Food bank Manila
Residents collecting free food packets from a food bank called a "community pantry", run by volunteers, along a road in Quezon City in suburban Manila Image Credit: AFP

Manila: Community-run stalls offering free food to the needy have multiplied across the Philippines, with many struggling to feed their families as coronavirus restrictions bite and government help falls short.

Street sweeper Juliet Reyes regularly picks up fruit and vegetables from a curbside food pantry in the capital, Manila, where a recent lockdown to contain a surge in infections threw hundreds of thousands out of work.

"I'm very thankful. It's a big help for us who are most in need," said Reyes, 41, who supports a family of eight on her meagre daily wage of 200 pesos ($4).

"When I go home I will cook what I got today."

Patricia Non ignited the nationwide movement this month after parking a bamboo cart stocked with rice, pasta, canned food and vegetables raided from her kitchen beside a busy street.

Food bank Manila
Residents collecting free food packets from a food bank called a "community pantry", run by volunteers, along a road in Quezon City in suburban Manila. Image Credit: AFP

A handwritten cardboard sign urged passers-by to "Give what you can, take what you need".

Within hours the cart was empty and Non issued a plea on Facebook for donations, which went viral.

As contributions flooded in and a few recipients turned into thousands queueing every day - many lining up as soon as the night-time curfew lifted at 5am - Non's trolley expanded into a distribution centre for other pantries.

"Many are in need and I have more than enough for myself at home," Non, 26, told AFP.

"It's not a solution to hunger and poverty. But it's a stop-gap measure."

Government help 'not enough'

Non's charitable act has inspired others - including police, churches and the Philippine Coast Guard - to start their own pantries across the archipelago.

Photos posted on social media show tables laden with donated food set up on streets, with people wearing masks and clutching reusable shopping bags waiting in line. Some pantries offer free pet food.

The scenes of community solidarity have fuelled criticism of the government's response to the poor after restrictions imposed to contain the virus devastated the economy and left millions hungry.

In the latest lockdown of Metro Manila and surrounding provinces, which began at the end of March, the national government offered a one-off payment of 1,000 pesos (DH76)per person, or 4,000 pesos for a family.

So far, only about two-thirds of the aid meant for nearly 23 million people has been distributed.

President Rodrigo Duterte's spokesman Harry Roque has praised the community pantries for showing "the best of the Filipino in the worst of times."

But police have reportedly profiled volunteers and a spokesman for Duterte's anti-communist task force even accused the movement of being rebel sympathisers and doing the devil's work.

"I'm not saying they're doing nothing, but I really think it's not enough, especially since there's a budget for it," Non said of the government's efforts.

"The community pantry concept would not go wild if there's no need for it."