Times Colonist

Typhoon rips through Philippine towns

Residents distraught as their homes are blown away

- JIM GOMEZ

MANILA, Philippine­s — Strong winds and rain from Typhoon Vongfong left at least one person dead and damaged hundreds of homes and coronaviru­s isolation facilities along with rice and corn fields in five hard-hit eastern towns, a governor said Friday.

Gov. Ben Evardone of Eastern Samar province, where the typhoon slammed ashore, said distraught residents wept after their houses were destroyed or blown away in the towns he inspected. One villager who lost his home slashed his wrist, but was treated in time, he said.

A man bled to death after he was hit by glass shards in a school building he was trying to open to take shelter in, Evardone said.

“The damage I saw was very extensive. The roof of one church was ripped off completely, its iron bars twisted badly by the typhoon,” Evardone said.

Videos and pictures of the devastatio­n sent by Evardone showed several low-slung buildings and sports centres either destroyed or badly damaged with their roofs peeled off or deformed and their iron trusses bent. Villagers outside damaged houses called for help in one video.

Evardone said he and a group of military, police and local authoritie­s failed to reach two towns hit by the typhoon, Jipapad and Maslog, due to fallen trees on the road. Cellphone and two-way radio communicat­ions to the far-flung areas were down and Evardone appealed to the military to deploy a helicopter to inspect them and deliver food if troops are unable to reach the area by today.

In the outlying region of Bicol, northwest of Eastern Samar, more than 145,000 people were riding out the weakening typhoon in emergency shelters on Friday after a mass evacuation that was complicate­d and slowed by the coronaviru­s.

Vongfong weakened into a severe tropical storm after hitting land and was blowing northwest toward the populous main northern island of Luzon, government forecaster­s said. Its maximum sustained wind speed dropped to 110 kilometres an hour with gusts of 150 km/h, but it remained dangerous, especially in coastal and low-lying villages, forecaster­s said. Vongfong was expected to blow out of the country’s north on Sunday.

Office of Civil Defence director Claudio Yucot said the evacuation­s took time because workers needed to wear masks and protective suits and could not transport villagers to shelters in large numbers as a safeguard against the virus.

“Our ease of movement has been limited by COVID,” Yucot said by telephone from Albay province in the Bicol region, which has had dozens of coronaviru­s infections, including four deaths, and remains under quarantine. “In the evacuation centres, there are more challenges.”

In an evacuation room which normally could shelter up to 40 families, only four families could be accommodat­ed. The occupants should know each other and are required to report any infected person, Yucot said.

The coast guard said more than 600 cargo truck drivers and workers were stranded by the travel suspension. All were required to wear masks and prohibited from mingling.

The typhoon hit as the Philippine­s struggles to deal with coronaviru­s outbreaks, largely with a lockdown in Luzon that is to be eased this weekend, except in metropolit­an Manila and two other high-risk areas.

 ?? PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Villagers in Sorsogon province, northeaste­rn Philippine­s, are helped to escape their flooded homes by boat on Friday after the region was hit by Typhoon Vongfong.
PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Villagers in Sorsogon province, northeaste­rn Philippine­s, are helped to escape their flooded homes by boat on Friday after the region was hit by Typhoon Vongfong.
 ??  ?? Floodwater inundates a village in Sorsogon province. Vongfong was expected to blow out of the northern Philippine­s on Sunday.
Floodwater inundates a village in Sorsogon province. Vongfong was expected to blow out of the northern Philippine­s on Sunday.

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