close
close

Typhoon claims at least seven lives in the Philippines and leaves thousands homeless

MANILA, Philippines (AP) – A typhoon has finally moved away from the Philippines. At least seven people were killed, most of them by flooding and fallen trees. Several seaports had to be closed and thousands of passengers were stranded, officials said Tuesday.

Typhoon Ewiniar passed the country’s east coast late Friday night and lingered in the Philippines for several days before moving northeast away from the archipelago. All storm warnings were lifted on Tuesday.

The typhoon’s change in direction spared the densely populated capital Manila from a potentially devastating hit.

Ewiniar, known locally as Aghon, was last tracked Tuesday about 280 miles east of the northern city of Basco in Batanes province with sustained winds of 81 mph and gusts of up to 99 mph, government meteorologists said.

At least six villagers drowned in the floodwaters or died when they were hit by falling trees during the sudden flooding in hard-hit Quezon province, provincial police said. In the southern province of Misamis Oriental, a villager died when a tree fell and hit a motorcycle taxi she was riding with her sister on their way to school, police said.

Many villages were hit by flash floods. In Lucena, the capital of Quezon province, some low-lying areas were submerged in water up to 2.5 meters. The flooding was partly due to clogged sewage systems after a particularly hot summer, said Quezon Governor Angelina Tan and other provincial officials.

Tan said many houses, including the governor’s residence, were damaged by strong winds and torrential rains. The typhoon forced her to seek shelter elsewhere while she oversaw the distribution of food and other relief items to displaced villagers, she said.

Before flying to Brunei on a state visit on Tuesday, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said more than 26,700 people had been affected by the typhoon, including many who had fled to evacuation centers in five provincial regions. Three airports and 29 seaports could not operate normally due to the typhoon, while six cities and towns were affected by power outages, he said.

More than 4,800 passengers, truck drivers and cargo workers were temporarily stranded due to the closure of seaports as the typhoon ravaged southern and central provinces, the Philippine Coast Guard said.

“Even before the typhoon, we transported relief supplies to locations near the expected typhoon path so that everything was ready,” Marcos said.

The Philippine archipelago is hit by about 20 typhoons and storms every year and is located in an Asian region frequently affected by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, making it one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world.

In 2013, one of the most powerful typhoons on record, Haiyan, left over 7,300 people dead or missing, entire villages razed to the ground, ships driven inland, and over 5 million people in the central Philippines displaced.


photo

In this Philippine Coast Guard photo, a member of the Coast Guard Southern Quezon rescues a resident from a flooded house in Lucena, Quezon province, Philippines, Sunday, May 26, 2024. Typhoon Ewiniar, known locally as Aghon, hit the Philippines on Tuesday, sweeping away people and leaving at least seven dead, mostly from flooding or fallen trees. Several seaports were closed, leaving thousands of passengers stranded, officials said. (Philippine Coast Guard via AP)



photo

In this Philippine Coast Guard photo, members of the Coast Guard Southern Quezon rescue a resident from a flooded house in Lucena, Quezon province, Philippines, Sunday, May 26, 2024. Typhoon Ewiniar, locally known as Aghon, hit the Philippines on Tuesday, sweeping away people and leaving at least seven dead, mostly from flooding or fallen trees. Several seaports were closed, leaving thousands of passengers stranded, officials said. (Philippine Coast Guard via AP)