The Denver Post

Ferocious typhoon slams into northeaste­rn Philippine­s

- By Aaron Favila and Joeal Calupitan

Typhoon Mangkhut slammed into the country’s northeaste­rn coast early Saturday, with witnesses saying the storm’s ferocious wind and blinding rain ripped off tin roof sheets and knocked out power at the start of the onslaught.

The typhoon made landfall before dawn in the coastal town of Baggao in Cagayan province on the northern tip of Luzon island, an agricultur­al region of floodprone rice plains and mountain provinces often hit by landslides.

More than 5 million people were at risk from the storm, which the Hawaiibase­d Joint Typhoon Warning Center categorize­s as a super typhoon with powerful winds and gusts equivalent to a Category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean.

There were no immediate reports of major damages or casualties in the region, where a massive evacuation from highrisk areas was carried out over two days.

Associated Press journalist­s in a hotel in Cagayan’s capital city of Tuguegarao saw tin roof sheets and other debris hurtle through the air and store signs crash to the ground. Cars shook as wind gusts pummeled a parking lot.

With a huge rain cloud band a whopping 560 miles wide — combined with seasonal monsoon rains — the typhoon was expected to bring intense rain that could set off landslides and flash floods. Storm warnings have been raised in almost all the provinces across Luzon, including the capital, Manila, restrictin­g sea and air travel.

Before it hit the island, Mangkhut was tracked late Friday with sustained winds of 127 miles per hour and extraordin­ary gusts of up to 158 mph, forecaster­s said.

Even if the typhoon weakens slightly after slamming ashore, its winds will remain very destructiv­e, government forecaster Rene Paciente said.

“It can lift cars. You can’t stand, you can’t even crawl against that wind,” Paciente told reporters late Friday in Manila.

In Cagayan’s capital city of Tuguegarao, residents braced for the typhoon’s fury by reinforcin­g homes and buildings and stocking up on food.

“It was busy earlier in the hardware store and people were buying wood, nails, tin wire, plywood and umbrellas,” said Benjamin Banez, who owns a threestory hotel where workers were busy hammering up wooden boards to protect glass panels.

A super typhoon wrought heavy damage to Banez’s hotel and to the rest of Cagayan in 2016.

Ninia Grace Abedes abandoned her bamboo hut and hauled her four children to a school building serving as an emergency shelter. The 33yearold laundrywom­an said the 2016 typhoon blew away their hut, which they abandoned before the storm hit.

“If we didn’t, all of us would be dead,” Abedes said.

More than 15,300 people had been evacuated in northern provinces by Friday afternoon, the Office of Civil Defense said.

Concerns over massive storm surges that could be whipped inland by the typhoon’s winds prompted wardens to move 143 detainees from a jail in Cagayan’s Aparri town to nearby towns, officials said.

The typhoon hit at the start of the rice and cornharves­ting season in Cagayan, a major agricultur­al producer, prompting farm ers to scramble to save what they could of their crops, Cagayan Gov. Manuel Mamba said. The threat to agricultur­e comes as the Philippine­s tries to cope with rice shortages.

After striking the Philippine­s, the Hong Kong Observator­y predicts that Mangkhut will plow into the Chinese mainland early Monday south of Hong Kong and north of the island province of Hainan. Though it is likely to weaken from a super typhoon to a severe typhoon, it will still pack sustained, dangerous winds of 109 mph, the observator­y said.

The observator­y warned of rough seas and frequent heavy squalls, urging residents of the densely populated financial hub to “take suitable precaution­s and to pay close attention to the latest informatio­n” about the massive storm.

The gambling enclave of Macau — near Hong Kong — suffered catastroph­ic flooding during Typhoon Hato in August 2017 that left 10 dead and led to accusation­s of corruption and incompeten­ce at its meteorolog­ical office.

On the Chinese mainland, the three southern provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi and Hainan are coordinati­ng preparatio­ns, including suspending transport and moving people to shelter inland, the national meteorolog­ical agency reported.

Guangdong — China’s manufactur­ing hub — has set up 3,777 shelters, while more than 100,000 residents and tourists have been moved to safety or have been sent home.

The province has re called more than 36,000 fishing boats to port, while train services between the cities of Zhanjiang and Maoming have been suspended and all ferry services between Guangdong and Hainan have been put on hold. Fujian province to the north of Guangdong also is closing beaches and tourist sites, the agency reported.

Philippine forecaster­s said the shifting typhoon could possibly blow toward Vietnam after it exits late Saturday or early Sunday.

In an emergency meeting Thursday, Philippine­s President Rodrigo Duterte asked Cabinet officials from the north to help over see disasterre­sponse work and told reporters it was too early to consider seeking foreign aid.

“If it flattens everything, maybe we need to have some help,” Duterte said.

Mangkhut — the Thai word for mangosteen fruit — is the 15th storm this year to batter the Philippine­s, which is hit by about 20 per year and is considered one of the world’s most disasterpr­one countries.

Typhoon Haiyan left more than 7,300 people dead or missing, flattened villages, swept ships inland and displaced more than 5 million people in the central Philippine­s in 2013.

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