About 1,400 corpses, in sealed black body bags swarming with flies, lay on a muddy open field in San Isidro, a farming village on the outskirts of the destroyed central city of Tacloban, an AFP reporter saw.
"The stench has taken away our appetite. Even in our sleep, we have to wear face masks," said local housewife Maritess Pedrosa, who lives in a house about 20 metres from the roadside city government property.
This made the storm, which also left 4.4 million people homeless, one of the deadliest natural disasters in Philippine history.
Tacloban and nearby towns were devastated by tsunami-like giant waves unleashed by Haiyan which accounted for a majority of the dead.
The council's spokesman, Reynaldo Balido, said he was unsure if the official death toll already included the cadavers in San Isidro.
Eutiquio Balunan, the local village chief, said government workers assigned to collect the typhoon dead began trucking them to San Isidro on November 10, where they have been exposed to the tropical heat and heavy seasonal rainshowers.
The processed corpses are then turned over to relatives, while those that are unclaimed are tagged and taken to a mass grave at the city cemetery about three kilometres away.
"Our tally comprises those already tagged and processed by the local governments," Balido, the disaster council spokesman, told AFP.
Balunan, the village chief, said the processing of the cadavers had been suspended over the Christmas weekend as the forensics experts went on holiday.
"We are requesting the city government to please bury the cadavers because our children and elderly residents are getting sick," he said.
The cadavers are guarded by eight policemen. One officer who asked not to be named said they are under orders to prevent the cadavers from being eaten by stray dogs.
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