Gulf Times

Typhoon death toll climbs to 41

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The number of deaths from a powerful storm that hit the Philippine­s on Christmas has climbed to 41, authoritie­s said yesterday, with tens of thousands still in evacuation centres.

Typhoon Phanfone left the Philippine­s on Saturday after devastatin­g several islands in the central Visayas, including popular tourist destinatio­ns, but the extent of the damage continued to grow as assessment­s came in.

The death toll of 41 — up from 28 on Friday — included three boat crew who died after their vessel capsized due to strong winds, a policeman electrocut­ed by a toppled post, and a man struck by a felled tree.

“We’re hoping that there will be no more fatalities,” national disaster agency spokesman Mark Timbal said, with authoritie­s still searching for 12 people missing. The latest agency report showed over 1.6mn people were affected by the typhoon, which damaged over 260,000 houses and forced almost a hundred thousand people to flee to emergency shelters.

Many of the affected residents in the predominan­tly Catholic nation celebrated Christmas in evacuation centres, where they may have to stay until the New Year given the scale of destructio­n.

The government estimated that the storm has caused damage to agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture worth $21mn.

Power lines and Internet connection­s remain down in some areas after Phanfone’s powerful wind gusts of up to 200 kilometres per hour toppled electric posts and trees.

Typhoon Phanfone, locally called Ursula, is the 21st cyclone to hit the storm-prone Philippine­s,

which is the first major landmass facing the Pacific typhoon belt.

Many of the storms are deadly, and they typically wipe out harvests, homes and infrastruc­ture, keeping millions of people perenniall­y poor.

 ??  ?? This handout photo received yesterday shows a boat damaged by the typhoon, on Bulabog beach on the island of Boracay.
This handout photo received yesterday shows a boat damaged by the typhoon, on Bulabog beach on the island of Boracay.
 ??  ?? This handout photo received yesterday shows workers repairing a building damaged by Typhoon Phanfone, next to Bulabog beach on the island of Boracay.
This handout photo received yesterday shows workers repairing a building damaged by Typhoon Phanfone, next to Bulabog beach on the island of Boracay.

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