot fix that. We can only offer a temporary salve.
So let us commend the humanitarian impulse. Let us praise the doctors and the nurses. But let us also acknowledge the limits of our compassion. Britain’s response is a mirror held up to our own values: we want to be seen as good, as generous, as part of the solution. But the mirror also reflects the cracks in our own world, where disaster is a constant for some and an occasional news story for others. The earth moves. And so does Westminster. But the motion is never enough to shift the heavens.










