Typhoon Rammasun, the strongest storm to hit the Philippines this
year, was heading northwest towards China after cutting a path
across the main island of Luzon, shutting down the capital and
knocking down trees and power lines, causing widespread blackouts.
The storm destroyed about 7,000 houses and damaged 19,000, the
executive director of the National Disaster Agency, Alexander Pama,
said. More than 530,000 people had taken refuge in evacuation
centers, according to official figures.
Pama put the damage to crops, mostly rice and corn, from the Bicol
region, southeast of Manila and the first to be hit by the storm, at
around 668 million pesos, or about $15 million.
Most schools remained closed in the capital and southern Luzon, the
most densely populated part of the country with about 17 million
people. Power had been restored to just over half of the Luzon grid,
a transmission agency official said.
Electricity distributor Manila Electric Co said a third of its 1.88
million customers were without power.
Disaster officials were assessing damage but the coconut-growing
Quezon province south of Manila appears to have borne the brunt of
Rammasun, which intensified into a category 3 typhoon as it crossed
the country.
The cyclone is expected to make landfall in China around midday on
Friday somewhere between the island of Hainan and the southern
province of Guangdong, the Hainan government said on its website,
adding that fishing boats had to returned to port.
The Ministry of Civil Affairs has already put authorities on alert
across a swathe of southern and southwestern China to deal with
expected damage, especially as torrential rain across a large part
of southern China has killed 34 in the last week.
[to top of second column]
|
Tropical Storm Risk, which monitors cyclones, downgraded Rammasun to
a category 1 storm on a scale of one to five.
But it predicted it would gain in strength to category two within 24
hours, picking up energy from the warm sea.
Quezon governor David Suarez said the province was preparing to
declare a state of calamity. He said officials had confirmed seven
people died in the province.
"Last night we had difficulty going around because many trees and
fallen poles are blocking highways and roads," Suarez said in a
radio interview.
Pama said on Wednesday the government was more prepared after the
devastation caused by Super Typhoon Haiyan in November, evacuating
people at risk in coastal and landslide-prone areas well before the
typhoon made landfall.
Parts of the Philippines are still recovering from Haiyan, one of
the biggest cyclones known to have made landfall anywhere. It killed
more than 6,100 in the central provinces, many in tsunami-like sea
surges, and left millions homeless.
(Reporting by Rosemarie Francisco; Additional reporting by Ben
Blanchard and Hui Li in BEIJING; Editing by Nick Macfie)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|