Typhoon kills at least 46 in Philippines, thousands more left stranded


The death toll from Typhoon Kalmaegi in the Philippines hit 46 on Tuesday, officials said, including six crew of a military helicopter that crashed during the powerful storm that unleashed heavy rains and floods across the central region.
The Huey helicopter went down in Agusan del Sur on the island of Mindanao, where it was conducting a humanitarian disaster response mission, the military said. Six bodies of the crew were recovered and an investigation was underway.

The crash took place before noon about 270km from the island of Cebu, the worst-hit region, where local authorities said 39 people had drowned or been killed by falling debris. One person was reported dead on the neighbouring island of Bohol.

Photos and videos from the Philippine Red Cross show rescue workers wading through knee-deep floodwaters in Cebu City, using boats to reach stranded residents. Source: Getty / Anadolu

Run of disasters in the Philippines

The Philippines, which is hit by an average of 20 tropical storms each year, is recovering from a run of disasters, including earthquakes and severe weather events in recent months.
In September, Typhoon Ragasa swept across northern Luzon, forcing schools and government offices to shut down as it brought fierce winds and torrential rain.

Although Kalmaegi, locally named Tino, has gradually lost strength since making landfall early on Tuesday, it continued to lash the country with winds of 120km/h and gusts of 165km/h as it swept across the Visayas islands headed for northern Palawan and towards the South China Sea.

Tens of thousands were evacuated across the Visayas region, including parts of southern Luzon and northern Mindanao, ahead of a storm that submerged homes and caused widespread flooding.
Cebu provincial information officer Ainjeliz Orong said the number of casualties in the province had jumped suddenly, from three reported earlier in the day, as rescue operations were underway and information had just started to come through.

Floods in Cebu City had subsided late on Tuesday, but power was still out in many places and telecommunications services were intermittent, a Reuters journalist said.

‘The waters kept rising’

Verified videos circulating on social media showed cars and streets underwater, with some vehicles carried away in the flow.
“We were really anxious because the longer the rains continued, the higher the floodwaters rose,” said John Patajo, a housekeeper in the area.
“When the waters rose, we went to our second floor. Yet, the waters kept rising, so we decided to head up to our roof.”

The typhoon was expected to leave the Philippines late on Wednesday or early Thursday.

State weather agency PAGASA had earlier warned of a high risk of “life-threatening and damaging storm surges” that could reach more than 3 metres high on coastal and low-lying communities in the central Philippines.

Vietnam on alert

The Vietnamese government on Tuesday said that it was preparing for the worst-case scenario as it braced for the impact of Kalmaegi.
The typhoon is forecast to make landfall on Thursday night in Vietnam’s central regions, which have already suffered heavy floods that killed at least 40 people and left six others missing over the past week.



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