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Frustration boiled over at some sites. Flood victims rushed at an army helicopter delivering boxes of clothes to a relief center in Rodriguez town in hard-hit Rizal province just east of the capital, an Associated Press photographer at the scene said. No one was apparently injured. Elsewhere in Rizal, police said they were investigating reports that flood victims mobbed two convoys carrying relief supplies and pelted the trucks with stones. "Apparently victims who were hoping to receive the relief goods blocked the convoy," police official Leopoldo Bataoil told The AP, adding that the report was unconfirmed. At relief centers, women and children clutching bags of belongings lined up for bottled water, boiled eggs and packets of instant noodles for a fourth day. Men waded through thick, gooey sludge back to their homes to clean up the mud
-- sometimes two feet (half a meter) deep -- using shovels and brooms. Manila's main downtown business and tourist district was largely unscathed. Another tropical storm was headed toward the southern Philippines on Wednesday but was still 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) off the coast. If it stays on its current path, it could bring winds more powerful than Ketsana's and driving rain back to the Manila area Saturday, said Nathaniel Cruz of the government's weather agency. The government has declared a "state of calamity" in Manila and 25 storm-hit provinces and estimated the damage at $100 million. It concedes its ability to cope with the disaster is stretched to the limit and has appealed for foreign aid, and accepted pledges from the United States, Australia, Japan and other nations.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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