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Asia Philippines

Update

Video: Goni now pounding Manila as supertyphoon leaves trail of death, destruction

Goni, world's strongest storm so far this year, barrels through Philippine capital



Residents stand on the roof of their house after a river overflowed due to heavy rains brought about by super Typhoon Goni, inundating houses in Daraga, Albay province, south of Manila. Handout photo taken on November 1, 2020 from Alejandro Miraflor’s Facebook page
Image Credit: Alejandro Miraflor / Facebook

MANILA: A super typhoon brought howling winds in the Philippine capital after barrelling through the southern part of the main island of Luzon on Sunday, with officials reporting at least four deaths, power supply outages, infrastructure damage and flash floods.

The weather bureau downgraded Goni, the world's strongest storm so far this year, to typhoon category, with 215 kph (140 miles per hour) sustained winds and gusts of up to 290 kph (180 mph) after it made landfall in the Bicol region.

347,000

number of people evacuated

Tropical storm-wind alerts were lowered in other parts, but the weather agency warned in its 0300 GMT bulletin that Goni still posed a threat while traversing provinces south of the capital Manila. Goni made two landfall in two places in the Bicol region, where four deaths were reported, said provincial Governor Al Francis Bichara, including one hit by a tree and a five-year-old washed away after a river overflowed.

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The disaster management agency could not confirm the report. Video footage by news channels and on social media showed rivers overflowing and some dikes destroyed, submerging villages in Bicol. Bichara also received reports of volcanic mud flows, as well as electricity supply and communication service outages. In Quezon, Governor Danilo Suarez said power supply was cut in 10 towns as Goni toppled trees.

Millions affected

Between 19 million and 31 million people could be affected by the typhoon, including those in danger zones and in metropolitan Manila, the disaster management agency said. About 347,000 people were in evacuation centres, said disaster management chief Ricardo Jalad, lowering the figure of nearly a million reported by the agency.

Goni pounded the capital as darkness fell Here's a view of the Manila international airport taken around 6pm Philippine time, on November 1, 2020.

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President Rodrigo Duterte was monitoring the government's disaster response from his southern hometown Davao city, according to presidential spokesman Harry Roque.

A scene near the Cagsawa ruins in Albay province, Philippines, showing mud carried by runoff water from the Mayon Volcano damaging the main entrance to the popular tourism site. Facebook photo posted by AJ Miraflor on November 1, 2020.
Image Credit: Facebook / AJ Miraflor

Health officials reminded those in evacuation centres to observe social distancing as the coronavirus spread is also a concern. Dozens of international and domestic flights have been cancelled as the civil aviation authority ordered a one-day closure of Manila's main gateway, the Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

Goni is among the strongest typhoons to hit the Philippines since Haiyan, which killed more than 6,300 people in 2013. It follows Typhoon Molave, which hit the Philippines last month killing 22 people, mostly through drowning in provinces south of Manila. The weather bureau said it was also monitoring another cyclone, tropical storm Atsani, which could hit northern Luzon provinces in the coming days.

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A car partly buried by mud flow from Mayon Volcano in Albay province in eastern Philippines. Photo taken on November 1, 2020.
Image Credit: Courtesy Vince Villar
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