The storm, which is strengthening as it gusts towards Taiwan,
did not make landfall in the Philippines but has intensified
seasonal monsoon rains, causing landslides and flooding over the
past few days.
At least 12 people have died and more than 600,000 are displaced
due to the storm, known locally as Typhoon Carina, the national
disaster agency said. Water in some areas is neck-high.
The Philippine coastguard said 260 passengers and 16 vessels
were stranded in ports while airlines cancelled 114 flights out
of Manila on Wednesday, the airport authority said.
The financial markets were also closed.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr told the disaster relief agencies
to provide assistance and prepare supplies for isolated
communities during a briefing on Wednesday, and the mayors of 16
cities in the Greater Manila region have asked for emergency
funding, officials said.
In the riverside city of Marikina, emergency workers waded
through waist-deep waters and used rubber dinghies to rescue
residents from their inundated homes.
Some people sheltered in churches among the statues of Catholic
saints.
"The flood reached the second floor of our house, all our things
are ruined, everything got wet, nothing was saved," Ladylyn
Bernas, an evacuee at a nearby church, told Reuters.
Social media posts showed several vehicles stuck in water or
floating down streets and highways.
The Philippines sees an average of 20 tropical storms annually,
causing floods and deadly landslides.
(Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales and Karen Lema; Editing by
Christian Schmollinger and Christopher Cushing and Miral Fahmy)
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