A typhoon killed at least 10 people as it churned across the Philippines and shut down the capital, cutting power and prompting more than 370,000 people to evacuate, rescue officials said yesterday.
The eye of Typhoon Rammasun, the strongest storm to hit the country this year, passed to the south of Manila yesterday after cutting a path across the main island of Luzon, toppling trees and power lines and causing electrocutions and widespread blackouts.
Major roads across Luzon were blocked by debris, fallen trees, electricity poles and tin roofs ripped off village houses. The storm uprooted trees in the capital where palm trees lining major arteries were bent over by the wind as broken hoardings bounced down the streets.
Photo: EPA
Philippine National Red Cross chairman Richard Gordon said there was minimal damage in the capital, but staff were trying to rescue people trapped by fallen debris in Batangas city to the south where two people were electrocuted.
“We have not received reports of major flooding in Metro Manila because the typhoon did not bring rain, but the winds were strong,” he said.
The number of evacuees had reached more than 370,000, mostly in the eastern province of Albay, the first to be hit by the typhoon, the disaster agency said. They were taken to schools, gymnasiums and town halls converted into shelters.
At least four southeastern provinces on Luzon declared, or were about to declare, a state of calamity, allowing the local governments to tap emergency relief funds.
The storm brought storm surges to Manila Bay and prompted disaster officials to evacuate slum-dwellers on the capital’s outskirts. More surges were expected as the storm headed west.
More than half of Luzon was without power supply, Philippine Secretary of Energy Carlos Jericho Petilla said, adding that he could not say when it would be back up.
Manila Electric Co, the country’s biggest power utility exclusively supplying to the capital, said about 86 percent of its customers were without electricity.
Parts of the Philippines are still recovering from Typhoon Haiyan, one of the biggest cyclones to have ever made landfall. It killed more than 6,100 people in November last year in the central provinces, many in tsunami-like sea surges, and left millions homeless.
Tropical Storm Risk, which monitors cyclones, labeled Rammasun a category-two storm on a scale of one to five as it headed west into the South China Sea. Haiyan was category five.
Yet it predicted Rammasun would strengthen to a category-three storm within a couple of days once it was back out at sea, picking up energy from the warm waters as it headed for the Chinese island of Hainan.
Rhea Catada, who works for Oxfam in Tacloban, which suffered the brunt of Haiyan, said thousands of people in tents and coastal villages had been evacuated to higher ground.
“They are scared because their experiences during Haiyan last year are still fresh,” she said. “Now they are evacuating voluntarily and leaving behind their belongings.”
Philippine Secretary for Social Work Dinky Soliman said 5,335 families, or nearly 27,000 people, had been “affected” by the storm in Tacloban.
A 25-year-old woman was killed when she was hit by a falling electricity pole as Rammasun hit the east coast on Tuesday, the Philippine disaster agency said. A pregnant woman was killed when a house wall collapsed in Lucena city in Quezon province.
The Philippine Stock Exchange and Philippine Dealing System, were shut and more than 200 flights have been canceled.
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