Philippines struggles amid typhoon damage


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) Terrifying winds and intense rains pounded the eastern Philippines yesterday as millions sheltered from a giant storm that threatened more devastation for a nation battling to recover from a catastrophic super typhoon.

Typhoon Hagupit roared in from the Pacific Ocean and crashed into remote fishing communities of Samar island last night with wind gusts of 210 kilometres an hour, local weather agency

Pagasa said.

The wind strength made Hagupit the most powerful storm to hit the Philippines this year, exceeding a typhoon in July that killed more than 100 people.

"Tin roofs are flying off, trees are falling and there is some flooding," Stephany Uy-Tan, the mayor of Catbalogan, a major city on Samar, told AFP by phone minutes after Hagupit made landfall.

Fearful of a repeat of last year when Super Typhoon Haiyan claimed more than 7,350 lives, the government undertook a massive evacuation effort ahead of Hagupit that saw millions seek shelter.

"This is it. I know you are tired, not enough sleep, not enough food, too much coffee," Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said a few hours before the typhoon hit, calling for a final effort to bring more people from vulnerable coastal homes to safe buildings.

"This is our last push. Every person we can save now is one less we have to look for after the typhoon passes."

Roxas was speaking at a nationally televised planning conference from Samar, having based himself in one of the areas expected to be among the first hit so he could oversee preparations there.

Hagupit was forecast to take three days to cut across the Philippines, passing over mostly poor central regions, while also bringing heavy rain to the densely populated capital of Manila slightly to the north.

Damage assessments from communities initially hit are not likely to be known until after daybreak today, as power and mobile networks have been lost in many of those areas. But the government warned of storm surges up to 4.5-metres high in some areas, flash flooding, landslides and winds strong enough to tear apart even

sturdy homes.

Tens of millions of people live in the typhoon's path, including those in the central Philippines who are still struggling to recover from the devastation of Haiyan, which hit 13 months ago.

Haiyan was the strongest storm ever recorded on land, with winds of 315 kilometres an hour, and generated tsunami-like storm surges that laid to waste entire towns.

In Tacloban, one of the cities worst-hit by Haiyan, thousands of traumatised typhoon survivors crammed into schools, churches and other evacuation centres.

"We are afraid. People are panicking," Alma Gaut, 36, who lost her mother and her home during Haiyan, told AFP yesterday morning as she huddled in the second floor of a university, sheltering with more than 1,000 other people.

After the storm made landfall in Samar, about 100 kilometres to the northeast, residents in Tacloban reported howling wind and ferocious rain, but none of the storm surges that ravaged the city last year.

In the eastern region of Bicol that is due to be hit throughout today and tomorrow, authorities said they were aiming for 2.5 million people - half the local population - to be in evacuation centres.

The Philippines endures about 20 major storms a year which, along with regular earthquakes and volcano eruptions, make it one of the world's most disaster-plagued countries.

The storms regularly claim many lives but they are becoming more violent and unpredictable because of climate change, according to the United Nations and many scientists.

Haiyan was the world's deadliest natural disaster last year.

In 2011 and 2012, there were consecutive December storms that together claimed more than 3,000 lives and were the word's deadliest disasters of those years.

And in July this year, Typhoon Rammasun killed 111 people when it cut across Manila, paralysing the capital for days, and other parts of the main island of Luzon.


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