World

Powerful typhoon slams southern Philippines

A powerful typhoon slammed into the southeastern Philippines on Thursday, toppling trees, ripping tin roofs and knocking down power lines as it blew across island provinces where nearly 100,000 people have been evacuated.

Emergency officials cluster evacuees by family in bid to reduce COVID-19 risk

Philippine Coast Guard personnel assist in the evacuation of residents due to flooding caused by Typhoon Rai in Cagayan De Oro City on Thursday. (Philippine Coast Guard/Reuters)

A powerful typhoon slammed into the southeastern Philippines on Thursday, toppling trees, ripping tin roofs and knocking down power lines as it blew across island provinces where nearly 100,000 people have been evacuated.

Coast guard personnel were rescuing residents stranded by chest-deep waters in a southern province, where pounding rains swamped villages in brownish water. In southern Cagayan de Oro city, footage showed two rescuers struggling to keep a month-old baby inside a laundry basin above the waters and shielded from the wind and rain with an umbrella.

Forecasters said Typhoon Rai, which is known locally as Odette, further strengthened with sustained winds of 195 kilometres per hour and gusts of up to 270 km/h as it blew from the Pacific Ocean into the Siargao Islands. There were no immediate reports of casualties or major damage.

"I'm scared and praying here in my house that this stops now. The wind outside is so strong it's cutting down trees," Teresa Lozano, a resident of eastern MacArthur town in coastal Leyte province, told DZMM radio by telephone, adding roofs of nearby houses were damaged and that her farming village had lost power.

Disaster-response officials said about 10,000 villages lie in the projected path of the typhoon, which has a 400-kilometre-wide rain band and is one of the strongest to hit the country this year.

Schools, workplaces closed

The coast guard said it has grounded all vessels, stranding nearly 4,000 passengers and ferry and cargo ship workers in dozens of southern and central ports. Several mostly domestic flights have been cancelled and schools and workplaces were shut in the most vulnerable areas.

WATCH | Power outages and flooding reported after typhoon hits Philippines:

Typhoon Rai causes power outages, flooding in southern Philippines

3 years ago
Duration 0:55
Typhoon Rai made landfall in the southern Philippines causing extensive damage, rising flood waters and disrupting COVID-19 vaccination efforts. (Credit: Philippine Coast Guard)

More than 98,000 people have been evacuated to safety, the government's disaster-response agency said. Crowding in evacuation centres was complicating efforts to keep people safely distanced after authorities detected the country's first infections caused by the Omicron variant of the coronavirus. Intensified vaccinations were also halted in provinces likely to experience stormy weather.

Local media reported that local officials in Cagayan De Oro City are worried waters could rise even higher. (Philippine Coast Guard/Reuters)
Residents stand in a flooded area in the coastal town of Guiuan, in central Philippines's Eastern Samar province, on Thursday. (Alren Beronia/AFP/Getty Images)

The Philippines has been among the hardest-hit in Southeast Asia by the pandemic, with confirmed infections of more than 2.8 million and more than 50,000 deaths.

Quarantine restrictions have been eased and more businesses have been allowed to reopen in recent weeks after an intensified vaccination campaign helped reduce infections to a few hundred a day from more than 26,000 in September.

The detection of Omicron cases this week, however, has set off the alarm and the government renewed calls for people to avoid crowds and get vaccinated immediately.

Storm disrupts vaccination efforts

Gov. Ben Evardone of Eastern Samar province said he suspended vaccinations in his region of nearly half a million people due to the typhoon. More than 70 per cent of villagers in the province have gotten at least one shot, and Evardone expressed concern because some vaccines stored in Eastern Samar will expire in a few months.

Overcrowding is unavoidable, he said, in the limited number of evacuation centres in his province, where more than 32,000 people have been moved to safety.

"It's impossible to observe social distancing, it will really be tough," Evardone told The Associated Press. "What we do is we cluster evacuees by families. We don't mix different people in the same place, as a precaution."

About 20 storms and typhoons batter the Philippines each year. The archipelago is also located in the seismically active Pacific "Ring of Fire" region, making it one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world.

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