Gulf Times

Typhoon Phanfone death toll rises to 28

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The death toll from Typhoon Phanfone’s battering of the Philippine­s on Christmas Day has risen to 28, and will likely climb further, authoritie­s said yesterday.

The storm, with wind gusts of up to 200 kilometre per hour, swept across remote villages and popular tourist destinatio­ns in the central Philippine­s on Wednesday.

Authoritie­s yesterday confirmed 28 people had died, up from 16 on Thursday, as informatio­n came in from badly hit areas where internet and mobile phone networks had been cut.

“The likelihood is present that the casualty count will still increase.

We’re hoping against it,” national disaster agency spokesman Mark Timbal said.

He said at least 12 people were still listed as missing. Among those killed were several members of a family who drowned, a policeman electrocut­ed by a toppled post while patrolling and a man struck by a felled coconut tree.

The Philippine­s is a mostly Catholic nation, and Phanfone ruined or disrupted Christmas festivitie­s for hundreds thousands of people.

The typhoon displaced tens of thousands living on the coast and low-lying areas who were forced to celebrate Christmas in evacuation centres.

Others missed family reunions, with plane and ferry services cancelled. It also hit Boracay island, famed for its white sand beaches which draws more than a million tourists a year.

Coconut trees were uprooted on Boracay and windows in some resorts were blown in during the storm, and ferry services to and from the island were cut on Wednesday and Thursday.

However no one died on Boracay, and the damage was not on the scale of badly hit coastal towns elsewhere in the central Philippine­s. The Philippine­s is the first major landmass facing the Pacific typhoon belt, and is hit by an average of around 20 storms a year. Phanfone, locally named “Ursula”, is the 21st cyclone to hit the Philippine­s in 2019.

Many of the storms are deadly, and they typically wipe out harvests, homes and infrastruc­ture, keeping millions of people perenniall­y poor.

Though much weaker, Phanfone tracked a similar path as Super Typhoon Haiyan — the country’s deadliest storm on record which left more than 7,300 people dead or missing in 2013. Phanfone blew out into the South China Sea on Thursday morning.It was tracking towards Vietnam yesterday but forecast to weaken significan­tly into a low pressure area well before making landfall again.

 ??  ?? Rescuers carry a body, believed to be one of several fishermen who went missing at the height of Typhoon Phanfone that pummelled the central Philippine­s on Christmas Day, from the seashore in Borongan, Eastern Samar province, yesterday.
Rescuers carry a body, believed to be one of several fishermen who went missing at the height of Typhoon Phanfone that pummelled the central Philippine­s on Christmas Day, from the seashore in Borongan, Eastern Samar province, yesterday.

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