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Water released from the dam at the height of the downpour caused most of the flooding in Pangasinan and surrounding provinces. A key bridge, one of the doorways to the Cordillera region, also was damaged. Two U.S. Navy ships, meanwhile, were anchored in the Lingayen Gulf in Pangasinan with Marines and sailors ready to deploy for rescue and relief operations, said Philippine military spokesman Lt. Col. Romeo Brawner. The U.S. Marines brought with them eight CH-46 helicopters to complement the same number of Vietnam War-era UH-1H helicopters of the Philippine air force to carry relief goods and other supplies to the isolated mountain region. "The focus is on the Cordillera," Brawner said. "The roads are impassable and the only way to reach Baguio is through air." He said the helicopters will try to penetrate the fog-shrouded mountains to drop off supplies at the Baguio airport, from where they can be distributed by land. Last month, Tropical Storm Ketsana left 337 people dead in the worst floods to hit Manila and nearby provinces in four decades. A week later, Typhoon Parma slammed into the northern Philippines. It later weakened into a tropical depression but lingered over the region for about 10 days, dumping more rain.
[Associated
Press;
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