/ 26 November 2007

Typhoon hits northern Philippines

Typhoon Mitag swirled out to sea on Monday after killing eight people, destroying homes and flooding rice paddies in the northern Philippines.

Mitag, a category-one typhoon with winds of 120km/h at its centre, lost strength as it made landfall late on Sunday and did not directly hit the central Bicol region, where nearly 300 000 people had been evacuated.

Seven people drowned in Bicol and one was electrocuted over the weekend but the region, regularly hit by typhoons, was spared lethal landslides or mass flooding after Mitag veered north.

Two men were also reported missing, swept away by a swollen river in Apayao province in the northern Philippines, disaster officials said.

In the northern province of Cagayan, Ronald Ayuyang (39) said Mitag, a woman’s name pronounced ”Me-tok” from Yap in the Pacific Ocean, was not as strong as previous storms.

”Last night, it was raining heavily but today we are only experiencing winds. Sometimes, we can see the sun,” the father of two said. ”Our neighbours are already cleaning their homes, sweeping broken branches and twigs.”

Taiwan issued a warning on Monday for large waves, torrential rain and high winds as Mitag rumbled south of its coastline. ”Waves in the oceans around Taiwan are extremely big,” the bureau said in a statement. ”Ocean travellers and boats working at sea should be especially careful.”

Mitag was not expected to make landfall as a typhoon in Taiwan, but it might come ashore as a lower-level tropical storm in Kaohsiung, Taiwan’s second-largest city, on Tuesday, according to British typhoon-tracking website Tropical Storm Risk.

Inundated farms

In the central province of Albay, where the sun was shining on Monday, tens of thousands of people were allowed to leave makeshift shelters in churches, schools and town halls as Mitag headed out to sea.

Disaster officials said Mitag flooded wide areas in the northern and central Philippines, destroying more than 100-million pesos’ ($2,3-million) worth of agricultural production, half of them rice fields in Isabela and Cagayan provinces.

Agriculture officials said the rice farms were about one to two weeks from harvest but were threatened by rain-swollen rivers.

Tropical Storm Hagibis, which killed 14 people in the Philippines last week, was due to bring heavy rain and wind to the western island of Palawan on Wednesday after it made a dramatic U-turn over the South China Sea, according to Tropical Storm Risk.

Disaster officials said they were monitoring the progress of Hagibis, which means ”rapidity” in the Philippines’ Tagalog language, but no new evacuations have been ordered as it has weakened to a tropical depression.

Hagibis disrupted coffee and oil production in Vietnam after it dumped rain on several south-central provinces last week.

The Philippine weather bureau said it was also monitoring another weather system in the Pacific Ocean that might hit the country later this week.

Storms regularly batter Vietnam and the Philippines and this year the central government in Manila ordered pre-emptive evacuations to try to avoid a repeat of last year’s devastating Typhoon Durian, which killed 1 200 and left 120 000 homeless when it crashed through Bicol in December. — Reuters