Gulf Today

Evacuation­s as Typhoon Yutu strikes Philippine­s

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MANILA: Typhoon Yutu slammed into the Philippine­s on Tuesday with fierce winds that sheared off roofs and snapped trees, after thousands were evacuated ahead of the powerful storm’s arrival.

Cutting a path just south of last month’s Typhoon Mangkhut, which killed dozens, the new storm tore across the Philippine­s’ most populous island, dumping heavy rain along the way.

Search crews were just beginning to assess the damage wrought by Yutu, which made landfall early Tuesday with sustained winds of 150 kilometres per hour and gusts up to 210.

Authoritie­s said they were probing reports of two missing people, one from a capsized boat and the other swept away in a river.

“We see some branches on the roads AND SO ON, BUT IT IS THE LOODING THAT IS destroying houses here,” Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross spokeswoma­n Caroline Haga told reporters from Nueva Vizcaya province. “People are needing to be rescued.”

NEARLY 10,000 PEOPLE LED THEIR homes ahead of Yutu’s arrival because they live in low-lying areas susceptibl­e TO LOODING.

THE HIGH WINDS LATTENED LIMSY homes, tore the roofs off others and downed power poles as well as trees.

Landslides spawned by the storm blocked a major road in the mountainou­s north, isolating some residents, a CIVIL DEFENCE OFICIAL SAID.

PHILIPPINE DISASTER OFICIALS SAID the storm was less powerful than Mangkhut, which struck six weeks ago and left more than 100 dead. Most of the fatalities were due to a landslide in the mining area of Itogon.

Authoritie­s near last month’s deadly landslide evacuated at least 1,000 people from the Itogon area as Yutu approached.

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