Philippine-held island in South China Sea suffers typhoon damage
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[December 22, 2021]
MANILA (Reuters) - The deadly
typhoon that killed hundreds in the Philippines also damaged dozens of
homes and government infrastructure on the country's biggest,
strategically most important outpost in the South China Sea, including a
newly built coast guard station.
Typhoon Rai, which left nearly 400 people dead and displaced hundreds of
thousands, hit the remote island of Thitu, one of nine features the
Philippines occupies in the Spratly archipelago, just as it was been
undergoing an upgrade to facilities including the repair of a runway.
The island is located more than 300 miles (483 kilometres) from the
Philippines.
"As soon as possible, we will rebuild the coast guard station,"
Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) spokesperson Armando Balilo told Reuters.
"We need Pagasa island, it is critical to our country," he said using
the local name of the island.
Thitu's population of just 194 as of July has a strategic purpose for
Manila - preserving a Philippine claim of sovereignty in the face of a
resurgent China.
China claims sovereignty over the Spratlys, but Brunei, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam all have competing claims for some or
all of the islands.
Coast guard official Balilo said the island's residents were safe, and
the coast guard's priority was to send relief supplies.
Images shared by the coast guard showed the trail of damage left behind
by Rai on Thitu, from uprooted trees to the roofs and walls of homes
being torn off. "Only the evacuation centre was left standing, but the
windows were also busted," Balilo said.
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Damaged structures due to typhoon Rai are seen, on
Philippine-claimed Thitu Island, South China Sea, December 21, 2021.
Picture taken December 21, 2021. Philippine Coast Guard/Handout via
REUTERS
Rai, which struck the Philippines last Thursday, was the strongest
typhoon to hit the archipelago this year. It has affected 1.8
million and displaced 630,000 residents, the U.N. Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.
It revived memories in the Philippines of the devastation brought in
2013 by Typhoon Haiyan, one of the most powerful tropical cyclones
ever recorded, which killed 6,300.
Balilo said the coast guard managed to reach Dinagat island, one of
the southeastern provinces first pounded by the typhoon, on Tuesday,
to deliver desperately needed relief supplies after residents had
been pleading for food, water and shelter.
(Reporting by Karen Lema; Editing by Ed Davies and Kenneth Maxwell)
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