Fiji Sun

Typhoon Rai kills 31 in Philippine­s

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Manilla: “I can hear the strong wind, howling as it peels off the iron sheets of our house,” Acerns Velasco of Lapu-Lapu City in the central Philippine­s said in a Facebook post seven hours after Typhoon Rai slammed into the country on Thursday.

The strongest typhoon to batter the Philippine­s this year swelled rivers and flooded low-lying areas while cutting through towns and villages in the central Philippine­s and the northern Mindanao in the southern Philippine­s. The typhoon has killed up to 31 people.

Out of the 31 reported deaths, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said only four have been validated. The national police reported at least 19 deaths but did not provide further details.

Gusty winds from the powerful typhoon toppled over trees and power lines in the Philippine­s as it blew away from the archipelag­o on Saturday.

Water was chest-high in some places, kneehigh in others. Only roofs in some flooded areas remained visible, forcing rescuers to use rubber boats and ropes to evacuate people to safer grounds.

In Bohol, one of the hardest-hit provinces, some residents sat on the roofs of their flooded houses as they waited for rescuers. People in the affected areas have difficulty in contacting their relatives due to the cut of telecommun­ication and power lines.

Bohol Governor Arthur Yap lamented that the breakdown of communicat­ions makes it difficult to make a rapid assessment of the typhoon.

Yap said the local government has moved more than 13,000 families to evacuation centers from critical areas. “But throughout the night and into yesterday morning, this number has swelled as the devastatio­n was great and allencompa­ssing,” he added.

Dinagat Islands Governor Kaka Bag-ao said typhoon Rai “leveled (the island province) to the ground,” cutting power and communicat­ion lines. “We have lost our homes. Wall and roofs were torn and blown away like paper,” Bag-ao said.

Rai made landfall on the island on Thursday afternoon. It was blowing maximum winds of 195 km per hour and with gusts of up to 240 km per hour when it slammed into Siargao Island.

Assistant Secretary Jusan Vincent Arcena of the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office said his hometown Siargao “is unfortunat­ely devastated by the typhoon.”

“I’m worried about their safety. I can’t even contact my relatives and local government units because of the situation here and in the island,” Arcena added in a Facebook post.

Landslides and flash floods are common across the Philippine­s during the rainy season, especially when typhoons hit.

The Philippine­s is one of the most disasterpr­one countries in the world, mainly due to its location in the Pacific Ring of Fire and Pacific typhoon belt. On average, this archipelag­ic country experience­s 20 typhoons every year, some of which are intense and destructiv­e.

The World Bank said natural disasters have killed 33,000 Filipinos in the past thirty years, and 120 million people adversely affected.

 ?? ?? Coast Guard personnel rescued stranded residents from floods in Cagayan De Oro City.
Coast Guard personnel rescued stranded residents from floods in Cagayan De Oro City.

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