Typhoon Mangkhut killed dozens in the Philippines as it obliterated homes and crops and caused massive flooding, and is now on course to plough into China’s southern coast.
Presidential adviser Francis Tolentino said the heaviest casualty was recorded in the mountainous Cordillera region in northern Luzon, where heavy rains caused landslides that left 24 people dead and 13 more missing. Four others – including two children – were buried in a landslide in Nueva Ecija, another in Kalinga, and one person was killed by a falling tree in Ilocos Sur, Tolentino said.
The storm, which was the strongest the region has seen this year, was not as ferocious as feared, though due to the remote areas where the typhoon hit, the full death toll and extent of the destruction is still unknown.
By Sunday morning, it was hurtling towards China’s heavily populated southern coast with winds of 177km/h (110mph).In Hong Kong, where the huge storm skirted just 100km (62 miles) south of the city, more than 100 people were injured. Officials had earlier raised the storm alert to a T10, its highest level. Businesses have been boarded up and most flights cancelled.
Residents have been advised to stay indoors and away from windows or doors, and some have been evacuated from low-lying areas. High winds smashed windows, torn off parts of buildings and roofs, while storm surges have flooded hotels and restaurants.
In Guangdong, schools have been closed until Tuesday and the high speed rail has been suspended, according to China’s state news agency Xinhua. In the southern province of Fujian, Chinese officials have ordered thousands of fishing boats to return to harbor and closed construction sites near the coast.
In the Philippines, President Rodrigo Duterte flew to Cagayan on Sunday with top government officials. He said: “I share the grief of those who lost their loved ones. Those [are what] we call the unforeseen events,” Duterte said in a televised briefing. Duterte said he would fly to the Cordillera region on Monday.
Tolentino said the search and rescue operation had now ended and that the focus would switch to “rehabilitation” and the restoration of power and water supplies.
The category 5 “super” typhoon hit the northern end of the Philippine island of Luzon early on Saturday morning, with the high winds ripping the roofs off houses and pulling down trees and electricity pylons, and the rains causing fatal landslides and flooding. More than five million people were in its path.
The island is a key agricultural area in the Philippines, producing most of the country’s rice, corn and others vegetable crops, and the storm left them ruined a month before harvest, damaging the livelihoods of thousands in the region.
Jerome Balinton, a spokesman for Save the Children who was on the ground in north-eastern Luzon, said: “The further north we travelled the more extensive the damage, particularly in Cagayan province. House after house had been flattened or badly damaged, with roofs or walls missing. Large trees have been uprooted from the ground and power poles bent right over, leaving power lines strewn across the ground.”
He added: “In some areas where the eye of the storm hit, it seems as if nothing has been left undamaged.”
The typhoon affected 250,000 people in Luzon, according to the government’s natural disaster council. Mangkhut, a Thai word for the mangosteen fruit, is the 15th storm this year to batter the Philippines.
Typhoon Mangkhut heads for south China as dozens killed in Philippines
Leave a Comment