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Storm moves away from northern Philippines, leaving 65 dead, but meteorologists warn it could do a 180-degree turn

Storm moves away from northern Philippines, leaving 65 dead, but meteorologists warn it could do a 180-degree turn

A resident navigates flooded streets caused by Tropical Storm Trami on October 25, 2024 in Cainta, Rizal province, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aarón Favila)

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Tropical Storm Trami moved away from the northwestern Philippines on Friday, leaving at least 65 people dead in landslides and extensive flooding that forced authorities to search for more rescue boats to save thousands of people. terrified, they were trapped. , some on their roofs.

But the onslaught may not be over: State forecasters raised the rare possibility that the storm, the 11th and one of the deadliest to hit the Philippines this year, could do a U-turn next week as it is pushed toward back due to high temperatures. Strong winds in the South China Sea.

A Philippine provincial police chief said Friday that 33 people were killed, most in landslides triggered by Trami in Batangas province, south of Manila. That brought the total death toll from the storm to at least 65.

Eleven other villagers remain missing in Batangas, Col. Jacinto Malinao Jr. told The Associated Press by telephone from the lake town of Talisay, where he was with a villager whose wife and son were buried in a deep mound of mud, rocks and trees. .

Using a backhoe and shovels, police scrambled through 10 feet (3 meters) of mud, rocks and debris and found a portion of the head and foot that appeared to be those of the missing woman and child.

“He’s just devastated,” Malinao said of the villager, a fisherman, whose wife and son were buried in the landslide that occurred Thursday afternoon amid torrential rains while he was tending fish cages at a lake.

“He is in shock and cannot speak and we just ask him to point out where his room was located so we can excavate that part,” Malinao said.

The storm was last tracked at dawn, blowing 125 kilometers (78 miles) west of the coastal city of Bacnotan, in the northern province of La Unión, with sustained winds of up to 95 kilometers (59 miles) per hour and gusts. up to 115 kph (78 mph). ). It was moving northwest at 25 kilometers per hour (15 mph) toward Vietnam, which was forecast to be hit by Trami starting Sunday if it maintained its course.

The Philippine weather agency, however, said high-pressure winds and other weather factors in the South China Sea are likely to force the storm back toward the Philippines.

President Ferdinand Marcos, appearing exasperated, asked about that prospect at an emergency meeting with cabinet members and disaster response officials on Friday about the response to the widespread devastation.

“What’s the prognosis for that? Is it possible he’ll come back?” Mark asked.

A government forecaster told Trami could turn toward the western Philippines early next week, but is more likely to move away from the Philippines again without making landfall.

“It doesn’t have to make landfall for damage to occur,” Marcos said, citing the continued rains brought on by Trami in the Philippines.

Marcos also cited another storm brewing in the Pacific Ocean that could threaten the country again.

“Oh God, it is what it is. We just have to deal with it,” Marcos said.

State forecaster Jofren Habaluyas told the AP that Trami’s possible U-turn has piqued the interest of government weather experts in Asia, including those in Japan, which has been providing information to the Philippines to help track the storm.

The 65 storm deaths included 26 villagers who died in floods and landslides in Bicol, an agricultural region and tourist destination southeast of Manila that is popular for Mayon, one of the country’s 24 most active volcanoes that has a nearly perfect cone. .

Although Trami did not become a typhoon, it dumped unusually heavy rain on some regions, including some that recorded one or two months’ worth of rainfall in just 24 hours, inundating communities with flash floods.

Authorities in the city of Naga, where 11 people drowned, and the outlying provinces of Camarines Sur and Albay called for more rescue boats to be sent at the height of the attack to reach people trapped on the upper floors of their buildings. houses or on their roofs as the waters rose. .

In the foothills of the Mayon volcano in Albay province, mud and other debris cascaded toward nearby towns as the storm hit, engulfing homes and cars in streams of black mud.

More than 2.6 million people were affected by the deluge, and nearly 320,000 people fled to evacuation centers or relatives’ homes, disaster mitigation officials said.

The government closed schools and government offices on the main northern island of Luzon. Inter-island ferry services were also suspended, leaving thousands of people stranded.

In Vietnam, state meteorologists warned of heavy rain in the central region. Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh ordered coastal provinces to remain alert, closely monitor the course of Trami and prepare for contingencies.

Last month, Typhoon Yagi hit Vietnam, killing 323 people and causing extensive damage valued at $3.3 billion, according to a Vietnamese government report.

Every year, about 20 storms and typhoons hit the Philippines, a Southeast Asian archipelago that lies between the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea. In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest tropical cyclones on record, left more than 7,300 people dead or missing and devastated entire towns.

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