Typhoon Sendong Update
(Second update)The death toll from mammoth floods unleashed in the Philippines by tropical storm Sendong (international name: Washi) has climbed to 521, the Red Cross said Sunday, warning the total could climb significantly.
(Second update)The death toll from mammoth floods unleashed in the Philippines by tropical storm Sendong (international name: Washi) has climbed to 521, the Red Cross said Sunday, warning the total could climb significantly.
The Red Cross said 497 people
were dead and more than 160 missing after the storm hit the south late Friday
but more fatalities were likely to be confirmed in the coming days.
"The affected area is so
wide and huge and I believe they have not really gone to all areas to do a
search. Also... many of the houses were washed out so that means the houses and
the bodies were displaced," said Gwen Pang, secretary general of the
Philippine National Red Cross.
"We are only counting the
actual dead bodies that were sent to funeral parlors," she told AFP,
warning many more bodies could still be found.
Heavy rain from Sendong on the
southern island of Mindanao led to flash floods, swollen rivers and landslides
with the cities of Cagayan de Oro and Iligan particularly hard hit.
"This thing happened so
fast, it was very overwhelming. It happened in the evening when people were
sleeping," said Pang.
"People were saying they
were really unprepared. They didn't know it would hit them to this
extent," she said.
Fortunately, the waters receded
quickly, in contrast to floods in the northern Philippines, which can last for
weeks or even months, said Pang.
Almost 35,000 people remained
huddled in evacuation centers after the storm, the National Disaster Risk
Reduction and Management Council said.
Rescue and relief efforts were
hampered by power outages in many areas including Cagayan de Oro and Iligan
cities as well as by damaged and destroyed bridges, the council added.
An average of 20 storms and
typhoons, many of them deadly, hit the Philippines annually.
However, most of the storms
strike the northern regions. The southern areas are usually spared so people in
the south were unprepared for Sendong's fury, government relief officials said.
Sendong, which crossed Mindanao
and some central islands on Saturday, hit the western island of Palawan before
dawn Sunday and has continued moving west into the South China Sea, the
government weather station said.
The storm, packing maximum
winds of 80 kilometers (50 miles) per hour, is forecast to move westward, away
from the Philippines, at 24 kilometers per hour.
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