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Rescuers prepare their equipment at their quarters in Davao City, in southern island of Mindanao on Monday in anticipation of powerful Typhoon Bopha which is expected to hit the southern fishing village overnight. Image Credit: AFP

Manila: Local government units in Philippines are preparing 24 hours ahead of the landfall of super Typhoon Bopha, locally known as Pablo, which is expected to hit the northern parts of the country, sources said.

Locals have started evacuating thousands of people in affected areas of Visayas and Mindanao, said Benito Ramos, head of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC).

All NDRRMC regional offices in the affected areas were placed on high alert ahead of Bopha’s arrival, said Ramos, adding that many residents on coastal areas and landslide-prone mountainsides were already asked to leave.

However, residents living in the low-lying areas are told be on stand-by for any evacuation. Police officials were helping the people to move out of the troubled areas, said Ramos.

Typhoon Bopha, packing winds of up to 210 kilometres an hour, is the strongest typhoon to hit the Philippines this year.

The mayor of Hinatuan has urged the village of 39,000 people to prepare for the worst, ordering those living along the coast, flood-prone river valleys, as well as tiny islands off the village to move to government shelters.

“There is no rain yet but they might start experiencing rain tonight. This will be the strongest typhoon this year,” warned Edgardo Ollet, director of the civil defence office in Manila.

The weather service said Bopha was expected to bring “intense to heavy rainfall” over Hinatuan and surrounding areas as well as the central Philippine islands.

As of 0200 GMT, the centre of the typhoon was 550 kilometres southeast of Hinatuan, it added.

Authorities have been stockpiling food supplies and rescue equipment, with military and coast guard personnel deployed in vulnerable areas amid fears the typhoon could trigger landslides and floods.

But Ollet said he was not sure whether residents were complying with the evacuation orders. Olive Luces, the regional civil defence director, warned local officials to not take the typhoon lightly.

“The weather is good right now but we keep advising local governments not to be complacent because this is going to get worse,” she said.

The Philippines is battered by about 20 typhoons a year, some of them destructive. Bopha is the 16th so far this year.

In August, nearly 100 people were killed and more than a million were displaced by heavy flooding caused by a series of storms.

Nineteen typhoons struck the country last year, of which 10 were destructive, leading to more than 1,500 deaths and affecting nearly 10 percent of the total population, according to the government.

— With inputs from AFP