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Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Typhoon ‘Pepito’ bears down on Philippines still reeling from ‘Ofel’

Manila, Philippines—Hundreds of people fled Friday as Typhoon ‘Pepito’ (Man-Yi) bore down on the Philippines, threatening yet more destruction even as rescuers tried to reach people stranded on rooftops by the last tropical cyclone.

Five major storms have battered the archipelago nation in the last three weeks, killing at least 163 people and prompting the United Nations to request $32.9 million in aid for the worst-affected regions.

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Typhoon ‘Ofel’ (Usagi) north of the country on Thursday, and on Friday rescuers were still scrambling to reach residents stranded on rooftops in northern Luzon island, where herds of livestock were devastated.

At the same time authorities began evacuating hundreds of people from the island of Catanduanes, which will likely be the first landmass hit directly by Typhoon ‘Pepito’ on Saturday, according to the weather service.

“We expect thousands more to evacuate in the hours before landfall, Roberto Monterola, operations chief of the Catanduanes civil defense office told Agence France Presse (AFP).

“We do not have enough evacuation centers, so some of them will be sheltering with neighbors who own houses made of stronger materials.”

Digging for cattle

On Thursday, flash floods driven by ‘Ofel’ struck 10 largely evacuated villages around the town of Gonzaga in Cagayan province, local rescue official Edward Gaspar told AFP by phone.

“We rescued a number of people who had refused to move to the shelters and got trapped on their rooftops,” Gaspar added.

While the evacuation of more than 5,000 Gonzaga residents ahead of ‘Ofel’ saved lives, he said two houses were swept away and many others were damaged while the farming region’s livestock industry took a heavy blow.

“We have yet to account for the exact number of hogs, cattle and poultry lost from the floods, but I can say the losses were huge,” Gaspar said.

Motorist Janford Bonifacio said he saw Gonzaga residents digging for their animals, many dead but some still alive, beneath mud and uprooted trees.

“I saw people digging for their cattle that were still alive, and some were trying to save their hogs which they found among the logs,” he told AFP.

Photo shows an aerial view of a destroyed bridge in Gonzaga town, Cagayan a day after Typhoon ‘Ofel’ hit the province. The cyclone blew out of the Philippines early on November 15 as another dangerous storm drew closer, threatening an area where scores were killed by flash floods and landslides just weeks ago, the weather service said. (Photo by Bloggers of Tuguegarao Facebook Page/AFP)

Uprooted trees also damaged a major bridge in Gonzaga, isolating nearby Santa Ana, a coastal town of about 36,000 people.

“Most evacuees have returned home, but we held back some of them. We have to check first if their houses are still safe for habitation,” Bonifacio Espiritu, operations chief of the civil defense office in Cagayan, told AFP.

By Friday, Usagi, now downgraded to a severe tropical storm, was over the Luzon Strait with a reduced strength of 110 kilometers (68 miles) an hour as it headed towards southern Taiwan.

But the streak of violent weather was forecast to continue in the central Philippines, with ‘Pepito,’ reclassified as a typhoon and already packing winds of up to 150 kilometers an hour, expected to hit the impoverished island province of Catanduanes late Saturday.

207,000 houses hit

A UN assessment said the past month’s storms damaged or destroyed 207,000 houses, with 700,000 people forced to seek temporary shelter.

Many families were without essentials like sleeping mats, hygiene kits and cooking supplies, and had limited access to safe drinking water.

Thousands of hectares of farmland were destroyed and persistent flooding was likely to delay replanting efforts and worsen food supply problems, the report added.

About 20 big storms and typhoons hit the Southeast Asian nation or its surrounding waters each year, killing scores of people, but it is unusual for multiple such weather events to take place in a small window.

The weather service said this tends to happen during seasonal episodes of La Niña, a climatic phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean that pushes more warm water toward Asia, causing heavy rains and flooding in the region and drought in the southern United States.

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