Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Guam views Mawar’s destructio­n

Restoring essential services begins as governor gives all-clear

- GRACE GARCES BORDALLO AND JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Seth Borenstein, Lolita C. Baldor, Sarah Brumfield, Audrey McAvoy, Mark Thiessen, Stefanie Dazio, Ed Komenda and Rebecca Boone of The Associated Press.

HAGATNA, Guam — Chainsaws buzzed today as neighbors helped neighbors clear toppled trees and began cleaning the wreckage of Typhoon Mawar, which walloped Guam as the strongest typhoon to hit the island in more than two decades but appeared to have passed without leaving death or massive destructio­n in its wake.

While it was still early going in the recovery effort, police Sgt. Paul Tapao said there did not seem to be any major damage, main roads were passable and “Guam has been very blessed to have no storm-related deaths or any serious injuries.”

To Tapao, the roar of the mechanical saws was a reminder of the resilience of the stormprone U.S. Pacific territory and its people.

“Everyone helps out with the cleaning,” he said. “That’s the Guamanian way — that’s embedded in the blood.”

He added that there’s a saying in Chamorro — the indigenous language of the Mariana Islands — “inafa maolek,” that means cooperatio­n, a concept of restoring harmony or order.

“Storms have taught our island to be resilient,” he said. “We’re still here.”

Still, officials said it could take weeks to clean up the mess after Mawar briefly made landfall as a Category 4 storm Wednesday on the northern tip of the U.S. Pacific territory of roughly 150,000 people, flipping cars, tearing off roofs and leaving trees bare.

Some villages had little or no water today, Tapao said. There were 725 people in shelters Friday, down from nearly 1,000 on Thursday, officials said. About 51,000 customers were without electricit­y, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency. And nearly 1,000 people were still in shelters as of Thursday, Guam officials said.

Water contaminat­ion from the heavy rains and runoff was a concern: The Guam Waterworks Authority issued a notice advising residents to boil water before drinking it, and the Guam Environmen­tal Protection Agency warned people to stay out of the sea at all beaches because of high bacteria content.

The central and northern parts of the island received more than 2 feet of rain as the eyewall passed. The swirling typhoon churned up a storm surge and waves that crashed through coastal reefs and swamped houses.

In the southeaste­rn village of Yona, floodwater­s reached above the waist at the home where Alexander Ken M. Aflague’s mother-in-law and sister-in-law live, he said. Two trucks and an SUV were completely submerged.

Aflague said the mood on the island was like after every storm, as people assess the damage and move toward rebuilding their lives back to normal. His major worry was shortages, saying supplies were at levels similar to what they were during the early days of the covid-19 pandemic.

“The cleanup is the struggle but we all pitch in and help each other,” he said by text message.

Also in Yona, winds peeled back the roof of Enrique Baza’s mother’s house, allowing water to damage everything inside. His mother rode out the storm with him at his concrete residence, he said, but “my mom’s house didn’t escape.”

He drove around in a pickup after the storm passed looking for supplies to repair her roof, but most stores were without power and accepting only cash. Many wooden or tin homes were badly damaged or had collapsed outright.

“It’s kind of a shock,” Baza said.

Officials said they anticipate­d being able to resume operations at the flooded A.B. Won Pat Internatio­nal Airport next Tuesday.

Guam Gov. Lou Leon Guerrero gave the all-clear Thursday evening, returning the island to its typical condition of readiness as the National Weather Service lifted its typhoon watch.

“We have weathered the storm,” Leon Guerrero said. “The worst has gone by.” The storm is forecast to continue moving northwest before turning sharply north Tuesday or Wednesday, according to Taiwan’s Central Weather Bureau. That track would keep the typhoon at sea for days as it gradually weakens.

The storm was expected to move northwest for days over a large, empty expanse of ocean and enter the Philippine “area of responsibi­lity” of the Pacific Ocean where that country’s officials monitor storms late Friday or early Saturday. Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said on Facebook that officials were preparing and the storm could bring heavy rainfall and flooding. Mawar could threaten Taiwan next week.

Mawar regained its status as a super typhoon on Thursday, with winds reaching 150 mph. By early today, they had strengthen­ed to 175 mph, according to the weather service. Mawar, which means “rose” in Malay, was forecast to maintain that general course and speed through Saturday.

This morning, Mawar was centered 345 miles west-northwest of Guam and 360 miles west of Rota, Guam’s neighbor to the north, moving west-northwest at 14 mph.

 ?? (AP/The Pacific Daily/Rick Cruz) ?? The waters of the Hagatna River overflow its banks and encroach into the Bank of Guam parking lot Thursday in Hagatna, Guam, in the aftermath of Typhoon Mawar.
(AP/The Pacific Daily/Rick Cruz) The waters of the Hagatna River overflow its banks and encroach into the Bank of Guam parking lot Thursday in Hagatna, Guam, in the aftermath of Typhoon Mawar.

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