Chattanooga Times Free Press

Powerful typhoon slams Philippine­s, spoiling Christmas

- BY JIM GOMEZ

MANILA, Philippine­s — A powerful typhoon slammed into the eastern Philippine­s on Christmas Day, spoiling the biggest holiday in Asia’s largest Catholic nation, where a governor offered roast pig to entice villagers to abandon family celebratio­ns for emergency shelters.

Typhoon Nock-Ten was packing maximum sustained winds of 114 miles per hour and gusts of up to 158 mph when it made landfall Sunday night in Catanduane­s province, where fierce winds and rain knocked out the island’s power and communicat­ions, officials said.

There were no immediate reports of injuries.

After Catanduane­s, the typhoon, which had a 300-mile rain band, was expected to barge westward across the mountainou­s southern plank of the Philippine­s’ main island of Luzon and blow close to the capital, Manila, today before starting to exit toward the South China Sea. Nock-Ten may weaken after hitting the Sierra Madre mountain range in southern Luzon.

Heavy rainfall, destructiv­e winds and battering waves were threatenin­g heavily populated rural and urban regions, where the Philippine weather agency raised typhoon warnings, stranding thousands of people in ports as airlines canceled flights and ferries were prevented from sailing. Officials warned of storm surges in coastal villages, flash floods and landslides, and asked villagers to evacuate to safer ground.

Christmas is the biggest holiday in the Philippine­s, which has Asia’s largest Roman Catholic population, making it difficult for officials to get people’s attention to heed the warnings. With many refusing to leave high-risk communitie­s, some officials said they decided to carry out forced evacuation­s.

In the past 65 years, seven typhoons have struck the Philippine­s on Christmas Day, according to the government’s weather agency.

Gov. Miguel Villafuert­e of Camarines Sur province, which is in the typhoon’s expected path, offered roast pig, a popular Christmas delicacy locally called “lechon,” in evacuation centers to entice villagers to move to emergency shelters.

“I know it’s Christmas … but this is a legit typhoon,” Villafuert­e tweeted on Christmas Eve. “Please evacuate, we’ll be having lechon at evacuation centers.”

Camarines Sur officials had targeted about 50,000 families — some 250,000 people — for evacuation by Saturday night, but the number of those who responded was initially far below expectatio­ns.

In Catanduane­s province, Vice Gov. Shirley Abundo said she ordered a forced evacuation of villagers, saying some “are really hard-headed, they don’t want to leave their houses because it’s Christmas.”

“We need to do this by force, we need to evacuate them now,” she told ABSCBN television.

The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t, which helps oversee government response during disasters, said only about 4,200 people were reported to have moved to six evacuation centers by Sunday morning in the Bicol region, which includes Camarines Sur.

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